IT Rock Anthem Videos by Director Christopher Guest

Intel IT team has the flava!  As a source for great stories about how Intel technology is helping companies advance and stay on the productive cutting edge, the Intel IT team continues to try creative ways of telling and sharing their stories.

I remember attending the Intel vPro launch event in San Francisco last year.  There were tons of other companies there — man of they service or software provider — talking about how they’re impressed with the new Intel hardware with baked in manageability and security.  The challenge was convincing some that hardware could actually help security and manageability software — the two would work better together.

Here’s what’s been happening since the 2006 introduction — more info.

Here are some videos the IT team created with rockumentray wildman Christopher Guest from Spinal Tap fame.  Here’s where today’s best built-in hardware (chips) teams up with the best software running today’s business.  Together the future looks better.

Better quality videos here.

Video Inside Intel’s Integrated Graphics Lab

My Intel buddy Nick visited the Folsom lab to actually see what all of the buzz was about. People who game or go heavy on graphics and video tend to pooh=pooh integrated graphics — shhh…I’m one of them. But integrated graphics are advancing — nearly everything steps to Moore’s Law at Intel, or steps up to good competition. Here’s Nick’s blog post with some comments from integrated graphics dissers and believers.

Social Networking 3.0 — Always On Panel with Charlene Li

The audio is not that great in this video, but it\’s great to see and hear next to each other: Chris DeWolfe (CEO, MySpace), Dustin Moskowitz (Co-Founder, Facebook), Richard Rosenblatt (CEO, Demand Media), Gina Bianchini (CEO, Ning) and Karl Jacob (CEO, Wallop).

Moderator Charlene Li is Senior Analyst, Forrester Research.

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VMWare’s latest virtualization technology on Intel Core 2

Virtualization is one of the big opportunities Intel’s Digital Enterprise Groups sees can help IT pros. VMWare is playing a key role in making these possibilities a reality.

From PodTech:
Dr. Mendel Rosenblum, co-founder and chief scientist at VMWare and Min Xu, R&D engineer at VMWare, demonstrate the company’s newest virtualization technology.

Tags: Mendel Rosenblum, VMWare, Min Xu, virtualization

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Gabe Rivera: Founder of Techmeme

Techmeme Founder Gabe Rivera is considered one of the Web’s top fifty most important people. He speaks with PodTech’s Marketing Voices host Jennifer Jones about how Techmeme harnesses the blogosphere to connect users with the biggest stories of the moment. Known as the “go-to” place for technology news, Rivera talks about his role as founder, and what he believes are the sites greatest assets.

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News 2.0 — My First Comment Left on HuffingtonPost

I enjoyed Ariana Huffington’s News 2.0  first-hand take on how newspapers are going away, but not so soon.   Here are some of my favorite parts, and a comment I left on her blog.

Those papers that wake up in time will become a journalistic hybrid combining the best aspects of traditional print newspapers with the best of what the Web brings to the table. We’re getting a glimpse into this hybrid future in so-called Old Media places like the Washington Post and the New York Times, and from New Media players like Josh Marshall’s Talking Points Memo sites. And, of course, that’s exactly what we’re trying to do with the Huffington Post.

Another old school behemoth that is embracing the digital future is the New York Times, despite its dunderheaded decision to hide Maureen Dowd, Nicholas Kristof, Bob Herbert, and co., behind TimesSelect (more on this in a moment). Drawing over 13 million unique users a month, the venerable Gray Lady is actually on the cutting edge of digital innovation, including Times Reader, which presents stories online in a format that approximates the experience of reading the paper’s print edition (combined with the search and flexibility bells-and-whistles of the web), and MyTimes (currently in beta), which allows readers to aggregate their favorite news sources and blend them with content produced by the Times, creating a single, custom-made digital super-paper. How serious is the Times about pushing the innovation envelope? It’s hired Michael Zimbalist, a former Disney imagineer, to oversee the company’s online research and development. That’s serious.

Chomping down on a story and refusing to let go is what bloggers do best. And while the vast majority of material that ends up being blogged about still originates with a mainstream news source, more and more stories are being broken by online news sources — a trend that will only continue with the growth of sites like TPM, Politico, TMZ (hey, the Mel Gibson and Michael Richards stories were big news), and HuffPost, where we are ratcheting up our commitment to original reporting, investigative reporting, and citizen journalism, in which our readers act as adjunct reporters — additional eyes, ears, and boots, or stiletto heels, on the ground, ferreting out news and underreported stories all across the country.

So stop writing teary-eyed eulogies for newspapers. The only thing dead is the either/or nature of the musty print vs online debate. The shifting dynamic between those two forces is exactly like the relationship between Sarah Conner and the T-101 in the Terminator movies. At first, the visitor from the future (digital) seemed intent on killing Sarah (print). But as the relationship progressed and the sequels unspooled, the Terminator became Sarah and her son’s one hope for salvation. Today, you can almost hear digital media (which for some reason has a thick Austrian accent) saying to print: “Come with me if you want to live!”

The hybrid future is kicking down the door. It’s time to let it in and fully embrace it.

 Blow is my first comment ever left on the Huffington Post, or see it here.

The blending of new and old. That’s like four generations all living together under one roof. While we’re all reading a lot more stuff, the old and new media are both fighting and crying over why they’re not making a lot more money. Moral of the story/sign of the times = Maybe we’re all doing more stuff and not making more money from it. Bottom line is we gotta help divided sides team up and move ahead swiftly with an open mind’s eye on efficiency, economy, magical power of people and potential for things to come.

By: kenekaplan on March 29, 2007 at 08:00pm

Tom Foremski Signs with the PodTech Network

A match made in social/new media heaven. Me and others at Intel have learned a lot working with Tom Foremski and PodTech. It will be interesting to see what’s to come. Tom has huge respect as a journalists and visionary, and John Furrier is riding teh crest of the wave by pulling together great talent that’s forging how media and storytelling will be shared in the years to come.

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Intel Unveils New 45nm Architecture-Nehalem

Intel living legend Pat Gelsinger is engaging. He sucks you in and takes you for a ride through the wonders and complexities of chip technology innovation. Pat’s vice-grip handshake and all present greeting got things started today before I got to sit down with him and PodTech’s Jason Lopez, who had visit the Penryn team at Intel’s Hillsboro, Oregon site back in January. This is a conversation about whats to come and about how we’re all movin’ ahead with every tick-tock of the clock.

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Talent Can Cross Species

Loren Feldman is classic and this great. You decide:

This was scripted and the dog is the star.

This is another Loren Feldman off-the-cuff creation but this time in front of a live audience.

The dog ain’t gonna be no blogger until he get’s some biscuits! Put up, or I shut up.

Maybe this pooch is smarter than the average blogger.

Loren might want to quit PodTech and follow this puppy to fame.

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The PC Turns 20 — Andy Grove from 2001

This is another story from the Intel archives. I was there next to Andy for this interview and I remember his powerful, beaming energy that day. He enjoyed looking back on how limited the origial PCs were compared with today\’s PCs.
This also reminds me of an exhibit inside the Intel Museum that has since been changed. It showed photographs side-by-side of the first processor ever designed next to the other major processor generations over a 10 to 15 year period. WIth each new generation, the number of faces and cultures represented seemed to double. More evidence of keeping Moore\’s Law alive?

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