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In conversation with NPR's Moira Gunn at a Churchill Club event, Paul Otellini describes how a focus on markets, rather than products, better positions Intel to deliver what people want. He also discusses how the chipmaker's engineers are adjusting to a recent company reorganization.
Intel CEO Paul Otellini on future wireless
At San Jose's Churchill Club, Otellini is asked by NPR's Moira Gunn about his vision for global wireless networking. His answer:\r\nIt will be a completely different production and economic model.\r\n
In a conversation with NPR's Moira Gunn at a Churchill Club event, Otellini says using less energy and shifting to parallelism (multicore chips) are key initiatives for the chip industry. The chipmaker chief says Google's costs today for electricity outpace those for hardware.
Andy Grove and constructive paranoia
Paul Otellini talks with NPR's Moira Gunn about his status as the first nonengineer Intel CEO. In describing his year as the assistant to former chairman and CEO Andy Grove, Otellini says he learned that he couldn't pull the wool over Grove's eyes. Intellectual honesty is a requirement, he concludes.
Ballmer talks up new security 'shield'
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer tells Silicon Valley's Churchill Club how his company's new shielding technologies will create a "whole new line of defense."
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer tells Silicon Valley's Churchill Club that his company will have to raise the bar on security for Windows in the aftermath of MSBlast.
VW, Intel and your wireless future
Intel CEO Paul Otellini introduces colleague Anand Chandrasekher, vice president of low-power platforms, at the Intel Developer Forum, Sept. 26, in San Francisco. The two chipmaker execs look at a new tablet and how it communicates with a Wi-Fi-equipped car.
Otellini's eye on multicore computing and WiMax
At the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco, Intel President Paul Otellini points to multicore computing and WiMax as the next areas of performance improvement and market growth for businesses and consumers.
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer tells a packed house at Silicon Valley's Churchill Club how "terrible" he felt at hearing the news of MSBlast. In conversation with Roger McNamee, Co-founder and Managing Director of Silver Lake Partners and Integral Capital Partners, Ballmer talks openly about emerging markets, Linux and stock options and has compliments for Google, Apple and IBM.
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, Intel CEO Paul Otellini talks about how new collaborative social-networking tools will fuel the next wave of information technology inside the enterprise.
