Yahoo CIO looks ahead Video
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Intel CIO discusses business outlook\r\n
John Johnson, CIO of Intel, talks about the company's strategy to provide consumers and businesses with new products and applications. The discussion took place in San Francisco on April 26. Video provided by the Churchill Club.
Jennifer Feikin, Director of Google Video, talks about the content and potential of user-submitted videos. Video provided by Churchill Club.\r\n
Yahoo: Past, present and future
Yahoo chiefs Terry Semel and Jerry Yang talk to author and columnist Kara Swisher in front of a large crowd at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco. Looking back at the dot-com bust and ahead to a broadband boost, they also discuss outsourcing, Wi-Fi, Web-based advertising, content, search and spam.
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.
Yahoo exec on competing with Google
At the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco, author and blogger John Battelle talks with Yahoo Executive Vice President Jeff Weiner about the company's media and partnership strategies and how they differ from those of Yahoo's main rival, search giant Google.
For decades, watching television meant being a couch potato. But with the Slingbox digital storage device, you get into Lost anywhere you please. Sling Media CEO Blake Krikorian talks about the benefits of Slingbox and how it compares to television and iTunes. Video provided by Churchill Club.
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, Hewlett-Packard chief Mark Hurd talks about how content companies are driving infrastructure innovations for the enterprise and consumers through their use of video, wikis, and blogs.
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
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.
