Paul Otellini President & CEO Intel Corp

with Paul Otellini
in Technology, Business
on Friday, February 26, 2010 * * * * *

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Paul Otellini President & CEO Intel Corp

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Keywords:
economy
Silicon Valley
microprocessors
pentium
PC
Intel
Windows
internet
computer
Asia
World
technology
processor

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  • Comments 7
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    1. futurevisionaries  04/22/2011 03:17 PM Report

      Paul ,

      Can you help or know of people or companies that can help?

      I need to save global FUTURE brands for and by the global people and countries.

      My name is Kent G Anderson .

      I see where 12 years of my life's work and ideas can help all people in all countries. My goal is to share the global Brand FUTURE... Future is design like a country and people's ideas are the global product. For more information about me and global people FUTURE google Kent G Anderson. My web page is www.futurevisionaries.com .

      FUTURE sm/tm

      925 N Griffin

      Bismarck,ND

      58501

      USA

      milmntec@btinet.net

    2. PetePatel  05/02/2010 09:14 PM Report

      Otellini is on the money. We need a Vice President like him who knows the future of business to move this country where it needs to get.

    3. Laocoon  03/10/2010 10:34 PM Report

      The best comment was near the end when Otellini talks about ignorance becoming obsolete. The 'digital divide' is morphing into the proactive and the clueless. Those who are connected are shaping their own lives. Those who are not, regardless of age, are being rapidly left behind. As we create our technologies, so they create us.

    4. doodahdaze  03/02/2010 09:00 AM Report

      Mr. Otellini makes a lot of very good points, but the most significant one was at 19:55 - 21:55 part of the conversation. If the tech industry is serious about really advancing their cause, they WILL have to address the, way over-done, security issues (he just said they have the hardware and software to do it.). This loop-hole left horribly open by Microsoft, is the biggest impediment to the total use of all of technologies potential by the masses. Even though (I suspect) many in the tech support professions rather enjoy the masses 'concerns' over security; to the point so much, that they are the 'ones' actually doing most of the breaching (creating their own demand)(making big bucks, working part-time) (very annoying).

      I would definitely buy a computer that would shut them down and shut them up.

    5. heatherlewis86  03/02/2010 07:29 AM Report

      I hate to admit it, but he is me. This is the way I think, and now I'm going to cry uncontrollably.

    6. doodahdaze  03/01/2010 12:43 PM Report

      I wouldn't mess with this guy.

    7. REMant  03/01/2010 12:21 PM Report

      I don't have anything against the idea of giving engineering grads from other countries visas if our own students aren't available, nor the observation that our technology grads are desirable hires. The problem is that our students no more want to major in math, science and engineering than pick tomatoes, and we have to consider the incentives. The Fed is the major disincentive, and clearly a spur to get-rich-quick schemes. Scientists and engineers do not generally work for money, but easy money lures many away from honest work, setting a bad example for the young. Our tax incentives are also out of line, and our govt R&D support now lags behind other countries, tho we have had greater private sector funding than many. I, myself, have argued that no firm should be broken up just because it is large. But harm to consumers, no less than competition, can be interpreted in ways that reward laziness and envy, and productivity ought to be the prime ration, not equality, one of Tocqueville's central concerns, BTW. He also thought Americans would never make good scientists or philosophers. I am planning to build a new PC myself with an i3-530 as soon as I find the time, and I suppose a lot of ppl are thinking of replacing their old machines as well.