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    <title>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</title>
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    <description>PodTech News provides analysis on top stories and issues in a weekly podcast series with business and industry leaders, analysts and observers. Listen during commute hours, while you're driving around on the weekend, or while you sit at your desk. Start the week with a fresh perspective and a deeper understanding of the media business, technology industry, financial trends and even politics. PodTech News speaks with leading industry analysts at firms including Gartner, IDC and Forrester Research. Find out what the experts are saying about major mergers and acquisitions, or products like the iPod/iPhone and gaming consoles like the Sony PS3, the Microsoft Xbox or Nintendo Wii. These short interviews provide the analysis you need, designed to fit your busy schedule.</description>
    <itunes:summary>PodTech News provides analysis on top stories and issues in a weekly podcast series with business and industry leaders, analysts and observers. Listen during commute hours, while you're driving around on the weekend, or while you sit at your desk. Start the week with a fresh perspective and a deeper understanding of the media business, technology industry, financial trends and even politics. PodTech News speaks with leading industry analysts at firms including Gartner, IDC and Forrester Research. Find out what the experts are saying about major mergers and acquisitions, or products like the iPod/iPhone and gaming consoles like the Sony PS3, the Microsoft Xbox or Nintendo Wii. These short interviews provide the analysis you need, designed to fit your busy schedule.</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:subtitle>PodTech News provides weekly analysis on top stories and issues</itunes:subtitle>
    <language>en</language>
    <ttl>40</ttl>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 23 Feb 2008 00:01:40 -0800</pubDate>
    <lastBuildDate>Sat, 23 Feb 2008 00:01:40 -0800</lastBuildDate>
    <category>Technology</category>
    <itunes:category text="Technology"/>
    <item>
      <title>Where is Gaming Going?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22145260-Where-is-Gaming-Going</link>
      <description>Now that GDC 2008 is behind us, and the reviews are really rolling in, PodTech takes a wide look at the gaming industry, with IDC gaming analyst Billy Pidgeon. Gaming's future likely includes more attention from the courts, as it continues to gain in mass popularity and questions continue to arise around "mature content" and children, for instance. And, as always, plenty of opinions about various consoles, PC vs. consoles, and the issue of game development from the developers' perspective (the one-console future, for example). Billy Pidgeon is the program manager for IDC's consumer markets: gaming program. In this podcast, he speaks with PodTech's Jason Lopez about the gaming industry, drawing important distinctions between gaming, which is a massive and growing business, and the more entrenched industries that are built around movies. The stakes for gaming companies are higher in a way, says Pidgeon, because there are no second chances after a game flops at market (unlike the many,...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>Now that GDC 2008 is behind us, and the reviews are really rolling in, PodTech takes a wide look at the gaming industry, with IDC gaming analyst Billy Pidgeon. Gaming's future likely includes more attention from the courts, as it continues to gain in mass popularity and questions continue to arise around "mature content" and children, for instance. And, as always, plenty of opinions about various consoles, PC vs. consoles, and the issue of game development from the developers' perspective (the one-console future, for example). Billy Pidgeon is the program manager for IDC's consumer markets: gaming program. In this podcast, he speaks with PodTech's Jason Lopez about the gaming industry, drawing important distinctions between gaming, which is a massive and growing business, and the more entrenched industries that are built around movies. The stakes for gaming companies are higher in a way, says Pidgeon, because there are no second chances after a game flops at market (unlike the many, many secondary distribution paths that movies have). But as the industry grows, Pidgeon says, there's a chance for the world to benefit, not only because of the truly international business that the gaming industry enjoys, but also because an broad interest in gaming might inspire a broader interest in technology and mathematics. Photo courtesy of Gamerscore Blog, via Creative Commons Tags: GDC 2008, IDC, Billy Pidgeon</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Now that GDC 2008 is behind us, and the reviews are really rolling in, PodTech takes a wide look at the gaming industry, with IDC gaming analyst Billy Pidgeon. Gaming's future likely includes more attention from the courts, as it continues to gain in mass popularity and questions continue to arise around "mature content" and children, for instance. And, as always, plenty of opinions about various consoles, PC vs. consoles, and the issue of game development from the developers' perspective (the one-console future, for example). Billy Pidgeon is the program manager for IDC's consumer markets: gaming program. In this podcast, he speaks with PodTech's Jason Lopez about the gaming industry, drawing important distinctions between gaming, which is a massive and growing business, and the more entrenched industries that are built around movies. The stakes for gaming companies are higher in a way, says Pidgeon, because there are no second chances after a game flops at market (unlike the many, many secondary distribution paths that movies have). But as the industry grows, Pidgeon says, there's a chance for the world to benefit, not only because of the truly international business that the gaming industry enjoys, but also because an broad interest in gaming might inspire a broader interest in technology and mathematics. Photo courtesy of Gamerscore Blog, via Creative Commons Tags: GDC 2008, IDC, Billy Pidgeon</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 23 Feb 2008 00:01:40 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>Facebook Status Update</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22129175-Facebook-Status-Update</link>
      <description>Last October, Microsoft invested $240 million in Facebook, suddenly placing Facebook's value at a lofty $15 billion. Now, we see that revenues for 2007 came to around $150 million, while expenses still leave the company with a negative cash flow that could be as high as $150 million next year. Microsoft's recent move to acquire Yahoo!, which began with a telephone call from Microsoft CEO Steven A. Ballmer to Yahoo! CEO Jerry Yang (a call that Ballmer later claimed was "definitely not a courtesy call") prompted us to revisit the Facebook/Microsoft relationship - what it means for Facebook, and what Microsoft might have been thinking last Fall. As Facebook moves to launch versions in Spanish, with more languages coming soon, analysts are looking again at the juggernaut, guessing about whether breaking into languages will erode its power as a single network around the world. Meanwhile, widgets and applications continue to proliferate, and Microsoft's role in aiding advertising at Faceb...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>Last October, Microsoft invested $240 million in Facebook, suddenly placing Facebook's value at a lofty $15 billion. Now, we see that revenues for 2007 came to around $150 million, while expenses still leave the company with a negative cash flow that could be as high as $150 million next year. Microsoft's recent move to acquire Yahoo!, which began with a telephone call from Microsoft CEO Steven A. Ballmer to Yahoo! CEO Jerry Yang (a call that Ballmer later claimed was "definitely not a courtesy call") prompted us to revisit the Facebook/Microsoft relationship - what it means for Facebook, and what Microsoft might have been thinking last Fall. As Facebook moves to launch versions in Spanish, with more languages coming soon, analysts are looking again at the juggernaut, guessing about whether breaking into languages will erode its power as a single network around the world. Meanwhile, widgets and applications continue to proliferate, and Microsoft's role in aiding advertising at Facebook continues to be a work in progress. Forrester Research senior analyst (and former host of PodTech's own Web Strategy show) Jeremiah Owyang speaks with PodTech's Jason Lopez about Facebook's evolving business. Tags: Microsoft, Facebook, Steven A. Ballmer, Jerry Yang, Web Strategy, Jeremiah Owyang, Jason Lopez</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Last October, Microsoft invested $240 million in Facebook, suddenly placing Facebook's value at a lofty $15 billion. Now, we see that revenues for 2007 came to around $150 million, while expenses still leave the company with a negative cash flow that could be as high as $150 million next year. Microsoft's recent move to acquire Yahoo!, which began with a telephone call from Microsoft CEO Steven A. Ballmer to Yahoo! CEO Jerry Yang (a call that Ballmer later claimed was "definitely not a courtesy call") prompted us to revisit the Facebook/Microsoft relationship - what it means for Facebook, and what Microsoft might have been thinking last Fall. As Facebook moves to launch versions in Spanish, with more languages coming soon, analysts are looking again at the juggernaut, guessing about whether breaking into languages will erode its power as a single network around the world. Meanwhile, widgets and applications continue to proliferate, and Microsoft's role in aiding advertising at Facebook continues to be a work in progress. Forrester Research senior analyst (and former host of PodTech's own Web Strategy show) Jeremiah Owyang speaks with PodTech's Jason Lopez about Facebook's evolving business. Tags: Microsoft, Facebook, Steven A. Ballmer, Jerry Yang, Web Strategy, Jeremiah Owyang, Jason Lopez</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 09 Feb 2008 00:01:46 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: Prairie Grass to the (Energy) Rescue</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009258-PodTech-Weekly-Prairie-Grass-to-the-Energy-Rescue</link>
      <description>As one comic put it, referring to a drive across the U.S.: "This country grows a lot of freakin' corn." Corn, prairie grasses and an innovative use of radiocarbon mapping may be leading the way to reduced carbon emissions as well as furthering the push for U.S. energy independence. Catherine Girardeau investigates the alternative energy possibilities of bio-fuels. Also in the news, Iraq, YouTube, and an up-and-coming source for Pinot. Tags: bio-fuels</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>As one comic put it, referring to a drive across the U.S.: "This country grows a lot of freakin' corn." Corn, prairie grasses and an innovative use of radiocarbon mapping may be leading the way to reduced carbon emissions as well as furthering the push for U.S. energy independence. Catherine Girardeau investigates the alternative energy possibilities of bio-fuels. Also in the news, Iraq, YouTube, and an up-and-coming source for Pinot. Tags: bio-fuels</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>As one comic put it, referring to a drive across the U.S.: "This country grows a lot of freakin' corn." Corn, prairie grasses and an innovative use of radiocarbon mapping may be leading the way to reduced carbon emissions as well as furthering the push for U.S. energy independence. Catherine Girardeau investigates the alternative energy possibilities of bio-fuels. Also in the news, Iraq, YouTube, and an up-and-coming source for Pinot. Tags: bio-fuels</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 03 Feb 2007 18:28:57 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>Intel&#8217;s 45nm Chips and a Wii Exercise Craze&#8230;?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22169346-Intel%E2%80%99s-45nm-Chips-and-a-Wii-Exercise-Craze%E2%80%A6</link>
      <description>The Nintendo Wii may not spark an exercise fad, but, in at least one well-publicized case, it may be leading to some welcome weight loss. Also this week, we stopped by Intel, which was showing off its latest chip, Penryn. The 45 nanometer transistors on this microprocessor are being hailed as an engineering miracle (PodTech&amp;#8217;s had a chance to get to see it in-depth, here. PodTech&amp;#8217;s Robert Scoble also got some great footage here and here.). Intel scientists wouldn&amp;#8217;t let us get too close to the actual microprocessor or take close photographs. IBM, which announced 45 nm technology today but still has their 45nm project in the development stages, would probably love to get a look at one, too. Tags: Nintendo, Wii, Intel, Penryn, 45 nanometer, microprocessor, Robert Scoble, IBM</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>The Nintendo Wii may not spark an exercise fad, but, in at least one well-publicized case, it may be leading to some welcome weight loss. Also this week, we stopped by Intel, which was showing off its latest chip, Penryn. The 45 nanometer transistors on this microprocessor are being hailed as an engineering miracle (PodTech&amp;#8217;s had a chance to get to see it in-depth, here. PodTech&amp;#8217;s Robert Scoble also got some great footage here and here.). Intel scientists wouldn&amp;#8217;t let us get too close to the actual microprocessor or take close photographs. IBM, which announced 45 nm technology today but still has their 45nm project in the development stages, would probably love to get a look at one, too. Tags: Nintendo, Wii, Intel, Penryn, 45 nanometer, microprocessor, Robert Scoble, IBM</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>The Nintendo Wii may not spark an exercise fad, but, in at least one well-publicized case, it may be leading to some welcome weight loss. Also this week, we stopped by Intel, which was showing off its latest chip, Penryn. The 45 nanometer transistors on this microprocessor are being hailed as an engineering miracle (PodTech&amp;#8217;s had a chance to get to see it in-depth, here. PodTech&amp;#8217;s Robert Scoble also got some great footage here and here.). Intel scientists wouldn&amp;#8217;t let us get too close to the actual microprocessor or take close photographs. IBM, which announced 45 nm technology today but still has their 45nm project in the development stages, would probably love to get a look at one, too. Tags: Nintendo, Wii, Intel, Penryn, 45 nanometer, microprocessor, Robert Scoble, IBM</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 27 Jan 2007 15:37:27 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
      <itunes:keywords>Technology, Gaming, podtech, PodTech News</itunes:keywords>
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    <item>
      <title>Intel's 45nm Chips and a Wii Exercise Craze&#8230;?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009261-Intel-s-45nm-Chips-and-a-Wii-Exercise-Craze%E2%80%A6</link>
      <description>The Nintendo Wii may not spark an exercise fad, but, in at least one well-publicized case, it may be leading to some welcome weight loss. Also this week, we stopped by Intel, which was showing off its latest chip, Penryn. The 45 nanometer transistors on this microprocessor are being hailed as an engineering miracle (PodTech's had a chance to get to see it in-depth, here. PodTech's Robert Scoble also got some great footage here and here.). Intel scientists wouldn't let us get too close to the actual microprocessor or take close photographs. IBM, which announced 45 nm technology today but still has their 45nm project in the development stages, would probably love to get a look at one, too. Tags: Nintendo, Wii, Intel, Penryn, 45 nanometer, microprocessor, Robert Scoble, IBM</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>The Nintendo Wii may not spark an exercise fad, but, in at least one well-publicized case, it may be leading to some welcome weight loss. Also this week, we stopped by Intel, which was showing off its latest chip, Penryn. The 45 nanometer transistors on this microprocessor are being hailed as an engineering miracle (PodTech's had a chance to get to see it in-depth, here. PodTech's Robert Scoble also got some great footage here and here.). Intel scientists wouldn't let us get too close to the actual microprocessor or take close photographs. IBM, which announced 45 nm technology today but still has their 45nm project in the development stages, would probably love to get a look at one, too. Tags: Nintendo, Wii, Intel, Penryn, 45 nanometer, microprocessor, Robert Scoble, IBM</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>The Nintendo Wii may not spark an exercise fad, but, in at least one well-publicized case, it may be leading to some welcome weight loss. Also this week, we stopped by Intel, which was showing off its latest chip, Penryn. The 45 nanometer transistors on this microprocessor are being hailed as an engineering miracle (PodTech's had a chance to get to see it in-depth, here. PodTech's Robert Scoble also got some great footage here and here.). Intel scientists wouldn't let us get too close to the actual microprocessor or take close photographs. IBM, which announced 45 nm technology today but still has their 45nm project in the development stages, would probably love to get a look at one, too. Tags: Nintendo, Wii, Intel, Penryn, 45 nanometer, microprocessor, Robert Scoble, IBM</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-27,22009261</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 27 Jan 2007 15:37:27 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Intel Says 45 Nanometer Microprocessors Due Later This Year</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009265-Intel-Says-45-Nanometer-Microprocessors-Due-Later-This-Year</link>
      <description>This video was commissioned by Intel. Intel announced that it will begin making 45 nanometer chips, code-named Penryn, in the second half of the year. The new microprocessors are the culmination of years of R&amp;D using new materials to improve the efficiency and performance of silicon-based semiconductors. The company says the new chip technology maintains Moore's Law, the observation made by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore in the late 1960s that the number of transistors doubles on chips every two years. Intel scientists say that transistors are now so small that more than 300 can fit on a human red blood cell. In a recent earnings announcement, Intel officials said they expect to rebuild a lead in the computer chip market through innovation and manufacturing efficiency. Intel's current line of microprocessors includes the Core2Duo, Core2Extreme, and Core2Quad. In this video podcast, PodTech's Jason Lopez visits Intel's Hillsboro, Oregon research facility and fab. Related Stories: Inte...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>This video was commissioned by Intel. Intel announced that it will begin making 45 nanometer chips, code-named Penryn, in the second half of the year. The new microprocessors are the culmination of years of R&amp;D using new materials to improve the efficiency and performance of silicon-based semiconductors. The company says the new chip technology maintains Moore's Law, the observation made by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore in the late 1960s that the number of transistors doubles on chips every two years. Intel scientists say that transistors are now so small that more than 300 can fit on a human red blood cell. In a recent earnings announcement, Intel officials said they expect to rebuild a lead in the computer chip market through innovation and manufacturing efficiency. Intel's current line of microprocessors includes the Core2Duo, Core2Extreme, and Core2Quad. In this video podcast, PodTech's Jason Lopez visits Intel's Hillsboro, Oregon research facility and fab. Related Stories: IntelMooresLaw Transcript: Host: Jason Lopez &#8211; PodTech Guests: Intel Spokesperson Guest: Kelin Kuhn - Intel Jason Lopez &#8211; PodTech Transistors are the miniature machines of the heart of computers. The first transistors built on silicon in the 1960&#8217;s were relatively large compared to those of today. But in the last few years, scientists have sensed The End of Moore&#8217;s Law as the quest to double a number of transistors on a chip every two years has pushed the limits of physics. This test wafer is used to measure the reliability of billions of H transistor and interconnect features, the blue prints for making microprocessors. For nearly 40 years, transistors have been made from a polysilicon gate and silicon gate oxide, the materials used to create the switch inside that turns it on and off. But with 65 nanometer technology currently in production, those materials have been pushed to their physical limits. To go smaller at 45 nanometers scientists said Intel chose new materials a Metal gate and High-K gate oxide based on the element hafnium. These materials have enabled yet again the doubling of the density of transistors within a two-year timeframe. Intel code names its new family of 45 nanometer chips &#8216;Penryn&#8217; which deliver a significant improvement in power efficiency and performance. Speaker This is a really tremendous accomplishment to get all the way down to 45 nanometer dimensions. When I joined Intel five micron dimensions were common. 45 nanometers is more than a 100 times smaller than that. So, quite remarkable. Kelin Kuhn - Intel If you think about it, if you look at the Intel 45 nanometer device technology, we can fit 400 transistors on something about the size of the human blood cell. Speaker So, it allows us to continue scaling and maintain this Moore&#8217;s Law type of evolutionary built up we&#8217;ve seen. Speaker Well, developing smaller transistors or technologies with smaller feature size is very key, because it allows you to pack more transistors on a chip which means you can do more things with that chip, that also means that these transistors when they&#8217;re smaller can use less energy when you switch them on and off. So, you have better power efficiency, you can get certain computational functions done using less energy, less power. Jason Lopez - PodTech Intel&#8217;s drive to adhere to Moore&#8217;s Law is as much an economic decision as it is a scientific one. It&#8217;s one thing to make the Metal gate and High-K gate oxide technologies work. It&#8217;s another to make 45 nanometer chips enlarged volumes to satisfy the market. Intel&#8217;s lead in the chip industry is based on its ability to deliver cheaper and faster microprocessors. Speaker Well, one of the key things that Intel does very well is what&#8217;s called Design for Manufacturability and the key there is to make sure that the product design and the process manufacturing technology are able to work together and produce high yielding, high quality products and because we&#8217;re an integrated device manufacturer, we do the design in-house, we do the process development in-house, we&#8217;re able to do a really good job at Design for Manufacturability up front and produce these chips in high volume. Jason Lopez - PodTech Metal gate and High-K gate oxide only atoms thick are more electrically efficient helping to reduce heat and power lost from leakage and improving transistor performance by 20%. The idea to use new materials has been around for more than a decade, but the technologies to deploy them were developed by hundreds of engineers over the past few years. Kelin Kuhn - Intel Okay so, if you think about how we build gate oxides, historically, we&#8217;ve used very simple silicon dioxide materials basically glass, and as we&#8217;ve developed our technology expertise over the years we started doing very elegant things to this glass to make ever better oxides basically the gate of the transistor. When we introduced the Intel 45 nanometer process we moved a hafnium-based material as a radically different way of resolving our gate leakage issues and so it&#8217;s a very novel material system that&#8217;s intrinsic to the type of leakage improvements we see. Chip design was simple once and we don&#8217;t do that anymore. It&#8217;s complicated now because we already did the simple stuff that&#8217;s my humorous answer, but I think in today&#8217;s world if you look at a modern microprocessor. We&#8217;re talking hundreds of millions of transistors and it&#8217;s incomprehensible that humans can build this to be honest. Every time we have a success in the fab. I sit back and look at this and we&#8217;re looking at devices that are one-tenth the wavelength of light. Little tinnie winnie devices and humans can build these very complicated things and if you think about it, a yielding dye in our process technology means every single transistor worked. Every single one of those 100 million transistors worked and that&#8217;s when we sell them. Can you believe it? Humans can actually make something where every single one of a hundred million plus devices worked, it&#8217;s remarkable, and we don&#8217;t do it as individuals, we do it as an international team. Speaker We had the fly of the wafers to Arizona, get them assembled and then fly them back to Folsom, California in order to actually test them. Jason Lopez - PodTech So, what was the feeling of the team when you booted up that first OS? Speaker I would say one word it was &#8216;Euphoria&#8217;. The team was just tremendously excited. When you considered a number of people involved in the two&#8211;and-a-half years that culminated in this boolean of major Operating System with Penryn, it was an awesome feeling. Jason Lopez - PodTech Is that simply because it worked or is it because a number of things work? Speaker Yeah, it really represents the fact that a number of things worked. Coming out of reset is not so monumentous as say (Inaudible) up to boot Windows XP, or Windows Vista or Linux because there is a lot of functionality that has to be working to reach that level of capability. So, the team was obviously excited for that. All this happened around. I believe we booted around 3:30 in the morning and there was just a lot of adrenalin in the lab at that time and this is a lot of excitement. Jason Lopez - PodTech It&#8217;s like a moon shot only you didn&#8217;t have the big screen looking. Speaker Yeah, you could say that. Maybe on a smaller scale, but yeah, that&#8217;s equivalent to us on the engineering team as our moon shot. Copyright &amp;#169;2006 PodTech.net. All rights reserved. Privacy policy Tags: Intel, 45 nanometer, Penryn, microprocessors, semiconductors, Moore's Law, Gordon Moore, Intel, Core2Duo, Core2Extreme, Core2Quad, Jason Lopez, IntelMooresLaw</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>This video was commissioned by Intel. Intel announced that it will begin making 45 nanometer chips, code-named Penryn, in the second half of the year. The new microprocessors are the culmination of years of R&amp;D using new materials to improve the efficiency and performance of silicon-based semiconductors. The company says the new chip technology maintains Moore's Law, the observation made by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore in the late 1960s that the number of transistors doubles on chips every two years. Intel scientists say that transistors are now so small that more than 300 can fit on a human red blood cell. In a recent earnings announcement, Intel officials said they expect to rebuild a lead in the computer chip market through innovation and manufacturing efficiency. Intel's current line of microprocessors includes the Core2Duo, Core2Extreme, and Core2Quad. In this video podcast, PodTech's Jason Lopez visits Intel's Hillsboro, Oregon research facility and fab. Related Stories: IntelMooresLaw Transcript: Host: Jason Lopez &#8211; PodTech Guests: Intel Spokesperson Guest: Kelin Kuhn - Intel Jason Lopez &#8211; PodTech Transistors are the miniature machines of the heart of computers. The first transistors built on silicon in the 1960&#8217;s were relatively large compared to those of today. But in the last few years, scientists have sensed The End of Moore&#8217;s Law as the quest to double a number of transistors on a chip every two years has pushed the limits of physics. This test wafer is used to measure the reliability of billions of H transistor and interconnect features, the blue prints for making microprocessors. For nearly 40 years, transistors have been made from a polysilicon gate and silicon gate oxide, the materials used to create the switch inside that turns it on and off. But with 65 nanometer technology currently in production, those materials have been pushed to their physical limits. To go smaller at 45 nanometers scientists said Intel chose new materials a Metal gate and High-K gate oxide based on the element hafnium. These materials have enabled yet again the doubling of the density of transistors within a two-year timeframe. Intel code names its new family of 45 nanometer chips &#8216;Penryn&#8217; which deliver a significant improvement in power efficiency and performance. Speaker This is a really tremendous accomplishment to get all the way down to 45 nanometer dimensions. When I joined Intel five micron dimensions were common. 45 nanometers is more than a 100 times smaller than that. So, quite remarkable. Kelin Kuhn - Intel If you think about it, if you look at the Intel 45 nanometer device technology, we can fit 400 transistors on something about the size of the human blood cell. Speaker So, it allows us to continue scaling and maintain this Moore&#8217;s Law type of evolutionary built up we&#8217;ve seen. Speaker Well, developing smaller transistors or technologies with smaller feature size is very key, because it allows you to pack more transistors on a chip which means you can do more things with that chip, that also means that these transistors when they&#8217;re smaller can use less energy when you switch them on and off. So, you have better power efficiency, you can get certain computational functions done using less energy, less power. Jason Lopez - PodTech Intel&#8217;s drive to adhere to Moore&#8217;s Law is as much an economic decision as it is a scientific one. It&#8217;s one thing to make the Metal gate and High-K gate oxide technologies work. It&#8217;s another to make 45 nanometer chips enlarged volumes to satisfy the market. Intel&#8217;s lead in the chip industry is based on its ability to deliver cheaper and faster microprocessors. Speaker Well, one of the key things that Intel does very well is what&#8217;s called Design for Manufacturability and the key there is to make sure that the product design and the process manufacturing technology are able to work together and produce high yielding, high quality products and because we&#8217;re an integrated device manufacturer, we do the design in-house, we do the process development in-house, we&#8217;re able to do a really good job at Design for Manufacturability up front and produce these chips in high volume. Jason Lopez - PodTech Metal gate and High-K gate oxide only atoms thick are more electrically efficient helping to reduce heat and power lost from leakage and improving transistor performance by 20%. The idea to use new materials has been around for more than a decade, but the technologies to deploy them were developed by hundreds of engineers over the past few years. Kelin Kuhn - Intel Okay so, if you think about how we build gate oxides, historically, we&#8217;ve used very simple silicon dioxide materials basically glass, and as we&#8217;ve developed our technology expertise over the years we started doing very elegant things to this glass to make ever better oxides basically the gate of the transistor. When we introduced the Intel 45 nanometer process we moved a hafnium-based material as a radically different way of resolving our gate leakage issues and so it&#8217;s a very novel material system that&#8217;s intrinsic to the type of leakage improvements we see. Chip design was simple once and we don&#8217;t do that anymore. It&#8217;s complicated now because we already did the simple stuff that&#8217;s my humorous answer, but I think in today&#8217;s world if you look at a modern microprocessor. We&#8217;re talking hundreds of millions of transistors and it&#8217;s incomprehensible that humans can build this to be honest. Every time we have a success in the fab. I sit back and look at this and we&#8217;re looking at devices that are one-tenth the wavelength of light. Little tinnie winnie devices and humans can build these very complicated things and if you think about it, a yielding dye in our process technology means every single transistor worked. Every single one of those 100 million transistors worked and that&#8217;s when we sell them. Can you believe it? Humans can actually make something where every single one of a hundred million plus devices worked, it&#8217;s remarkable, and we don&#8217;t do it as individuals, we do it as an international team. Speaker We had the fly of the wafers to Arizona, get them assembled and then fly them back to Folsom, California in order to actually test them. Jason Lopez - PodTech So, what was the feeling of the team when you booted up that first OS? Speaker I would say one word it was &#8216;Euphoria&#8217;. The team was just tremendously excited. When you considered a number of people involved in the two&#8211;and-a-half years that culminated in this boolean of major Operating System with Penryn, it was an awesome feeling. Jason Lopez - PodTech Is that simply because it worked or is it because a number of things work? Speaker Yeah, it really represents the fact that a number of things worked. Coming out of reset is not so monumentous as say (Inaudible) up to boot Windows XP, or Windows Vista or Linux because there is a lot of functionality that has to be working to reach that level of capability. So, the team was obviously excited for that. All this happened around. I believe we booted around 3:30 in the morning and there was just a lot of adrenalin in the lab at that time and this is a lot of excitement. Jason Lopez - PodTech It&#8217;s like a moon shot only you didn&#8217;t have the big screen looking. Speaker Yeah, you could say that. Maybe on a smaller scale, but yeah, that&#8217;s equivalent to us on the engineering team as our moon shot. Copyright &amp;#169;2006 PodTech.net. All rights reserved. Privacy policy Tags: Intel, 45 nanometer, Penryn, microprocessors, semiconductors, Moore's Law, Gordon Moore, Intel, Core2Duo, Core2Extreme, Core2Quad, Jason Lopez, IntelMooresLaw</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 27 Jan 2007 00:20:06 -0800</pubDate>
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      <title>Sun and Intel CEOs Announce New Agreement</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009272-Sun-and-Intel-CEOs-Announce-New-Agreement</link>
      <description>Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz and Intel CEO Paul Otellini took the stage in San Francisco Monday to announce a new alliance. Listen here for the audio of the entire presentation and the Q&amp;A session. Transcript: Guest: Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Guest: Paul Otellini - Intel Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Well, good morning everybody. I think we&#8217;ve got a pretty interesting day ahead of us. What I&#8217;d like to do is, first of all, welcome Paul and the Intel team. As somebody earlier remarked, it was interesting to see those two logos side by side up there, with no spontaneous creation of energy around them. We think today really changes the marketplace for Sun, it certainly opens up a new era in our future. We are really looking forward to talking through what it is that we&#8217;re all about. So, what I&#8217;d like to do, and maybe give Paul an opportunity to take a little rest here, is actually talk back to a meeting, and I don&#8217;t know if you remember this Paul, but when I was announced as the CEO of Sun, that w...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz and Intel CEO Paul Otellini took the stage in San Francisco Monday to announce a new alliance. Listen here for the audio of the entire presentation and the Q&amp;A session. Transcript: Guest: Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Guest: Paul Otellini - Intel Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Well, good morning everybody. I think we&#8217;ve got a pretty interesting day ahead of us. What I&#8217;d like to do is, first of all, welcome Paul and the Intel team. As somebody earlier remarked, it was interesting to see those two logos side by side up there, with no spontaneous creation of energy around them. We think today really changes the marketplace for Sun, it certainly opens up a new era in our future. We are really looking forward to talking through what it is that we&#8217;re all about. So, what I&#8217;d like to do, and maybe give Paul an opportunity to take a little rest here, is actually talk back to a meeting, and I don&#8217;t know if you remember this Paul, but when I was announced as the CEO of Sun, that was back in April of last year, I made a series of phone calls, and probably first on the list was a call to Paul to say, surely, there&#8217;s more that we could do together. I mean we are really fundamentally engineering companies, we&#8217;re both really focused on innovation and opportunity. We then had dinner in a San Francisco restaurant, which Paul enjoyed a great deal, he came to my neighborhood, which I was happy about. We really got to talking about the marketplace, and it really struck me at that point, the more we talked, the more similarly we viewed the market, the more similarly we viewed the market opportunity. A slide that can give you a little picture of that is really quite simple. The more folks come online, the more services they want to get access to. You want to get access to your Gmail account, you want to get access to your work, you want to get access to the new entertainment services. The more folks we could bring online, the more opportunity on the network, the more opportunity that would drive in the world&#8217;s data centers and network operation centers to fuel that demand. This is a very simple idea, but really the volume on the front end of this is what defines our markets. The accessibility, the affordability, and the innovation that really captivates consumers brings people online and creates economic opportunity, and certainly for Sun and Intel back in the world&#8217;s data centers. So, what I thought I could do is just give you a little bit of a perspective on, not only our business model and the way we see the marketplace, but put our relationship today in the context of the business that we&#8217;re ultimately building, and then I will turn it over to Paul to talk about some of the things that we&#8217;re going to be doing together. So, if you spend anytime around Sun, you&#8217;ll hear us talk about the four S&#8217;s. We&#8217;re basically in four businesses, and those businesses are Software, Server, Services and Storage. Now, for us those businesses are a Venn diagram, because there is a considerable amount of overlap between them. Customers really don&#8217;t want to have to make four entirely distinct and separate and disparate decisions, and similarly as an R&amp;#38;D company, we don&#8217;t want to have to do completely independent R&amp;#38;D to go pursue these marketplaces. So, we want to leverage to the extent that we can the core innovations we have at Sun, the core systems engineering expertise, software expertise, and market expertise. To the extent that we can, that creates a very efficient model for R&amp;#38;D as well as a very efficient mechanism to go pursue the marketplace, but importantly for Sun, we cannot be just about our own intellectual property. We cannot simply attempt to lock piece A to piece B and piece C, that&#8217;s not how customers buy as we see in the marketplace, that&#8217;s not what ultimately we believe the market actually wants. So, if you look at how we go pursue the marketplace, we tend to meet customers where they are today. Our servers at this point run both the SPARC as well as AMD, and going forward, the Intel servers we build are not just about running Solaris, they&#8217;re about running Windows, they&#8217;re about running Linux, they&#8217;re about running Red Hat. The software we ship, and I&#8217;ll give you a graphic to really make this point in a moment, dominantly runs off of Sun hardware. The majority of the software that Sun builds is running on Nokia hardware or on Intel hardware or on -- certainly non-Sun hardware, HP, Dell laptops and notebooks along with those systems and servers up in the network. Our storage business tends to be very, very cross platform. A very significant portion of the storage we build in the marketplace, whether it&#8217;s archive systems or enterprise storage, attaches to an IBM mainframe or to an HP server, or to a Windows server. Then finally our services business, customers don&#8217;t want to just go to a company they can support only its own products, they need those products in deployment attached to a world of other innovations and opportunities. So, really this is our view of the marketplace. We meet customers at the edges of this Venn diagram and then we do our best to bring them toward the centre, knowing full well, there&#8217;s only one customer in the world who only buys from Sun and that&#8217;s our Chief Information Officer and we don&#8217;t expect to clone him anytime soon. So, fundamentally behind this is a very simple concept that I know -- also, Paul and I spoke about, which is a belief that volume drives value. So, what you see up in front of you here is a chart showing since we announced the open sourcing of Solaris, announcing that Solaris would be cross platform, would run on anybody&#8217;s hardware, what happened when we left those downloads free onto the networks? So, you&#8217;ll see back in March of 2005, when we began this program, we have come close to, if not, I don&#8217;t have the exact numbers in front of me right now, around 7 million licenses total distributed out into the marketplaces, 7 million licenses. What&#8217;s truly interesting about those download figures is how significant a proportion of those downloads are actually running on Intel and x86 hardware out in the marketplace, nearly 70%. So, 7/10 downloads, 7/10 of those licenses of Solaris into the marketplace were not running on Sun hardware, they were running on Intel innovation. They were running on systems built by HP and DELL and IBM, and clearly if there is going to be an indication of opportunity for us to work together, it looked an awful lot like, here is a great motivation. It&#8217;s evident that customers wanted us to work together, and so clearly we wanted to do exactly that. So, I think you&#8217;ve seen some of the news come out this morning, but as we were discussing with the media this morning, you&#8217;ve seen one out of three elements of this relationship. To just walk you through what in fact is going on. We are announcing today a relationship in which Intel will endorse Solaris, will support it across a broad range of Xeon platforms, will agree to OEM Solaris out into the marketplace, and to ensure that the market gets the support it needs in running and optimizing Solaris on Xeon platforms. This is a market changing event. This totally changes the perspective that a customer has on how they can do business with Sun, and similarly how they can do business with Intel. So, Intel has agreed to really promote Solaris, to help us collectively go off and build the marketplace and the ecosystem around that, and reciprocally Sun is announcing today that we are going to be building a complete line of Xeon servers as well as workstations, complementing and augmenting a very rapidly growing server business that we have at Sun. You&#8217;ve probably seen the double digit growth we&#8217;ve posted now for consecutive quarters. This just opens yet more opportunity creates more choice for consumers, and again, not just running Solaris, but running Windows as well as Linux that&#8217;s out there. Lastly, and I think what&#8217;s most interesting to me is -- in fact our teams had a dinner back in December to help prep them for working together on getting this agreement struck, and it was evident, we had all of the heads of our product businesses there, and similarly Paul had some of his leading products folks there as well. We&#8217;re both engineering companies, we&#8217;re both companies focused on technology, focused on the advancement of our own technologies, using process, using wisdom about the marketplace to create new innovations that really capture and captivate consumers. So, we&#8217;re also announcing today that we&#8217;re going to be collaborating on the next generation of our software leveraging Intel software expertise, the next generation of systems leveraging Intel microprocessors as well as Sun Systems engineering capabilities. What does that hold for the future? Time will tell, we&#8217;re pretty certain you all will be paying attention to that, and certainly we think there is just a world of opportunity out in front of us. So, this is really a comprehensive relationship. This is not simply a buy-sell arrangement. This is a mechanism that brings the two of us together and creates new market opportunities and new options as well as new value for both of us. So, the substance of our collaboration, why don&#8217;t I just quickly walk you through this, I think you can read this on your own. Again, from the Intel side, Solaris will now be a Tier 1 operating system in the Intel definition, which again confers upon Sun and the ecosystem built up around Solaris in the OpenSolaris Community, a great opportunity to go drive after the volume leading microprocessors in the marketplace. This really brings Intel&#8217;s involvement in not just the product evolution, but also the community evolution around the Open Source Java platform, NetBeans, as well as Solaris. Then importantly, Intel is going to help make sure that we know how to optimize Solaris well for Intel microprocessors, so we end up with a better total solution for customers. On the Sun side, we&#8217;re certainly looking forward to building out uniprocessor Dual and Quad Core processor systems. I think we&#8217;ve also suggested that we&#8217;re not just going to end there, this is -- again, we see the marketplace is growing, both in requirements as well as the need for scale. We&#8217;re going to be building out things that are greater than four way, and I don&#8217;t think it takes a lot of creativity to figure out what&#8217;s greater than four way, but it sounds an awful lot like an eight way. As we go -- yeah, six way, probably not. Again, this is a mechanism for both of us to get together to do the engineering, to do the hard work, to invent things that really capture and captivate consumers. So, with that I&#8217;d like to pass the pickle to -- actually you have your own pickle. Paul Otellini, Chief Executive Officer in Intel. Thank you very much. Paul Otellini - Intel Thank you, gentleman. As Jonathan said at one level the very highest level, this is about Intel endorsing and embracing Solaris and this about Sun endorsing and embracing Xeon, but I think there is a lot more behind that story and to give you some of our perspective on that. I thought it has been just a couple of seconds talking about how we at Intel view the enterprise environment today. At the highest level, the biggest single thing that&#8217;s happening is it all data centers regardless of their size are now focusing on evolving to a service oriented architecture and what that means we&#8217;ve think about the data center providing the critical services for a company, large or small. It means you start worrying about the cost of that echoes of that environment. They overall ecosystem built out in a particular how you use your equipment. Thinks like utilization rights of servers are becoming very, very critical particularly in the era of rising energy cause. So, you want to able to use them more, but also have them costless in terms of the overall construct at the data center. As this happens, we look at things that are important to CIO&#8217;s and data center managers today. One of the things that&#8217;s popped up to us is that Solaris is evolving as a mainstream operating system, as you saw some other rate on the downloads, but it also it&#8217;s mainstream and enough itself and just to the equipment the Sun ships. Now we&#8217;ve the opportunity to have Intel Inside many of those boxes, but it is becoming as the slide as the Mission-critical UNIX for Xeon. What is that mean? It means that we can collaborate together to make sure that the feature sets that people are -- who buyers are focused on that is availability, reliability, Demand Base Switching, virtualization those kinds of features can be unleashed from the microprocessor through the operating system into the hardware the people buy, this lowers are in customers cost and increases the utilization rights. It&#8217;s all very, very good. All the customers are demanding more, more flexibility, interoperability that also a strong argument for us to work together Sun is in a unique position, rather unique position or being the operating system vendor and the supplier of the hardware. That means, we can collaborate to be able to take advantage of a lot of these deep features been in a microprocessors and surrounding architectures. Then the third point is the Intel architecture is expanding. It&#8217;s expanding upwards into the high end of the data centers and downwards into mobile devices, but if you&#8217;re independent software developer, thinking about Solaris now, being able to think about Solaris and conjunction with Xeon, which is the volume leader in the marketplace. It&#8217;s really important to you as a software developer. You can now take advance of the install base of the Intel hardware that&#8217;s out there from Sun and other vendors, but also focus your efforts on Solaris. In terms on Solaris on Xeon in terms of being able to find new markets for your software. In terms of Intel in the enterprise, the driving feature in the enterprise is Moore&#8217;s law. It&#8217;s been sold for almost 13 years now and Moore&#8217;s law gives us more, more transistors. Up until very recently, the more transistors met simply higher clock speeds. That&#8217;s changed it changed in the last year and it&#8217;s going to change. I think systemically going forward to where we&#8217;ll deliver more performance, but we do it through delivering multiple cores more and more cores of microprocessors on a single chip. That leads to overall lower power requirements, lower cost but gives people more performance. That transistor budget though the Moore&#8217;s law gives us, also gives us the ability think but it is the template to put new features on to the chips. You&#8217;re seeing Intel developed things like I/O virtualization. Virtualization of the kernel capabilities to build or run multiple operating system environments on a single microprocessor, which is been true in mainframes for long time and now is coming down to volume-based servers. Intel -- from our perspective has done a good job in the last year, meeting all of our commitments in terms of new products coming into the marketplace. We&#8217;ve been at or ahead of schedule on every new server chip we&#8217;ve developed and we now have industry leading performance on 28th of the top 29 industry benchmarks for servers in terms of performance or energy efficiency of those kinds of metrics. We were the first to market with quad Core. We started shipping quad Core in the third quarter and ramp that volume up in the fourth quarter. Now you see our quad Core products setting performance metric records out in the industry. We&#8217;re stopping Jonathan talked about a deep collaboration. That collaboration goes beyond today&#8217;s products and we&#8217;re excited about working with Sun or what we can do tomorrow, not just 2007 but beyond. We have a lot of new and exciting products coming out on the next generation Silicon Technology, which is 45 nanometers. This technology is extremely healthy at our conference call last week. We talked about Intel now, microprocessors built on this technology, booting four operating systems and for those members of the press that are interested we&#8217;re going to have a deep breathing on 45 nanometers up in Oregon next Monday. You can talk to our PR people. If you&#8217;re interested in attending that that would be one we can actually see what a construct of this technology is like, look the fab look at the products that have been built on it. I think it will be very exciting for you. We have three fabs coming up on this technology in 2008, but I think I talked enough about the technology maybe I think it would be best now to turn a back over to Jonathan and he can tell you about why he was interested in Intel. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun I offered earlier in the day to allow Paul to walk you through this slide. I am, so, thinking about this. This is actually as a very natural collaboration and I want to try to convey to you how we think about our business and how you should look about the some of the strategic moves you&#8217;re going to continue to see from Sun as we go drive forward. Every business we built at Sun is independent of the others. They are related to one another, but they cannot be exclusively dependent upon one another. If all we do is built software for our own microprocessors or our own systems. We&#8217;ll by definition not be able to go after &#8211; majority of the marketplace. The same applies for our storage business. We cannot simply attach to Sun servers or to the Sun software that obviously misses the majority of the marketplace. By definition, we&#8217;re a minority of the marketplace and we&#8217;re looking forward to go participate in as broad a market as possible. So, you can dismiss the fact that one looking at our software business, there is a very natural relationship with the volume microprocessor leader in the marketplace. Again if you look at the numbers that are out there, if you look at where people built applications. They&#8217;re building them on Intel microprocessors they&#8217;re building them on laptops and notebooks, PCs as well as servers. So, for us, this is an enormous expansion of the market potential, because we can leverage Intel&#8217;s brand, Intel&#8217;s reach, Intel&#8217;s momentum in the marketplace that gives to our consumers to developers as well as the enterprises, more choice and more options that creates more value for Sun. In the fact that we can reach a much, much broader marketplace. So, frankly along with the technical expertise the fact that when we hurdle together, we end up having engineering interchanges, which create value for both companies. One of the most exciting things here and I think one of the things that is, is really the story underlying all of this. Is the fact that Intel and Sun getting together around the promotion and the endorsement of Solaris changes the game in the marketplace; what was, potentially in question two or three years ago, which is what happens to Solaris. Does it suffer the same fate as some of the other UNIX is in the marketplace that issue is now off the table. We clearly have volume, we clearly can work together with Intel to amplify that volume and not just &#8211; go look at the market as it currently is and sharing a vision of where the market is headed next to what Paul just said? The fact that we can excitedly sit down with Intel and say tell us the features you&#8217;d like us to expose through the operating system. We&#8217;re already talking about I/O virtualization as well as the next generation of network optimization of application performance. These are the kinds of things we can do working together and again that creates market opportunity for Sun, creates adoption, and momentum behind Solaris, and if there is a better leading indicator for the future of Sun&#8217;s fortune, I can&#8217;t think of it than the adoption and the proliferation of Solaris. So, tell us this is a very natural relationship, we&#8217;re very appreciative of the work that the Sun and Intel teams have been doing over the past 6 months as we tried to figure out or how is it we worked together. I think we have had a bit of an ebb and flow in our relationship and I think we&#8217;ve only been detecting flow in the past 6 months and I think we want to continue seeing that go forwards, so again this is to us, this is a historic moment. This definitively changes the game in the operating system landscape, changes the market opportunity for Sun gives developers that want to use technologies from Sun as well as from Intel new choices, new opportunities, new performance, new economics. The fact that we can give more choice to customers that ISV&#8217;s have a higher volume platform now to plan. There is just a tremendous opportunity both for the Intel side as well as for the Sun side. So, we can do what we do best and in concert with Intel&#8217;s obvious strength and volume, and brand out in the marketplace. We can combine forces to really go after a next ways of opportunity. So, again, I don&#8217;t think we could be happy with the relationship, more expectant of the benefits. This is going to bring to us and to bring to customers ultimately at the end of the day. It&#8217;s all about them any ways. So, with that why not I turn it over to Russ and maybe we&#8217;ll field some questions. Russ So, we&#8217;ve got some folks moving around the room here with some microphones. So, in just a moment, we&#8217;ll start, but I&#8217;ll do have to ask you or we&#8217;re going to be online on the web, so I need to identify yourself and the company you&#8217;re with, so that people listening in and can also get that information and with that it also if you like to direct your questions to either of these two, just let us -- let me know. So, with that I think we&#8217;ll start. Tom Hi, Tom Sanders (Inaudible) where will the Intel processor sit next to the AMD line? Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Right next to it; different boards. Paul Otellini - Intel Yeah, probably different boards; haven&#8217;t got on that level of collaboration yet. Tom I mean is it going to be -- can I choose between a Intel skew and an AMD skew for the identical system or what is it going to look like? Jonathan Schwartz - Sun So, I guess two things, one, I&#8217;d refer you to John Fallow (ph) and he can talk about specifics of the segments we&#8217;re going after. The end of the day, customer will define that. The customer will determine what they want to buy from Sun and what the underlying infrastructure needs to look like? That applies by the way to software as well as hardware because we do an awful lot of business out in the marketplace now, satisfying Window&#8217;s demand as much as Linux&#8217;s demand. So, that&#8217;s not so much a grand strategic plan about how we carve up the market that&#8217;s really a &#8211; let&#8217;s look at the marketplace let&#8217;s go figure out where Intel innovation really creates new opportunity, let&#8217;s go after that. Ian Kinfer - Bloomberg News Ian Kinfer; Bloomberg News. Jonathan. you mentioned number of facts is one into your decision, but all other the things you said about Intel is pretty much always been true of the Intel in terms of scale, size, power in the marketplace, so why now would be the question place. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Well I think a few things, number one the fact that Solaris was growing as rapidly as that has not always been true. I mean go look at the chart is just been a rocket ride up into the right that changes again. Secondly our server business has been growing double digits and that&#8217;s over the past four consecutive quarters on the spot side, triple digits on the x64 side. Frankly I think we&#8217;re different company in were obviously coming at this relationship in a very different way. Thirdly, I think there has been a change in our view of the marketplace and how we want to go after it, maybe leaving some of the rhetoric of the past behind us. Again, one of the first calls I made having gotten my shiny new job was to call Paul and say, &#8220;what can we do together?&#8221; because clear -- of course, we&#8217;re going to compete we&#8217;re both very large companies. We compete with almost everybody in the marketplace, but where can we go collaborate to create value for both companies, so again this is an either/or relationship for Sun. This is very much in an relationship. I think it is also a reflection on time and place, but maybe I&#8217;d also ask Paul to respond to that. Paul Otellini - Intel Sure. From our perspective, this is not just a chip deal, that&#8217;s certainly is what we&#8217;re all about and is important to us from both the credibility standpoint and the commercial aspects of the relationship, but it is not insignificant for us to commit to endorsing Solaris. This means we&#8217;ll put deep engineering on it, we&#8217;ll put field resources on it and that is from our perspective not just because I like Jonathan, but I think it&#8217;s a really good commercial opportunity for us. The install basis Solaris in a lot of places where Intel is not in some cases. Financial services and telecommunication are two markets where Solaris is very strong there being able to offer an optimize environment on Solaris, on Xeon into those marketplaces, make sense for us and it goes beyond the traditional chip sales aspect of the collaboration. Speaker The questions (ph) seem to be very quick. Merv Adrian - Forrester Research Merv Adrian from Forrester. Can you give us a little color as to when you think you&#8217;ll start to ship systems. You said this year, but can you be anymore specific; you think it&#8217;s year end, you think it is going to come any quicker on that? Paul Otellini &#8211; Sun We&#8217;re shipping right now; Solaris running on Xeon - go to Sun.com/solaris, get it downloaded, run it. It runs well; it will only run better. And for the specifics of when we start shipping Intel systems, I guess I&#8217;d defer to John, late in the first half of 07. Can&#8217;t you do better than that John? Stephen Shankland &#8211; CNetNews.com Stephen Shankland from CNetNews.com. In the past, you guys have been concerned about keeping a cap on your R&amp;#38;D budget; clearly this increases the amount of R&amp;#38;D. You&#8217;ll have to do engineering; you&#8217;ll to do hardware and software qualifications and certification. I wonder if you can comment on how much of a difference this is going to mean to Sun&#8217;s business also in terms of &#8211; would just take some supply chain -- are you - presumably you think it is going to be justified, but how important is that factor and are you going to be getting any help in those activities from Intel? Jonathan Schwartz &#8211; Sun Yeah and in fact just to the beginning part; this, is in our view, actually lowers the expense because now we&#8217;ve a collaborator who is willing to work with us to court and cultivate and invest in the success of the ecosystem. So, this is a way of making R&amp;#38;D much, much more efficient. We can do what we do best and really now work with Intel to make sure that they can bring all that Intel has to bear against ensuring the success of Solaris. I think the way we look at R&amp;#38;D, we&#8217;re not interested in &#8211; nor is Paul for that matter in capping R&amp;#38;D. We are interested in the return on R&amp;#38;D. And so long as we can get a return, we are interested in amplifying that to the extent certainly possible. And I think this is a way of ensuring, we get a better return for the R&amp;#38;D we are doing. Again, Solaris just running on Sun -- on SPARC Systems or just running on AMD systems misses the majority of the marketplace. We want to go after the majority of the marketplace. Sun simply delivering SPARC Systems or simply shipping AMD systems misses the Intel opportunity. We want to make sure we can participate in both equally. I think one of the unspoken assets that Intel has is, they got a big software team. They know an awful lot about software; and the fact that we can get together to optimize Java, we can optimize Net means that we can optimize Solaris; makes their systems look better, makes our operating system look better, makes the overall customer set happier -- that&#8217;s all goodness as far as I am concerned. And again, I don&#8217;t know if you want to add to that. Michael Singer &#8211; InformationWeek Michael Singer with InformationWeek. Talk about your -- you might have alluded to it before, but what were the previous barriers, because both of you had guiders before you took your posts that had a different relationship than you two have today. What was it that broke down those barriers and for you Jonathan and then for Paul? Was it just that you had a new opportunity with Sun that allowed you to take that choice to make this decision today or can you kind of, give us some call on that? Paul Otellini - Intel I think it was a bottle of Barolo at Delfina; I think that really - really good bottle. Jonathan Schwartz &#8211; Sun You know leave history aside, we think -- and I think what motivates both of us is, we think there is opportunity &#8211; let&#8217;s get busy - let&#8217;s get after the opportunity. And what do you got, what have we got, how do we put it together in ways that goes off and creates value. So I think, we&#8217;re both looking forward and looking at customers -- and by the way, just talk to any customer out there; no one could possibly think that this is anything other than a brilliant partnership; all these does is create options and choice for them. Paul Otellini - Intel One of the things I think is interesting to observe is that we are coming together at a time when both companies had very positive momentum both in the market and in our products; a momentum behind Solaris, we had a momentum behind the double-digit growth in servers, momentum behind Intel&#8217;s new product lines and so forth. And I have always thought that momentum breeds momentum; and the idea that we could get -- the two of us working together, could only multiply as what we could have done independently and that was the principal reason for me to really want to do this. Audience Member So Jonathan, you&#8217;re going to start releasing Dual Processors, Xeon Systems in the first half, which is pretty soon. How long have you actually been developing these systems and also can you comment on when you expect the 4P and uniprocessor systems to come; but basically when did you start working it? How long has this been under cover? Jonathan Schwartz &#8211; Sun We &#8211; and again just so you think about -- we don&#8217;t take the team that&#8217;s working on these systems and have them completely segregated and isolated from every other team at Sun. We have really deep systems engineering expertise; and frankly, the fact that they were only working on SPARC - you know, microprocessors, under-leveraged the talent they had that could enable us to get into new markets. So we have a unified systems team at Sun that builds all the systems we build. So, in that regard, along with Solaris, which is obviously more than two decades in evolution, we&#8217;ve been working an awfully long time in the same space. The question was, when were we really going to commit to build common products. And I think that relationship has been going on for a while, because we&#8217;ve seen one another in the marketplace so often. So I don&#8217;t know if I could put a specific date on when did we actually sit down and say okay, what are the aspects and performance and in-outs and how do we go make this -- just didn&#8217;t work that way. And in terms of the specific ship dates, I am not going to give that to you. You&#8217;d give it to the other guy. Yeah, it was a good try still. But again, I&#8217;d like to remind you, Solaris runs beautifully on Xeon, is available at Sun.com/Solaris. Rush I guess Michael. Michael Singer - InformationWeek On the software side, obviously Intel is adopting more the Solaris, but Jonathan talk about Intel software business, and what are the sort of gold nuggets within say TBB or BePro (ph) or what are the things that you&#8217;re looking forward to sort of enhancing that you may not already have in Solaris or NetBeans or Java for that matter? Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Are you asking him or me? Michael Singer - InformationWeek You. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Let me give you a very simple example. Virtualization in a chip is less interesting if it&#8217;s not exposed by the operating system. If the operating system doesn&#8217;t know how to deal with it or leverage it or take advantage of it that makes the overall systems package less interesting. If we can synchronize and coordinate our releases around virtualization, whether it&#8217;s application virtualization, OS virtualization, or network virtualization, that&#8217;s only upside. I was with a customer just last week, who is in a very, very high scale and very high value environment, and one of the points they made, which was I think similar to the point that Paul made, is we&#8217;re the only company in the marketplace today that delivers both the operating systems and the underlying system infrastructure, the only one. Now, a few years ago that was viewed as a deficit that was a bad thing, because that wasn&#8217;t the future. Well, now the fact that we can coordinate our releases and work with partners to make sure that we sit down with Paul&#8217;s team and say, what&#8217;s coming up and how can we help you amplify it in the marketplace, that adds value to them and also adds value to us. That applies across Solaris as well as Java. I mean again, to really understand the Sun model, we want Solaris to absolutely scream on Xeon, to blow everyone else in the marketplace away. Paul Otellini - Intel If I could just jump in there. The two other areas I think would be interesting, at least from our perspective. Solaris being able to take advantage of Intel&#8217;s I/O acceleration technology for the whole I/O part of the system to run faster. Demand based switching, so we can move task back and forth very quickly, exposing that from the hardware to the operating system would be very interesting to us. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Ultimately, if we do a better job of optimizing Solaris on Xeon, because we can, then that means it&#8217;s going to win in the marketplace, but we want to present customer with choice, we want to do what we can to amplify the best of everything we build. Rush Steven. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Don, you&#8217;re silent back there, what&#8217;s going on? Don Happy to yield the mike down. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun I read your blog, I can start asking you questions now. So Don, what do you think of the deal? Don So, where do you see now SPARC and Itanium competing in the future, how do you divide the x86 line from the SPARC line, and in your case, Paul, the Itanium line? Jonathan Schwartz - Sun We don&#8217;t divide it, we try to go after as much market as we can, but these are loosely coupled than highly aligned business, and so we want to see Solaris succeed on all platforms on which it ships. The fact that we&#8217;ve got four consecutive quarters of growth behind us suggests there is more than enough opportunity across all the disparate product lines. We want to go after all the opportunity and not just isolate ourselves to one. Paul Otellini - Intel I guess for my perspective, the very positive part of this relationship is the ability to work together to get the Xeon based systems greater than four, up and running, and delivering really good results into the marketplace. Sun is a good company to collaborate with from that perspective. I think it will be the wrong thing to do to reopen the religious war or Itanium. Itanium is a separate product line right now, Solaris does not support Itanium. If they decide to support it, we&#8217;d love it, if they don&#8217;t, that&#8217;s just business decision on their side. Russ Steven. Steven So, related question, which is big-iron on x86, it&#8217;s something a lot of people have tried for a very long time, Sequent, all these companies that have vanished into the midst, and it&#8217;s something I guess really, IBM is the only enthusiast for, do you think that Sun is going to be the company that finally gets big-iron x86 to break out, Paul? Paul Otellini - Intel Gosh, I hope so, but&#8230; Jonathan Schwartz - Sun He meant to say yes. Paul Otellini - Intel The reason I said that is, is that there are other customers working on 8 and above Xeon as well, not necessarily in this country, so you probably don&#8217;t have as much visibility to them, but we see that happening elsewhere. I think that in -- if you look at, from our perspective, a snapshot or a side view of the Solaris marketplace in terms of some of those very critical mission, mission critical markets and data intensive markets like financial service or Telco, well, the thing is it has to be reliable has heck, that allows us to get Xeon into the space where it isn&#8217;t really today. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Maybe then to give you more confidence in that, the single biggest determinant of the success of a high scale x86 system will be the popularity of the operating system that runs on a single socket x86 system. You cannot start by saying I&#8217;d like to build a 16 way x86 system, and oh, I would probably need an operating system. No one starts their business on a 16 way system, they all start their businesses and they all start their projects on one way. So, the fact that we can show up in the marketplace with a one socket system that -- I mean again, this is the recipe we know well. What&#8217;s led to the success of Sun Systems business is the fact that we&#8217;ve had complete binary compatibility up and down the product set. So, the fact that we&#8217;re going to be in this space with our own systems, and by the way with an operating system that eats threads for lunch and scales beautifully, should give us a little bit of a boost that maybe some of the other players haven&#8217;t had. Russ So, I think I&#8217;m going to have one more question here. So, if anybody would like to be the last questionnaire, that would be great, if not, we will end early. Michael, give it another go? Speaker No question Duncan. Audience Member So, the last question is on Service Oriented Architecture, SOA. We&#8217;ve heard about writing to the chip, writing to the OS, we write to the SOA stack, so what is it that you now bring to the table, Paul, that wasn&#8217;t previously already there with the current processor systems that you have in place Jonathan? Paul Otellini - Intel I&#8217;m sorry, what is it, that we bring to the... Audience Member Yeah, what is that you&#8217;re now bringing to SOA that Jonathan couldn&#8217;t do already? Paul Otellini - Intel Well, on his SPARC side, he&#8217;s been doing it for sometime. On the x86 side, I think we&#8217;re very comfortable with our first implementation, a visualization. We&#8217;ve a second instantiation of that coming down the pipeline that I think is substantially better than the competition. We have other things I talked about earlier in terms of I/O Acceleration, demand-based switching. The terms of the ability for us to use the advance silicon technology we&#8217;re about to deploy, to deliver not just performers, but energy efficient performers, leadership, makes the end systems better. SOA isn&#8217;t just what it does, its how it does it and how much does it cost, and we think that we help that whole equation in terms of power performance. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Just to amplify what Paul said that, the single biggest issue with SOA in the marketplace -- and look SOA is a horrible buzzword, and we can all agree that it represents something, but no can quite identify what it is. The single biggest issue in the data center, just economics, brutal efficiency, environmental capacity, that I think is -- that&#8217;s become the dominant issue in large scale enterprises, that&#8217;s very different than developer productivity, where obviously we&#8217;ve been making a lot of progress with NetBeans and the Java platform. So, I think just ending here, I want to thank Paul specifically and also especially the Intel team. This has been a long time coming and I know there&#8217;s been a lot of hard work that&#8217;s been put into it. We are thrilled to death with the market opportunities. We&#8217;re both going to go evolve and couldn&#8217;t be happier with the progress we&#8217;ve made to date, and couldn&#8217;t be more excited about the progress we&#8217;re going to make in the marketplace. So, thank you all very much. Paul Otellini - Intel Thank you. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun It is much appreciated. Paul Otellini - Intel We iterate that from our side, thank you. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Good. Copyright &amp;#169;2006 PodTech.net. All rights reserved. Privacy policy Tags: Sun, Jonathan Schwartz, Intel, Paul Otellini</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz and Intel CEO Paul Otellini took the stage in San Francisco Monday to announce a new alliance. Listen here for the audio of the entire presentation and the Q&amp;A session. Transcript: Guest: Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Guest: Paul Otellini - Intel Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Well, good morning everybody. I think we&#8217;ve got a pretty interesting day ahead of us. What I&#8217;d like to do is, first of all, welcome Paul and the Intel team. As somebody earlier remarked, it was interesting to see those two logos side by side up there, with no spontaneous creation of energy around them. We think today really changes the marketplace for Sun, it certainly opens up a new era in our future. We are really looking forward to talking through what it is that we&#8217;re all about. So, what I&#8217;d like to do, and maybe give Paul an opportunity to take a little rest here, is actually talk back to a meeting, and I don&#8217;t know if you remember this Paul, but when I was announced as the CEO of Sun, that was back in April of last year, I made a series of phone calls, and probably first on the list was a call to Paul to say, surely, there&#8217;s more that we could do together. I mean we are really fundamentally engineering companies, we&#8217;re both really focused on innovation and opportunity. We then had dinner in a San Francisco restaurant, which Paul enjoyed a great deal, he came to my neighborhood, which I was happy about. We really got to talking about the marketplace, and it really struck me at that point, the more we talked, the more similarly we viewed the market, the more similarly we viewed the market opportunity. A slide that can give you a little picture of that is really quite simple. The more folks come online, the more services they want to get access to. You want to get access to your Gmail account, you want to get access to your work, you want to get access to the new entertainment services. The more folks we could bring online, the more opportunity on the network, the more opportunity that would drive in the world&#8217;s data centers and network operation centers to fuel that demand. This is a very simple idea, but really the volume on the front end of this is what defines our markets. The accessibility, the affordability, and the innovation that really captivates consumers brings people online and creates economic opportunity, and certainly for Sun and Intel back in the world&#8217;s data centers. So, what I thought I could do is just give you a little bit of a perspective on, not only our business model and the way we see the marketplace, but put our relationship today in the context of the business that we&#8217;re ultimately building, and then I will turn it over to Paul to talk about some of the things that we&#8217;re going to be doing together. So, if you spend anytime around Sun, you&#8217;ll hear us talk about the four S&#8217;s. We&#8217;re basically in four businesses, and those businesses are Software, Server, Services and Storage. Now, for us those businesses are a Venn diagram, because there is a considerable amount of overlap between them. Customers really don&#8217;t want to have to make four entirely distinct and separate and disparate decisions, and similarly as an R&amp;#38;D company, we don&#8217;t want to have to do completely independent R&amp;#38;D to go pursue these marketplaces. So, we want to leverage to the extent that we can the core innovations we have at Sun, the core systems engineering expertise, software expertise, and market expertise. To the extent that we can, that creates a very efficient model for R&amp;#38;D as well as a very efficient mechanism to go pursue the marketplace, but importantly for Sun, we cannot be just about our own intellectual property. We cannot simply attempt to lock piece A to piece B and piece C, that&#8217;s not how customers buy as we see in the marketplace, that&#8217;s not what ultimately we believe the market actually wants. So, if you look at how we go pursue the marketplace, we tend to meet customers where they are today. Our servers at this point run both the SPARC as well as AMD, and going forward, the Intel servers we build are not just about running Solaris, they&#8217;re about running Windows, they&#8217;re about running Linux, they&#8217;re about running Red Hat. The software we ship, and I&#8217;ll give you a graphic to really make this point in a moment, dominantly runs off of Sun hardware. The majority of the software that Sun builds is running on Nokia hardware or on Intel hardware or on -- certainly non-Sun hardware, HP, Dell laptops and notebooks along with those systems and servers up in the network. Our storage business tends to be very, very cross platform. A very significant portion of the storage we build in the marketplace, whether it&#8217;s archive systems or enterprise storage, attaches to an IBM mainframe or to an HP server, or to a Windows server. Then finally our services business, customers don&#8217;t want to just go to a company they can support only its own products, they need those products in deployment attached to a world of other innovations and opportunities. So, really this is our view of the marketplace. We meet customers at the edges of this Venn diagram and then we do our best to bring them toward the centre, knowing full well, there&#8217;s only one customer in the world who only buys from Sun and that&#8217;s our Chief Information Officer and we don&#8217;t expect to clone him anytime soon. So, fundamentally behind this is a very simple concept that I know -- also, Paul and I spoke about, which is a belief that volume drives value. So, what you see up in front of you here is a chart showing since we announced the open sourcing of Solaris, announcing that Solaris would be cross platform, would run on anybody&#8217;s hardware, what happened when we left those downloads free onto the networks? So, you&#8217;ll see back in March of 2005, when we began this program, we have come close to, if not, I don&#8217;t have the exact numbers in front of me right now, around 7 million licenses total distributed out into the marketplaces, 7 million licenses. What&#8217;s truly interesting about those download figures is how significant a proportion of those downloads are actually running on Intel and x86 hardware out in the marketplace, nearly 70%. So, 7/10 downloads, 7/10 of those licenses of Solaris into the marketplace were not running on Sun hardware, they were running on Intel innovation. They were running on systems built by HP and DELL and IBM, and clearly if there is going to be an indication of opportunity for us to work together, it looked an awful lot like, here is a great motivation. It&#8217;s evident that customers wanted us to work together, and so clearly we wanted to do exactly that. So, I think you&#8217;ve seen some of the news come out this morning, but as we were discussing with the media this morning, you&#8217;ve seen one out of three elements of this relationship. To just walk you through what in fact is going on. We are announcing today a relationship in which Intel will endorse Solaris, will support it across a broad range of Xeon platforms, will agree to OEM Solaris out into the marketplace, and to ensure that the market gets the support it needs in running and optimizing Solaris on Xeon platforms. This is a market changing event. This totally changes the perspective that a customer has on how they can do business with Sun, and similarly how they can do business with Intel. So, Intel has agreed to really promote Solaris, to help us collectively go off and build the marketplace and the ecosystem around that, and reciprocally Sun is announcing today that we are going to be building a complete line of Xeon servers as well as workstations, complementing and augmenting a very rapidly growing server business that we have at Sun. You&#8217;ve probably seen the double digit growth we&#8217;ve posted now for consecutive quarters. This just opens yet more opportunity creates more choice for consumers, and again, not just running Solaris, but running Windows as well as Linux that&#8217;s out there. Lastly, and I think what&#8217;s most interesting to me is -- in fact our teams had a dinner back in December to help prep them for working together on getting this agreement struck, and it was evident, we had all of the heads of our product businesses there, and similarly Paul had some of his leading products folks there as well. We&#8217;re both engineering companies, we&#8217;re both companies focused on technology, focused on the advancement of our own technologies, using process, using wisdom about the marketplace to create new innovations that really capture and captivate consumers. So, we&#8217;re also announcing today that we&#8217;re going to be collaborating on the next generation of our software leveraging Intel software expertise, the next generation of systems leveraging Intel microprocessors as well as Sun Systems engineering capabilities. What does that hold for the future? Time will tell, we&#8217;re pretty certain you all will be paying attention to that, and certainly we think there is just a world of opportunity out in front of us. So, this is really a comprehensive relationship. This is not simply a buy-sell arrangement. This is a mechanism that brings the two of us together and creates new market opportunities and new options as well as new value for both of us. So, the substance of our collaboration, why don&#8217;t I just quickly walk you through this, I think you can read this on your own. Again, from the Intel side, Solaris will now be a Tier 1 operating system in the Intel definition, which again confers upon Sun and the ecosystem built up around Solaris in the OpenSolaris Community, a great opportunity to go drive after the volume leading microprocessors in the marketplace. This really brings Intel&#8217;s involvement in not just the product evolution, but also the community evolution around the Open Source Java platform, NetBeans, as well as Solaris. Then importantly, Intel is going to help make sure that we know how to optimize Solaris well for Intel microprocessors, so we end up with a better total solution for customers. On the Sun side, we&#8217;re certainly looking forward to building out uniprocessor Dual and Quad Core processor systems. I think we&#8217;ve also suggested that we&#8217;re not just going to end there, this is -- again, we see the marketplace is growing, both in requirements as well as the need for scale. We&#8217;re going to be building out things that are greater than four way, and I don&#8217;t think it takes a lot of creativity to figure out what&#8217;s greater than four way, but it sounds an awful lot like an eight way. As we go -- yeah, six way, probably not. Again, this is a mechanism for both of us to get together to do the engineering, to do the hard work, to invent things that really capture and captivate consumers. So, with that I&#8217;d like to pass the pickle to -- actually you have your own pickle. Paul Otellini, Chief Executive Officer in Intel. Thank you very much. Paul Otellini - Intel Thank you, gentleman. As Jonathan said at one level the very highest level, this is about Intel endorsing and embracing Solaris and this about Sun endorsing and embracing Xeon, but I think there is a lot more behind that story and to give you some of our perspective on that. I thought it has been just a couple of seconds talking about how we at Intel view the enterprise environment today. At the highest level, the biggest single thing that&#8217;s happening is it all data centers regardless of their size are now focusing on evolving to a service oriented architecture and what that means we&#8217;ve think about the data center providing the critical services for a company, large or small. It means you start worrying about the cost of that echoes of that environment. They overall ecosystem built out in a particular how you use your equipment. Thinks like utilization rights of servers are becoming very, very critical particularly in the era of rising energy cause. So, you want to able to use them more, but also have them costless in terms of the overall construct at the data center. As this happens, we look at things that are important to CIO&#8217;s and data center managers today. One of the things that&#8217;s popped up to us is that Solaris is evolving as a mainstream operating system, as you saw some other rate on the downloads, but it also it&#8217;s mainstream and enough itself and just to the equipment the Sun ships. Now we&#8217;ve the opportunity to have Intel Inside many of those boxes, but it is becoming as the slide as the Mission-critical UNIX for Xeon. What is that mean? It means that we can collaborate together to make sure that the feature sets that people are -- who buyers are focused on that is availability, reliability, Demand Base Switching, virtualization those kinds of features can be unleashed from the microprocessor through the operating system into the hardware the people buy, this lowers are in customers cost and increases the utilization rights. It&#8217;s all very, very good. All the customers are demanding more, more flexibility, interoperability that also a strong argument for us to work together Sun is in a unique position, rather unique position or being the operating system vendor and the supplier of the hardware. That means, we can collaborate to be able to take advantage of a lot of these deep features been in a microprocessors and surrounding architectures. Then the third point is the Intel architecture is expanding. It&#8217;s expanding upwards into the high end of the data centers and downwards into mobile devices, but if you&#8217;re independent software developer, thinking about Solaris now, being able to think about Solaris and conjunction with Xeon, which is the volume leader in the marketplace. It&#8217;s really important to you as a software developer. You can now take advance of the install base of the Intel hardware that&#8217;s out there from Sun and other vendors, but also focus your efforts on Solaris. In terms on Solaris on Xeon in terms of being able to find new markets for your software. In terms of Intel in the enterprise, the driving feature in the enterprise is Moore&#8217;s law. It&#8217;s been sold for almost 13 years now and Moore&#8217;s law gives us more, more transistors. Up until very recently, the more transistors met simply higher clock speeds. That&#8217;s changed it changed in the last year and it&#8217;s going to change. I think systemically going forward to where we&#8217;ll deliver more performance, but we do it through delivering multiple cores more and more cores of microprocessors on a single chip. That leads to overall lower power requirements, lower cost but gives people more performance. That transistor budget though the Moore&#8217;s law gives us, also gives us the ability think but it is the template to put new features on to the chips. You&#8217;re seeing Intel developed things like I/O virtualization. Virtualization of the kernel capabilities to build or run multiple operating system environments on a single microprocessor, which is been true in mainframes for long time and now is coming down to volume-based servers. Intel -- from our perspective has done a good job in the last year, meeting all of our commitments in terms of new products coming into the marketplace. We&#8217;ve been at or ahead of schedule on every new server chip we&#8217;ve developed and we now have industry leading performance on 28th of the top 29 industry benchmarks for servers in terms of performance or energy efficiency of those kinds of metrics. We were the first to market with quad Core. We started shipping quad Core in the third quarter and ramp that volume up in the fourth quarter. Now you see our quad Core products setting performance metric records out in the industry. We&#8217;re stopping Jonathan talked about a deep collaboration. That collaboration goes beyond today&#8217;s products and we&#8217;re excited about working with Sun or what we can do tomorrow, not just 2007 but beyond. We have a lot of new and exciting products coming out on the next generation Silicon Technology, which is 45 nanometers. This technology is extremely healthy at our conference call last week. We talked about Intel now, microprocessors built on this technology, booting four operating systems and for those members of the press that are interested we&#8217;re going to have a deep breathing on 45 nanometers up in Oregon next Monday. You can talk to our PR people. If you&#8217;re interested in attending that that would be one we can actually see what a construct of this technology is like, look the fab look at the products that have been built on it. I think it will be very exciting for you. We have three fabs coming up on this technology in 2008, but I think I talked enough about the technology maybe I think it would be best now to turn a back over to Jonathan and he can tell you about why he was interested in Intel. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun I offered earlier in the day to allow Paul to walk you through this slide. I am, so, thinking about this. This is actually as a very natural collaboration and I want to try to convey to you how we think about our business and how you should look about the some of the strategic moves you&#8217;re going to continue to see from Sun as we go drive forward. Every business we built at Sun is independent of the others. They are related to one another, but they cannot be exclusively dependent upon one another. If all we do is built software for our own microprocessors or our own systems. We&#8217;ll by definition not be able to go after &#8211; majority of the marketplace. The same applies for our storage business. We cannot simply attach to Sun servers or to the Sun software that obviously misses the majority of the marketplace. By definition, we&#8217;re a minority of the marketplace and we&#8217;re looking forward to go participate in as broad a market as possible. So, you can dismiss the fact that one looking at our software business, there is a very natural relationship with the volume microprocessor leader in the marketplace. Again if you look at the numbers that are out there, if you look at where people built applications. They&#8217;re building them on Intel microprocessors they&#8217;re building them on laptops and notebooks, PCs as well as servers. So, for us, this is an enormous expansion of the market potential, because we can leverage Intel&#8217;s brand, Intel&#8217;s reach, Intel&#8217;s momentum in the marketplace that gives to our consumers to developers as well as the enterprises, more choice and more options that creates more value for Sun. In the fact that we can reach a much, much broader marketplace. So, frankly along with the technical expertise the fact that when we hurdle together, we end up having engineering interchanges, which create value for both companies. One of the most exciting things here and I think one of the things that is, is really the story underlying all of this. Is the fact that Intel and Sun getting together around the promotion and the endorsement of Solaris changes the game in the marketplace; what was, potentially in question two or three years ago, which is what happens to Solaris. Does it suffer the same fate as some of the other UNIX is in the marketplace that issue is now off the table. We clearly have volume, we clearly can work together with Intel to amplify that volume and not just &#8211; go look at the market as it currently is and sharing a vision of where the market is headed next to what Paul just said? The fact that we can excitedly sit down with Intel and say tell us the features you&#8217;d like us to expose through the operating system. We&#8217;re already talking about I/O virtualization as well as the next generation of network optimization of application performance. These are the kinds of things we can do working together and again that creates market opportunity for Sun, creates adoption, and momentum behind Solaris, and if there is a better leading indicator for the future of Sun&#8217;s fortune, I can&#8217;t think of it than the adoption and the proliferation of Solaris. So, tell us this is a very natural relationship, we&#8217;re very appreciative of the work that the Sun and Intel teams have been doing over the past 6 months as we tried to figure out or how is it we worked together. I think we have had a bit of an ebb and flow in our relationship and I think we&#8217;ve only been detecting flow in the past 6 months and I think we want to continue seeing that go forwards, so again this is to us, this is a historic moment. This definitively changes the game in the operating system landscape, changes the market opportunity for Sun gives developers that want to use technologies from Sun as well as from Intel new choices, new opportunities, new performance, new economics. The fact that we can give more choice to customers that ISV&#8217;s have a higher volume platform now to plan. There is just a tremendous opportunity both for the Intel side as well as for the Sun side. So, we can do what we do best and in concert with Intel&#8217;s obvious strength and volume, and brand out in the marketplace. We can combine forces to really go after a next ways of opportunity. So, again, I don&#8217;t think we could be happy with the relationship, more expectant of the benefits. This is going to bring to us and to bring to customers ultimately at the end of the day. It&#8217;s all about them any ways. So, with that why not I turn it over to Russ and maybe we&#8217;ll field some questions. Russ So, we&#8217;ve got some folks moving around the room here with some microphones. So, in just a moment, we&#8217;ll start, but I&#8217;ll do have to ask you or we&#8217;re going to be online on the web, so I need to identify yourself and the company you&#8217;re with, so that people listening in and can also get that information and with that it also if you like to direct your questions to either of these two, just let us -- let me know. So, with that I think we&#8217;ll start. Tom Hi, Tom Sanders (Inaudible) where will the Intel processor sit next to the AMD line? Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Right next to it; different boards. Paul Otellini - Intel Yeah, probably different boards; haven&#8217;t got on that level of collaboration yet. Tom I mean is it going to be -- can I choose between a Intel skew and an AMD skew for the identical system or what is it going to look like? Jonathan Schwartz - Sun So, I guess two things, one, I&#8217;d refer you to John Fallow (ph) and he can talk about specifics of the segments we&#8217;re going after. The end of the day, customer will define that. The customer will determine what they want to buy from Sun and what the underlying infrastructure needs to look like? That applies by the way to software as well as hardware because we do an awful lot of business out in the marketplace now, satisfying Window&#8217;s demand as much as Linux&#8217;s demand. So, that&#8217;s not so much a grand strategic plan about how we carve up the market that&#8217;s really a &#8211; let&#8217;s look at the marketplace let&#8217;s go figure out where Intel innovation really creates new opportunity, let&#8217;s go after that. Ian Kinfer - Bloomberg News Ian Kinfer; Bloomberg News. Jonathan. you mentioned number of facts is one into your decision, but all other the things you said about Intel is pretty much always been true of the Intel in terms of scale, size, power in the marketplace, so why now would be the question place. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Well I think a few things, number one the fact that Solaris was growing as rapidly as that has not always been true. I mean go look at the chart is just been a rocket ride up into the right that changes again. Secondly our server business has been growing double digits and that&#8217;s over the past four consecutive quarters on the spot side, triple digits on the x64 side. Frankly I think we&#8217;re different company in were obviously coming at this relationship in a very different way. Thirdly, I think there has been a change in our view of the marketplace and how we want to go after it, maybe leaving some of the rhetoric of the past behind us. Again, one of the first calls I made having gotten my shiny new job was to call Paul and say, &#8220;what can we do together?&#8221; because clear -- of course, we&#8217;re going to compete we&#8217;re both very large companies. We compete with almost everybody in the marketplace, but where can we go collaborate to create value for both companies, so again this is an either/or relationship for Sun. This is very much in an relationship. I think it is also a reflection on time and place, but maybe I&#8217;d also ask Paul to respond to that. Paul Otellini - Intel Sure. From our perspective, this is not just a chip deal, that&#8217;s certainly is what we&#8217;re all about and is important to us from both the credibility standpoint and the commercial aspects of the relationship, but it is not insignificant for us to commit to endorsing Solaris. This means we&#8217;ll put deep engineering on it, we&#8217;ll put field resources on it and that is from our perspective not just because I like Jonathan, but I think it&#8217;s a really good commercial opportunity for us. The install basis Solaris in a lot of places where Intel is not in some cases. Financial services and telecommunication are two markets where Solaris is very strong there being able to offer an optimize environment on Solaris, on Xeon into those marketplaces, make sense for us and it goes beyond the traditional chip sales aspect of the collaboration. Speaker The questions (ph) seem to be very quick. Merv Adrian - Forrester Research Merv Adrian from Forrester. Can you give us a little color as to when you think you&#8217;ll start to ship systems. You said this year, but can you be anymore specific; you think it&#8217;s year end, you think it is going to come any quicker on that? Paul Otellini &#8211; Sun We&#8217;re shipping right now; Solaris running on Xeon - go to Sun.com/solaris, get it downloaded, run it. It runs well; it will only run better. And for the specifics of when we start shipping Intel systems, I guess I&#8217;d defer to John, late in the first half of 07. Can&#8217;t you do better than that John? Stephen Shankland &#8211; CNetNews.com Stephen Shankland from CNetNews.com. In the past, you guys have been concerned about keeping a cap on your R&amp;#38;D budget; clearly this increases the amount of R&amp;#38;D. You&#8217;ll have to do engineering; you&#8217;ll to do hardware and software qualifications and certification. I wonder if you can comment on how much of a difference this is going to mean to Sun&#8217;s business also in terms of &#8211; would just take some supply chain -- are you - presumably you think it is going to be justified, but how important is that factor and are you going to be getting any help in those activities from Intel? Jonathan Schwartz &#8211; Sun Yeah and in fact just to the beginning part; this, is in our view, actually lowers the expense because now we&#8217;ve a collaborator who is willing to work with us to court and cultivate and invest in the success of the ecosystem. So, this is a way of making R&amp;#38;D much, much more efficient. We can do what we do best and really now work with Intel to make sure that they can bring all that Intel has to bear against ensuring the success of Solaris. I think the way we look at R&amp;#38;D, we&#8217;re not interested in &#8211; nor is Paul for that matter in capping R&amp;#38;D. We are interested in the return on R&amp;#38;D. And so long as we can get a return, we are interested in amplifying that to the extent certainly possible. And I think this is a way of ensuring, we get a better return for the R&amp;#38;D we are doing. Again, Solaris just running on Sun -- on SPARC Systems or just running on AMD systems misses the majority of the marketplace. We want to go after the majority of the marketplace. Sun simply delivering SPARC Systems or simply shipping AMD systems misses the Intel opportunity. We want to make sure we can participate in both equally. I think one of the unspoken assets that Intel has is, they got a big software team. They know an awful lot about software; and the fact that we can get together to optimize Java, we can optimize Net means that we can optimize Solaris; makes their systems look better, makes our operating system look better, makes the overall customer set happier -- that&#8217;s all goodness as far as I am concerned. And again, I don&#8217;t know if you want to add to that. Michael Singer &#8211; InformationWeek Michael Singer with InformationWeek. Talk about your -- you might have alluded to it before, but what were the previous barriers, because both of you had guiders before you took your posts that had a different relationship than you two have today. What was it that broke down those barriers and for you Jonathan and then for Paul? Was it just that you had a new opportunity with Sun that allowed you to take that choice to make this decision today or can you kind of, give us some call on that? Paul Otellini - Intel I think it was a bottle of Barolo at Delfina; I think that really - really good bottle. Jonathan Schwartz &#8211; Sun You know leave history aside, we think -- and I think what motivates both of us is, we think there is opportunity &#8211; let&#8217;s get busy - let&#8217;s get after the opportunity. And what do you got, what have we got, how do we put it together in ways that goes off and creates value. So I think, we&#8217;re both looking forward and looking at customers -- and by the way, just talk to any customer out there; no one could possibly think that this is anything other than a brilliant partnership; all these does is create options and choice for them. Paul Otellini - Intel One of the things I think is interesting to observe is that we are coming together at a time when both companies had very positive momentum both in the market and in our products; a momentum behind Solaris, we had a momentum behind the double-digit growth in servers, momentum behind Intel&#8217;s new product lines and so forth. And I have always thought that momentum breeds momentum; and the idea that we could get -- the two of us working together, could only multiply as what we could have done independently and that was the principal reason for me to really want to do this. Audience Member So Jonathan, you&#8217;re going to start releasing Dual Processors, Xeon Systems in the first half, which is pretty soon. How long have you actually been developing these systems and also can you comment on when you expect the 4P and uniprocessor systems to come; but basically when did you start working it? How long has this been under cover? Jonathan Schwartz &#8211; Sun We &#8211; and again just so you think about -- we don&#8217;t take the team that&#8217;s working on these systems and have them completely segregated and isolated from every other team at Sun. We have really deep systems engineering expertise; and frankly, the fact that they were only working on SPARC - you know, microprocessors, under-leveraged the talent they had that could enable us to get into new markets. So we have a unified systems team at Sun that builds all the systems we build. So, in that regard, along with Solaris, which is obviously more than two decades in evolution, we&#8217;ve been working an awfully long time in the same space. The question was, when were we really going to commit to build common products. And I think that relationship has been going on for a while, because we&#8217;ve seen one another in the marketplace so often. So I don&#8217;t know if I could put a specific date on when did we actually sit down and say okay, what are the aspects and performance and in-outs and how do we go make this -- just didn&#8217;t work that way. And in terms of the specific ship dates, I am not going to give that to you. You&#8217;d give it to the other guy. Yeah, it was a good try still. But again, I&#8217;d like to remind you, Solaris runs beautifully on Xeon, is available at Sun.com/Solaris. Rush I guess Michael. Michael Singer - InformationWeek On the software side, obviously Intel is adopting more the Solaris, but Jonathan talk about Intel software business, and what are the sort of gold nuggets within say TBB or BePro (ph) or what are the things that you&#8217;re looking forward to sort of enhancing that you may not already have in Solaris or NetBeans or Java for that matter? Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Are you asking him or me? Michael Singer - InformationWeek You. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Let me give you a very simple example. Virtualization in a chip is less interesting if it&#8217;s not exposed by the operating system. If the operating system doesn&#8217;t know how to deal with it or leverage it or take advantage of it that makes the overall systems package less interesting. If we can synchronize and coordinate our releases around virtualization, whether it&#8217;s application virtualization, OS virtualization, or network virtualization, that&#8217;s only upside. I was with a customer just last week, who is in a very, very high scale and very high value environment, and one of the points they made, which was I think similar to the point that Paul made, is we&#8217;re the only company in the marketplace today that delivers both the operating systems and the underlying system infrastructure, the only one. Now, a few years ago that was viewed as a deficit that was a bad thing, because that wasn&#8217;t the future. Well, now the fact that we can coordinate our releases and work with partners to make sure that we sit down with Paul&#8217;s team and say, what&#8217;s coming up and how can we help you amplify it in the marketplace, that adds value to them and also adds value to us. That applies across Solaris as well as Java. I mean again, to really understand the Sun model, we want Solaris to absolutely scream on Xeon, to blow everyone else in the marketplace away. Paul Otellini - Intel If I could just jump in there. The two other areas I think would be interesting, at least from our perspective. Solaris being able to take advantage of Intel&#8217;s I/O acceleration technology for the whole I/O part of the system to run faster. Demand based switching, so we can move task back and forth very quickly, exposing that from the hardware to the operating system would be very interesting to us. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Ultimately, if we do a better job of optimizing Solaris on Xeon, because we can, then that means it&#8217;s going to win in the marketplace, but we want to present customer with choice, we want to do what we can to amplify the best of everything we build. Rush Steven. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Don, you&#8217;re silent back there, what&#8217;s going on? Don Happy to yield the mike down. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun I read your blog, I can start asking you questions now. So Don, what do you think of the deal? Don So, where do you see now SPARC and Itanium competing in the future, how do you divide the x86 line from the SPARC line, and in your case, Paul, the Itanium line? Jonathan Schwartz - Sun We don&#8217;t divide it, we try to go after as much market as we can, but these are loosely coupled than highly aligned business, and so we want to see Solaris succeed on all platforms on which it ships. The fact that we&#8217;ve got four consecutive quarters of growth behind us suggests there is more than enough opportunity across all the disparate product lines. We want to go after all the opportunity and not just isolate ourselves to one. Paul Otellini - Intel I guess for my perspective, the very positive part of this relationship is the ability to work together to get the Xeon based systems greater than four, up and running, and delivering really good results into the marketplace. Sun is a good company to collaborate with from that perspective. I think it will be the wrong thing to do to reopen the religious war or Itanium. Itanium is a separate product line right now, Solaris does not support Itanium. If they decide to support it, we&#8217;d love it, if they don&#8217;t, that&#8217;s just business decision on their side. Russ Steven. Steven So, related question, which is big-iron on x86, it&#8217;s something a lot of people have tried for a very long time, Sequent, all these companies that have vanished into the midst, and it&#8217;s something I guess really, IBM is the only enthusiast for, do you think that Sun is going to be the company that finally gets big-iron x86 to break out, Paul? Paul Otellini - Intel Gosh, I hope so, but&#8230; Jonathan Schwartz - Sun He meant to say yes. Paul Otellini - Intel The reason I said that is, is that there are other customers working on 8 and above Xeon as well, not necessarily in this country, so you probably don&#8217;t have as much visibility to them, but we see that happening elsewhere. I think that in -- if you look at, from our perspective, a snapshot or a side view of the Solaris marketplace in terms of some of those very critical mission, mission critical markets and data intensive markets like financial service or Telco, well, the thing is it has to be reliable has heck, that allows us to get Xeon into the space where it isn&#8217;t really today. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Maybe then to give you more confidence in that, the single biggest determinant of the success of a high scale x86 system will be the popularity of the operating system that runs on a single socket x86 system. You cannot start by saying I&#8217;d like to build a 16 way x86 system, and oh, I would probably need an operating system. No one starts their business on a 16 way system, they all start their businesses and they all start their projects on one way. So, the fact that we can show up in the marketplace with a one socket system that -- I mean again, this is the recipe we know well. What&#8217;s led to the success of Sun Systems business is the fact that we&#8217;ve had complete binary compatibility up and down the product set. So, the fact that we&#8217;re going to be in this space with our own systems, and by the way with an operating system that eats threads for lunch and scales beautifully, should give us a little bit of a boost that maybe some of the other players haven&#8217;t had. Russ So, I think I&#8217;m going to have one more question here. So, if anybody would like to be the last questionnaire, that would be great, if not, we will end early. Michael, give it another go? Speaker No question Duncan. Audience Member So, the last question is on Service Oriented Architecture, SOA. We&#8217;ve heard about writing to the chip, writing to the OS, we write to the SOA stack, so what is it that you now bring to the table, Paul, that wasn&#8217;t previously already there with the current processor systems that you have in place Jonathan? Paul Otellini - Intel I&#8217;m sorry, what is it, that we bring to the... Audience Member Yeah, what is that you&#8217;re now bringing to SOA that Jonathan couldn&#8217;t do already? Paul Otellini - Intel Well, on his SPARC side, he&#8217;s been doing it for sometime. On the x86 side, I think we&#8217;re very comfortable with our first implementation, a visualization. We&#8217;ve a second instantiation of that coming down the pipeline that I think is substantially better than the competition. We have other things I talked about earlier in terms of I/O Acceleration, demand-based switching. The terms of the ability for us to use the advance silicon technology we&#8217;re about to deploy, to deliver not just performers, but energy efficient performers, leadership, makes the end systems better. SOA isn&#8217;t just what it does, its how it does it and how much does it cost, and we think that we help that whole equation in terms of power performance. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Just to amplify what Paul said that, the single biggest issue with SOA in the marketplace -- and look SOA is a horrible buzzword, and we can all agree that it represents something, but no can quite identify what it is. The single biggest issue in the data center, just economics, brutal efficiency, environmental capacity, that I think is -- that&#8217;s become the dominant issue in large scale enterprises, that&#8217;s very different than developer productivity, where obviously we&#8217;ve been making a lot of progress with NetBeans and the Java platform. So, I think just ending here, I want to thank Paul specifically and also especially the Intel team. This has been a long time coming and I know there&#8217;s been a lot of hard work that&#8217;s been put into it. We are thrilled to death with the market opportunities. We&#8217;re both going to go evolve and couldn&#8217;t be happier with the progress we&#8217;ve made to date, and couldn&#8217;t be more excited about the progress we&#8217;re going to make in the marketplace. So, thank you all very much. Paul Otellini - Intel Thank you. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun It is much appreciated. Paul Otellini - Intel We iterate that from our side, thank you. Jonathan Schwartz - Sun Good. Copyright &amp;#169;2006 PodTech.net. All rights reserved. Privacy policy Tags: Sun, Jonathan Schwartz, Intel, Paul Otellini</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 23 Jan 2007 10:02:42 -0800</pubDate>
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      <title>Apple, Sony, and Social Investing</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009277-Apple-Sony-and-Social-Investing</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, January 20, 2007 (PodTech News) -- It's been a quiet week compared to the double whammy earlier this month that saw dueling trade shows -- Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas and MacWorld in San Francisco. MacWorld, which saw Apple's formal introduction of its iPhone, stole a lot of the thunder from the annual Las Vegas electronics ritual, but as the initial rapturous iPhone-mania begins to subside, some tech pundits are taking a second, less effusive stance on the three-services-in-one iPhone. Pundits are also continuing to have a go at Sony's PS3, asking if, this time around, the new gaming device might have missed the mark.... In all things social media, it's time to follow the money. While Silicon Valley searches for the perfect way to harness online communities for profit and scalability, some business are using social media to drive investor revenue -- welcome to social investing. It's PodTech News. Tags: Consumer Electronics Show, MacWorld, iPhone, Sony, PS3...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, January 20, 2007 (PodTech News) -- It's been a quiet week compared to the double whammy earlier this month that saw dueling trade shows -- Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas and MacWorld in San Francisco. MacWorld, which saw Apple's formal introduction of its iPhone, stole a lot of the thunder from the annual Las Vegas electronics ritual, but as the initial rapturous iPhone-mania begins to subside, some tech pundits are taking a second, less effusive stance on the three-services-in-one iPhone. Pundits are also continuing to have a go at Sony's PS3, asking if, this time around, the new gaming device might have missed the mark.... In all things social media, it's time to follow the money. While Silicon Valley searches for the perfect way to harness online communities for profit and scalability, some business are using social media to drive investor revenue -- welcome to social investing. It's PodTech News. Tags: Consumer Electronics Show, MacWorld, iPhone, Sony, PS3, social media, Silicon Valley, social investing</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, January 20, 2007 (PodTech News) -- It's been a quiet week compared to the double whammy earlier this month that saw dueling trade shows -- Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas and MacWorld in San Francisco. MacWorld, which saw Apple's formal introduction of its iPhone, stole a lot of the thunder from the annual Las Vegas electronics ritual, but as the initial rapturous iPhone-mania begins to subside, some tech pundits are taking a second, less effusive stance on the three-services-in-one iPhone. Pundits are also continuing to have a go at Sony's PS3, asking if, this time around, the new gaming device might have missed the mark.... In all things social media, it's time to follow the money. While Silicon Valley searches for the perfect way to harness online communities for profit and scalability, some business are using social media to drive investor revenue -- welcome to social investing. It's PodTech News. Tags: Consumer Electronics Show, MacWorld, iPhone, Sony, PS3, social media, Silicon Valley, social investing</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 20 Jan 2007 19:33:38 -0800</pubDate>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>Apple TV: Jobs Shows Off the Box</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009280-Apple-TV-Jobs-Shows-Off-the-Box</link>
      <description>It wasn't highly anticipated. We all knew it. But if Apple's new "Apple TV" appliance works as advertised, the company--now known simply as Apple and no longer Apple Computer--might have quite a juggernaut on its hands. With movie deals that include product from Walt Disney and Paramount, Jobs might be getting us closer to actually using IT devices for moviewatching much faster than YouTube. Tags: Apple TV</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>It wasn't highly anticipated. We all knew it. But if Apple's new "Apple TV" appliance works as advertised, the company--now known simply as Apple and no longer Apple Computer--might have quite a juggernaut on its hands. With movie deals that include product from Walt Disney and Paramount, Jobs might be getting us closer to actually using IT devices for moviewatching much faster than YouTube. Tags: Apple TV</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>It wasn't highly anticipated. We all knew it. But if Apple's new "Apple TV" appliance works as advertised, the company--now known simply as Apple and no longer Apple Computer--might have quite a juggernaut on its hands. With movie deals that include product from Walt Disney and Paramount, Jobs might be getting us closer to actually using IT devices for moviewatching much faster than YouTube. Tags: Apple TV</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-09,22009280</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 09 Jan 2007 16:04:48 -0800</pubDate>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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      <title>iPhone: Has Cingular Thrown in the Towel?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009285-iPhone-Has-Cingular-Thrown-in-the-Towel</link>
      <description>Apple CEO Steve Jobs suggested in his MacWorld 2007 keynote that the new iPhone can connect to the Internet via WiFi. Really? And Cingular is okay with that? A reading of the description on Apple's Web site seems to confirm it. "iPhone is fully multi-tasking, so you can read a web page while downloading your email in the background over Wi-Fi or EDGE." In this podcast, Steve Jobs demonstrates the iPhone's Web muscle and announces some partnerships to make Internet functionality easier. Tags: Apple, Steve Jobs, MacWorld, iPhone, Cingular</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>Apple CEO Steve Jobs suggested in his MacWorld 2007 keynote that the new iPhone can connect to the Internet via WiFi. Really? And Cingular is okay with that? A reading of the description on Apple's Web site seems to confirm it. "iPhone is fully multi-tasking, so you can read a web page while downloading your email in the background over Wi-Fi or EDGE." In this podcast, Steve Jobs demonstrates the iPhone's Web muscle and announces some partnerships to make Internet functionality easier. Tags: Apple, Steve Jobs, MacWorld, iPhone, Cingular</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Apple CEO Steve Jobs suggested in his MacWorld 2007 keynote that the new iPhone can connect to the Internet via WiFi. Really? And Cingular is okay with that? A reading of the description on Apple's Web site seems to confirm it. "iPhone is fully multi-tasking, so you can read a web page while downloading your email in the background over Wi-Fi or EDGE." In this podcast, Steve Jobs demonstrates the iPhone's Web muscle and announces some partnerships to make Internet functionality easier. Tags: Apple, Steve Jobs, MacWorld, iPhone, Cingular</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 09 Jan 2007 15:41:01 -0800</pubDate>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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      <title>iPhone: Album Arty, Finger Scrolling, Up Sensor, Widescreen, Music/Video Thingy</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009288-iPhone-Album-Arty-Finger-Scrolling-Up-Sensor-Widescreen-Music-Video-Thingy</link>
      <description>The functionality of the new Apple iPhone, which comes in 4 gig ($499) and 8 gig ($599) models, appears to be far superior to the regular iPod. Trouble is, it doesn't store enough music for people who keep large collections at their fingertips. The iPhone may turn out to be much more fun and compelling to use than the increasingly old-fashioned-looking iPod. In this podcast Steve Jobs tells a morning MacWorld crowd about the music and video features of the new iPhone. The talk included a slide with of an iPod with a rotary phone dial. The lack, for now at least, of storage space on the much-hyped iPhone, leaves the door open for another image -- an iPhone, duct taped to a 60-gig iPod. Tags: Apple iPhone, Steve Jobs, MacWorld</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>The functionality of the new Apple iPhone, which comes in 4 gig ($499) and 8 gig ($599) models, appears to be far superior to the regular iPod. Trouble is, it doesn't store enough music for people who keep large collections at their fingertips. The iPhone may turn out to be much more fun and compelling to use than the increasingly old-fashioned-looking iPod. In this podcast Steve Jobs tells a morning MacWorld crowd about the music and video features of the new iPhone. The talk included a slide with of an iPod with a rotary phone dial. The lack, for now at least, of storage space on the much-hyped iPhone, leaves the door open for another image -- an iPhone, duct taped to a 60-gig iPod. Tags: Apple iPhone, Steve Jobs, MacWorld</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>The functionality of the new Apple iPhone, which comes in 4 gig ($499) and 8 gig ($599) models, appears to be far superior to the regular iPod. Trouble is, it doesn't store enough music for people who keep large collections at their fingertips. The iPhone may turn out to be much more fun and compelling to use than the increasingly old-fashioned-looking iPod. In this podcast Steve Jobs tells a morning MacWorld crowd about the music and video features of the new iPhone. The talk included a slide with of an iPod with a rotary phone dial. The lack, for now at least, of storage space on the much-hyped iPhone, leaves the door open for another image -- an iPhone, duct taped to a 60-gig iPod. Tags: Apple iPhone, Steve Jobs, MacWorld</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-09,22009288</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 09 Jan 2007 15:27:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2007/01/PID_001762/Podtech_010907_MacWorld_Jobs_iPhone_iP.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>iPhone: Product of the Year?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009330-iPhone-Product-of-the-Year</link>
      <description>Apple CEO Steve Jobs delivered one of his most dazzling MacWorld keynotes as he unveiled Apple's new iPhone. The device uses a patented touch screen system called multi-touch. Cisco, which owns the iPhone name, says it expects to close a deal with Apple on some sort of trademark royalty for the moniker. In this podcast Jobs introduces the device, which is combination of iPod, phone and Internet device. Price points are $499 for a 4 gig model and $599 for an 8 gig. Tags: Steve Jobs, MacWorld, iPhone, multi-touch, Cisco</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>Apple CEO Steve Jobs delivered one of his most dazzling MacWorld keynotes as he unveiled Apple's new iPhone. The device uses a patented touch screen system called multi-touch. Cisco, which owns the iPhone name, says it expects to close a deal with Apple on some sort of trademark royalty for the moniker. In this podcast Jobs introduces the device, which is combination of iPod, phone and Internet device. Price points are $499 for a 4 gig model and $599 for an 8 gig. Tags: Steve Jobs, MacWorld, iPhone, multi-touch, Cisco</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Apple CEO Steve Jobs delivered one of his most dazzling MacWorld keynotes as he unveiled Apple's new iPhone. The device uses a patented touch screen system called multi-touch. Cisco, which owns the iPhone name, says it expects to close a deal with Apple on some sort of trademark royalty for the moniker. In this podcast Jobs introduces the device, which is combination of iPod, phone and Internet device. Price points are $499 for a 4 gig model and $599 for an 8 gig. Tags: Steve Jobs, MacWorld, iPhone, multi-touch, Cisco</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-09,22009330</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 09 Jan 2007 12:43:31 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2007/01/PID_001758/Podtech_010907_MacWorld_Jobs_Keynote_i.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Gates CES Keynote Long on Demos, Short on Pizzazz</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009342-Gates-CES-Keynote-Long-on-Demos-Short-on-Pizzazz</link>
      <description>LAS VEGAS, NV, January 7, 2007 (PodTech.net) -- Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates kicked off CES 2007 with a keynote address that was long on demos and short on pizzazz. It was all about Vista and Vista as connector of the digital lifestyles and experiences. There's no question that Vista, due out to the public in 22 days, is a powerful operating system, a huge improvement over previous versions of Windows, and has plenty of nifty features, notably controllability in 3-D with Microsoft's X-Box 360 controller -- but Gates' more than hour-long, dry rundown of features, all digilently supported by (too many) demos left PodTech's Catherine Girardeau a bit underwhelmed. PodTech.net brings you edited selections from Gates' presentation. Tags: Microsoft, Bill Gates, CES, Vista, Catherine Girardeau</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>LAS VEGAS, NV, January 7, 2007 (PodTech.net) -- Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates kicked off CES 2007 with a keynote address that was long on demos and short on pizzazz. It was all about Vista and Vista as connector of the digital lifestyles and experiences. There's no question that Vista, due out to the public in 22 days, is a powerful operating system, a huge improvement over previous versions of Windows, and has plenty of nifty features, notably controllability in 3-D with Microsoft's X-Box 360 controller -- but Gates' more than hour-long, dry rundown of features, all digilently supported by (too many) demos left PodTech's Catherine Girardeau a bit underwhelmed. PodTech.net brings you edited selections from Gates' presentation. Tags: Microsoft, Bill Gates, CES, Vista, Catherine Girardeau</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>LAS VEGAS, NV, January 7, 2007 (PodTech.net) -- Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates kicked off CES 2007 with a keynote address that was long on demos and short on pizzazz. It was all about Vista and Vista as connector of the digital lifestyles and experiences. There's no question that Vista, due out to the public in 22 days, is a powerful operating system, a huge improvement over previous versions of Windows, and has plenty of nifty features, notably controllability in 3-D with Microsoft's X-Box 360 controller -- but Gates' more than hour-long, dry rundown of features, all digilently supported by (too many) demos left PodTech's Catherine Girardeau a bit underwhelmed. PodTech.net brings you edited selections from Gates' presentation. Tags: Microsoft, Bill Gates, CES, Vista, Catherine Girardeau</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-08,22009342</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 08 Jan 2007 11:35:46 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2007/01/PID_001739/Podtech_gates_CES_keynote.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: Saddam's Tech-xecution</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/5463513-PodTech-Weekly-Saddam-s-Tech-xecution</link>
      <description></description>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-06,5463513</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 06 Jan 2007 23:12:27 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="" url="http://media.podtech.net/media/2007/01/PID_001728/Podtech_010607_PodTech_News_Weekly_Mag.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: Saddam's Tech-xecution</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009344-PodTech-Weekly-Saddam-s-Tech-xecution</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, January 6, 2007 (PodTech News) -- The 2007 Consumer Electronics Show begins tomorrow night with a keynote by Microsoft Founder and Chairman Bill Gates. Catherine Girardeau takes a look at the CES schedule to see what the next week -- and the next year -- might bring. While CES is expected to focus on entertainment -- from games to movies and other media -- Matt Kelly checks in with the world of movies and the Internet, revisiting Intel's role with ClickStar (and actor Morgan Freeman), which aims to bring the user closer to the world of film. (PodTech and Seagate will be running a "bloghaus" there, the better to provide complete coverage for the thousands of professionals and enthusiasts who can't spend the week in Las Vegas.) Also in the newscast this week, a closer look at the particular way that mobile, handheld media technology infiltrated an execution chamber, and what would have been one of the most private moments in the life of former Iraqi dictator and convict...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, January 6, 2007 (PodTech News) -- The 2007 Consumer Electronics Show begins tomorrow night with a keynote by Microsoft Founder and Chairman Bill Gates. Catherine Girardeau takes a look at the CES schedule to see what the next week -- and the next year -- might bring. While CES is expected to focus on entertainment -- from games to movies and other media -- Matt Kelly checks in with the world of movies and the Internet, revisiting Intel's role with ClickStar (and actor Morgan Freeman), which aims to bring the user closer to the world of film. (PodTech and Seagate will be running a "bloghaus" there, the better to provide complete coverage for the thousands of professionals and enthusiasts who can't spend the week in Las Vegas.) Also in the newscast this week, a closer look at the particular way that mobile, handheld media technology infiltrated an execution chamber, and what would have been one of the most private moments in the life of former Iraqi dictator and convicted criminal Saddam Hussein, and the Nintendo Wii's more dangerous tendencies. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Amir Farshad Ebrahimi via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Consumer Electronics Show, Microsoft, Bill Gates, Intel, ClickStar, Morgan Freeman, bloghaus, execution, Iraqi, Saddam Hussein, Nintendo Wii, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, January 6, 2007 (PodTech News) -- The 2007 Consumer Electronics Show begins tomorrow night with a keynote by Microsoft Founder and Chairman Bill Gates. Catherine Girardeau takes a look at the CES schedule to see what the next week -- and the next year -- might bring. While CES is expected to focus on entertainment -- from games to movies and other media -- Matt Kelly checks in with the world of movies and the Internet, revisiting Intel's role with ClickStar (and actor Morgan Freeman), which aims to bring the user closer to the world of film. (PodTech and Seagate will be running a "bloghaus" there, the better to provide complete coverage for the thousands of professionals and enthusiasts who can't spend the week in Las Vegas.) Also in the newscast this week, a closer look at the particular way that mobile, handheld media technology infiltrated an execution chamber, and what would have been one of the most private moments in the life of former Iraqi dictator and convicted criminal Saddam Hussein, and the Nintendo Wii's more dangerous tendencies. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Amir Farshad Ebrahimi via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Consumer Electronics Show, Microsoft, Bill Gates, Intel, ClickStar, Morgan Freeman, bloghaus, execution, Iraqi, Saddam Hussein, Nintendo Wii, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-06,22009344</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 06 Jan 2007 15:12:27 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2007/01/PID_001728/Podtech_010607_PodTech_News_Weekly_Mag.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: Saddam&#8217;s Tech-xecution</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22169347-PodTech-Weekly-Saddam%E2%80%99s-Tech-xecution</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, January 6, 2007 (PodTech News) &amp;#8212; The 2007 Consumer Electronics Show begins tomorrow night with a keynote by Microsoft Founder and Chairman Bill Gates. Catherine Girardeau takes a look at the CES schedule to see what the next week &amp;#8212; and the next year &amp;#8212; might bring. While CES is expected to focus on entertainment &amp;#8212; from games to movies and other media &amp;#8212; Matt Kelly checks in with the world of movies and the Internet, revisiting Intel&amp;#8217;s role with ClickStar (and actor Morgan Freeman), which aims to bring the user closer to the world of film. (PodTech and Seagate will be running a &amp;#8220;bloghaus&amp;#8221; there, the better to provide complete coverage for the thousands of professionals and enthusiasts who can&amp;#8217;t spend the week in Las Vegas.) Also in the newscast this week, a closer look at the particular way that mobile, handheld media technology infiltrated an execution chamber, and what would have been one of the most private moments...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, January 6, 2007 (PodTech News) &amp;#8212; The 2007 Consumer Electronics Show begins tomorrow night with a keynote by Microsoft Founder and Chairman Bill Gates. Catherine Girardeau takes a look at the CES schedule to see what the next week &amp;#8212; and the next year &amp;#8212; might bring. While CES is expected to focus on entertainment &amp;#8212; from games to movies and other media &amp;#8212; Matt Kelly checks in with the world of movies and the Internet, revisiting Intel&amp;#8217;s role with ClickStar (and actor Morgan Freeman), which aims to bring the user closer to the world of film. (PodTech and Seagate will be running a &amp;#8220;bloghaus&amp;#8221; there, the better to provide complete coverage for the thousands of professionals and enthusiasts who can&amp;#8217;t spend the week in Las Vegas.) Also in the newscast this week, a closer look at the particular way that mobile, handheld media technology infiltrated an execution chamber, and what would have been one of the most private moments in the life of former Iraqi dictator and convicted criminal Saddam Hussein, and the Nintendo Wii&amp;#8217;s more dangerous tendencies. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It&amp;#8217;s PodTech News. Photo Credit: Amir Farshad Ebrahimi via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Consumer Electronics Show, Microsoft, Bill Gates, Intel, ClickStar, Morgan Freeman, bloghaus, execution, Iraqi, Saddam Hussein, Nintendo Wii, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, January 6, 2007 (PodTech News) &amp;#8212; The 2007 Consumer Electronics Show begins tomorrow night with a keynote by Microsoft Founder and Chairman Bill Gates. Catherine Girardeau takes a look at the CES schedule to see what the next week &amp;#8212; and the next year &amp;#8212; might bring. While CES is expected to focus on entertainment &amp;#8212; from games to movies and other media &amp;#8212; Matt Kelly checks in with the world of movies and the Internet, revisiting Intel&amp;#8217;s role with ClickStar (and actor Morgan Freeman), which aims to bring the user closer to the world of film. (PodTech and Seagate will be running a &amp;#8220;bloghaus&amp;#8221; there, the better to provide complete coverage for the thousands of professionals and enthusiasts who can&amp;#8217;t spend the week in Las Vegas.) Also in the newscast this week, a closer look at the particular way that mobile, handheld media technology infiltrated an execution chamber, and what would have been one of the most private moments in the life of former Iraqi dictator and convicted criminal Saddam Hussein, and the Nintendo Wii&amp;#8217;s more dangerous tendencies. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It&amp;#8217;s PodTech News. Photo Credit: Amir Farshad Ebrahimi via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Consumer Electronics Show, Microsoft, Bill Gates, Intel, ClickStar, Morgan Freeman, bloghaus, execution, Iraqi, Saddam Hussein, Nintendo Wii, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-06,22169347</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 06 Jan 2007 15:12:27 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/media/2007/01/PID_001728/Podtech_010607_PodTech_News_Weekly_Mag.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
      <itunes:keywords>Technology, podtech, PodTech News</itunes:keywords>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: MacRumors, Apple Bugs</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009350-PodTech-News-Brief-MacRumors-Apple-Bugs</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, January 4, 2007 (PodTech News) -- As MacWorld approaches, it's time to take stock of the rumors that have been building up. There are a few worth noting, though some Apple-watchers are impressed with the company's improved ability to keep the lid on announcements until they want us to know about them. In other Apple news, a so-called "month of Apple bugs" has begun. The project made headlines yesterday with a Quicktime weakness you might want to know a little more about. Also in the news, a Bluetooth patent lawsuit, Blockbuster reaches a milestone subscriber goal, and a very rosy target prediction for Google share price. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: schwa23 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Bluetooth, Google, share price, Stat of the Day</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, January 4, 2007 (PodTech News) -- As MacWorld approaches, it's time to take stock of the rumors that have been building up. There are a few worth noting, though some Apple-watchers are impressed with the company's improved ability to keep the lid on announcements until they want us to know about them. In other Apple news, a so-called "month of Apple bugs" has begun. The project made headlines yesterday with a Quicktime weakness you might want to know a little more about. Also in the news, a Bluetooth patent lawsuit, Blockbuster reaches a milestone subscriber goal, and a very rosy target prediction for Google share price. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: schwa23 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Bluetooth, Google, share price, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, January 4, 2007 (PodTech News) -- As MacWorld approaches, it's time to take stock of the rumors that have been building up. There are a few worth noting, though some Apple-watchers are impressed with the company's improved ability to keep the lid on announcements until they want us to know about them. In other Apple news, a so-called "month of Apple bugs" has begun. The project made headlines yesterday with a Quicktime weakness you might want to know a little more about. Also in the news, a Bluetooth patent lawsuit, Blockbuster reaches a milestone subscriber goal, and a very rosy target prediction for Google share price. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: schwa23 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Bluetooth, Google, share price, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-04,22009350</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 04 Jan 2007 02:16:12 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2007/01/PID_001699/Podtech_010307_PodTech_News.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Merger&#8217;s Neutrality Implications</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22169348-PodTech-News-Brief-Merger%E2%80%99s-Neutrality-Implications</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, January 3, 2007 (PodTech News) &amp;#8212; The finalized merger of BellSouth and AT&amp;#038;T included an unprecedented agreement with serious implications for network neutrality. Also, security issues set the year off to a jittery start, with a short-lived malware virus and a short-lived Gmail vulnerability. The holiday season closed out with Microsoft&amp;#8217;s Xbox 360 ahead of its gaming console rivals. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It&amp;#8217;s PodTech News. Reporter&amp;#8217;s Notes: For additional coverage of the BellSouth/AT&amp;#038;T negotiations, check out Susan Crawford&amp;#8217;s blog. Also, Public Knowledge, the Washington, D.C.-based digital rights advocacy group, and official documents at the FCC Web site. Photo Credit: bluepoint951 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: BellSouth, AT&amp;#038;T, Xbox 360, Stat of the Day, Susan Crawford</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, January 3, 2007 (PodTech News) &amp;#8212; The finalized merger of BellSouth and AT&amp;#038;T included an unprecedented agreement with serious implications for network neutrality. Also, security issues set the year off to a jittery start, with a short-lived malware virus and a short-lived Gmail vulnerability. The holiday season closed out with Microsoft&amp;#8217;s Xbox 360 ahead of its gaming console rivals. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It&amp;#8217;s PodTech News. Reporter&amp;#8217;s Notes: For additional coverage of the BellSouth/AT&amp;#038;T negotiations, check out Susan Crawford&amp;#8217;s blog. Also, Public Knowledge, the Washington, D.C.-based digital rights advocacy group, and official documents at the FCC Web site. Photo Credit: bluepoint951 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: BellSouth, AT&amp;#038;T, Xbox 360, Stat of the Day, Susan Crawford</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, January 3, 2007 (PodTech News) &amp;#8212; The finalized merger of BellSouth and AT&amp;#038;T included an unprecedented agreement with serious implications for network neutrality. Also, security issues set the year off to a jittery start, with a short-lived malware virus and a short-lived Gmail vulnerability. The holiday season closed out with Microsoft&amp;#8217;s Xbox 360 ahead of its gaming console rivals. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It&amp;#8217;s PodTech News. Reporter&amp;#8217;s Notes: For additional coverage of the BellSouth/AT&amp;#038;T negotiations, check out Susan Crawford&amp;#8217;s blog. Also, Public Knowledge, the Washington, D.C.-based digital rights advocacy group, and official documents at the FCC Web site. Photo Credit: bluepoint951 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: BellSouth, AT&amp;#038;T, Xbox 360, Stat of the Day, Susan Crawford</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-03,22169348</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 03 Jan 2007 00:35:54 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/media/2007/01/PID_001687/Podtech_010207_PodTechNews.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
      <itunes:keywords>Technology, podtech, PodTech News</itunes:keywords>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Merger's Neutrality Implications</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009353-PodTech-News-Brief-Merger-s-Neutrality-Implications</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, January 3, 2007 (PodTech News) -- The finalized merger of BellSouth and AT&amp;T included an unprecedented agreement with serious implications for network neutrality. Also, security issues set the year off to a jittery start, with a short-lived malware virus and a short-lived Gmail vulnerability. The holiday season closed out with Microsoft's Xbox 360 ahead of its gaming console rivals. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Reporter's Notes: For additional coverage of the BellSouth/AT&amp;T negotiations, check out Susan Crawford's blog. Also, Public Knowledge, the Washington, D.C.-based digital rights advocacy group, and official documents at the FCC Web site. Photo Credit: bluepoint951 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: BellSouth, AT&amp;T, Xbox 360, Stat of the Day, Susan Crawford</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, January 3, 2007 (PodTech News) -- The finalized merger of BellSouth and AT&amp;T included an unprecedented agreement with serious implications for network neutrality. Also, security issues set the year off to a jittery start, with a short-lived malware virus and a short-lived Gmail vulnerability. The holiday season closed out with Microsoft's Xbox 360 ahead of its gaming console rivals. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Reporter's Notes: For additional coverage of the BellSouth/AT&amp;T negotiations, check out Susan Crawford's blog. Also, Public Knowledge, the Washington, D.C.-based digital rights advocacy group, and official documents at the FCC Web site. Photo Credit: bluepoint951 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: BellSouth, AT&amp;T, Xbox 360, Stat of the Day, Susan Crawford</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, January 3, 2007 (PodTech News) -- The finalized merger of BellSouth and AT&amp;T included an unprecedented agreement with serious implications for network neutrality. Also, security issues set the year off to a jittery start, with a short-lived malware virus and a short-lived Gmail vulnerability. The holiday season closed out with Microsoft's Xbox 360 ahead of its gaming console rivals. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Reporter's Notes: For additional coverage of the BellSouth/AT&amp;T negotiations, check out Susan Crawford's blog. Also, Public Knowledge, the Washington, D.C.-based digital rights advocacy group, and official documents at the FCC Web site. Photo Credit: bluepoint951 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: BellSouth, AT&amp;T, Xbox 360, Stat of the Day, Susan Crawford</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-03,22009353</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 03 Jan 2007 00:35:54 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2007/01/PID_001687/Podtech_010207_PodTechNews.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>CES Predictions: E is for Eco-System</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009366-CES-Predictions-E-is-for-Eco-System</link>
      <description>Tim Bajarin, principal analyst with Creative Strategies, a Silicon Valley tech analysis firm, says look no further than your digital home to see what will be hot in technology this year. Today on PodTech News, we'll get an inside look at how analysts predict technology trends, and hear what's on Tim Bajarin's watch list for the 2007 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, which kicks off on Saturday. PodTech's Catherine Girardeau reports. Blogwatch: Tim Bajarin's Complete 2007 Tech Trend Predictions List on Technology Pundits. Technology Evangelist evaluates his last year's CES predictions. Fun Stuff: Nerdcore Performances at CES from Boing Boing. Other links: Tim Bajarin's Super Session at CES, *Understanding Consumer Digital Ecosystems: What it Takes to Succeed in a Digital Consumer Marketplace.* Tags: Tim Bajarin, Silicon Valley, digital home, Consumer Electronics Show</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>Tim Bajarin, principal analyst with Creative Strategies, a Silicon Valley tech analysis firm, says look no further than your digital home to see what will be hot in technology this year. Today on PodTech News, we'll get an inside look at how analysts predict technology trends, and hear what's on Tim Bajarin's watch list for the 2007 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, which kicks off on Saturday. PodTech's Catherine Girardeau reports. Blogwatch: Tim Bajarin's Complete 2007 Tech Trend Predictions List on Technology Pundits. Technology Evangelist evaluates his last year's CES predictions. Fun Stuff: Nerdcore Performances at CES from Boing Boing. Other links: Tim Bajarin's Super Session at CES, *Understanding Consumer Digital Ecosystems: What it Takes to Succeed in a Digital Consumer Marketplace.* Tags: Tim Bajarin, Silicon Valley, digital home, Consumer Electronics Show</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Tim Bajarin, principal analyst with Creative Strategies, a Silicon Valley tech analysis firm, says look no further than your digital home to see what will be hot in technology this year. Today on PodTech News, we'll get an inside look at how analysts predict technology trends, and hear what's on Tim Bajarin's watch list for the 2007 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, which kicks off on Saturday. PodTech's Catherine Girardeau reports. Blogwatch: Tim Bajarin's Complete 2007 Tech Trend Predictions List on Technology Pundits. Technology Evangelist evaluates his last year's CES predictions. Fun Stuff: Nerdcore Performances at CES from Boing Boing. Other links: Tim Bajarin's Super Session at CES, *Understanding Consumer Digital Ecosystems: What it Takes to Succeed in a Digital Consumer Marketplace.* Tags: Tim Bajarin, Silicon Valley, digital home, Consumer Electronics Show</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2007-01-01,22009366</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 01 Jan 2007 12:48:27 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2007/01/PID_001677/Podtech_News_Jan0107.MP3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: Gartner Takes a Look Ahead</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009368-PodTech-Weekly-Gartner-Takes-a-Look-Ahead</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 30, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Do you think 2007 will be an even BIGGER year for blogs? Are you already thinking ahead to what lies beyond the release of Microsoft VISTA? Well, you may want to rethink whatever it is you think you're thinking. PodTech's Clark Boyd speaks with Gartner Research Analyst Daryl Plummer about the group's IT predictions for the years ahead. Rio Pesino looks back over the past year, and ahead to what the current state of gaming -- including Microsoft's Xbox 360, the Sony PS3 and Nintendo Wii, might mean for the year ahead. And the second in a two-part conversation with Prosper.com CEO Chris Larsen. He speaks with Podtech's Michael Johnson. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Sister72 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Microsoft VISTA, Clark Boyd, Gartner Research, Daryl Plummer, Xbox 360, Sony PS3, Nintendo Wii, Prosper.com, Chris Larsen</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 30, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Do you think 2007 will be an even BIGGER year for blogs? Are you already thinking ahead to what lies beyond the release of Microsoft VISTA? Well, you may want to rethink whatever it is you think you're thinking. PodTech's Clark Boyd speaks with Gartner Research Analyst Daryl Plummer about the group's IT predictions for the years ahead. Rio Pesino looks back over the past year, and ahead to what the current state of gaming -- including Microsoft's Xbox 360, the Sony PS3 and Nintendo Wii, might mean for the year ahead. And the second in a two-part conversation with Prosper.com CEO Chris Larsen. He speaks with Podtech's Michael Johnson. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Sister72 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Microsoft VISTA, Clark Boyd, Gartner Research, Daryl Plummer, Xbox 360, Sony PS3, Nintendo Wii, Prosper.com, Chris Larsen</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 30, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Do you think 2007 will be an even BIGGER year for blogs? Are you already thinking ahead to what lies beyond the release of Microsoft VISTA? Well, you may want to rethink whatever it is you think you're thinking. PodTech's Clark Boyd speaks with Gartner Research Analyst Daryl Plummer about the group's IT predictions for the years ahead. Rio Pesino looks back over the past year, and ahead to what the current state of gaming -- including Microsoft's Xbox 360, the Sony PS3 and Nintendo Wii, might mean for the year ahead. And the second in a two-part conversation with Prosper.com CEO Chris Larsen. He speaks with Podtech's Michael Johnson. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Sister72 via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Microsoft VISTA, Clark Boyd, Gartner Research, Daryl Plummer, Xbox 360, Sony PS3, Nintendo Wii, Prosper.com, Chris Larsen</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-30,22009368</guid>
      <pubDate>Sat, 30 Dec 2006 17:35:42 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001673/Podtech_123006_PodTech_News_Weekly.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Scoble and Blogging on the Campaign Trail</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/5196493-Scoble-and-Blogging-on-the-Campaign-Trail</link>
      <description></description>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-29,5196493</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 29 Dec 2006 08:01:52 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="" url="http://media.podtech.net/media/2006/12/PID_001663/Podtech_News_Scoble_Edwards.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Scoble and Blogging on the Campaign Trail</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009372-Scoble-and-Blogging-on-the-Campaign-Trail</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 29, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Robert Scoble was invited by Senator John Edwards's campaign team to join the Senator, his staff, other "social media" representatives and the more traditional press corps for the first few days of his presidential campaign. It's been a marathon few days, chronicled at Robert's popular Scobleizer.com, as well as here on PodTech's ScobleShow channel. These all-important first few days of the Edwards campaign have made a splash in the blogosphere for several reasons, from the inclusion of social media people like Robert and a team from online news site Rocketboom to the Senator's desire to communicate with people online (he spent some time yesterday chatting with several hundred people online at DailyKos.com -- before spending time with several hundred people in person at a Town Hall meeting in Iowa). Robert spoke with PodTech's Paul Lancour from his hotel room in New Hampshire, where the whole thing starts all over again today. Photo...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 29, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Robert Scoble was invited by Senator John Edwards's campaign team to join the Senator, his staff, other "social media" representatives and the more traditional press corps for the first few days of his presidential campaign. It's been a marathon few days, chronicled at Robert's popular Scobleizer.com, as well as here on PodTech's ScobleShow channel. These all-important first few days of the Edwards campaign have made a splash in the blogosphere for several reasons, from the inclusion of social media people like Robert and a team from online news site Rocketboom to the Senator's desire to communicate with people online (he spent some time yesterday chatting with several hundred people online at DailyKos.com -- before spending time with several hundred people in person at a Town Hall meeting in Iowa). Robert spoke with PodTech's Paul Lancour from his hotel room in New Hampshire, where the whole thing starts all over again today. Photos Compiled from live streaming of Dec. 28 Town Hall Meeting, Des Moines, Iowa Tags: Robert Scoble, Senator John Edwards, social media, Scobleizer, Edwards campaign, Rocketboom, DailyKos.com, Paul Lancour</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 29, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Robert Scoble was invited by Senator John Edwards's campaign team to join the Senator, his staff, other "social media" representatives and the more traditional press corps for the first few days of his presidential campaign. It's been a marathon few days, chronicled at Robert's popular Scobleizer.com, as well as here on PodTech's ScobleShow channel. These all-important first few days of the Edwards campaign have made a splash in the blogosphere for several reasons, from the inclusion of social media people like Robert and a team from online news site Rocketboom to the Senator's desire to communicate with people online (he spent some time yesterday chatting with several hundred people online at DailyKos.com -- before spending time with several hundred people in person at a Town Hall meeting in Iowa). Robert spoke with PodTech's Paul Lancour from his hotel room in New Hampshire, where the whole thing starts all over again today. Photos Compiled from live streaming of Dec. 28 Town Hall Meeting, Des Moines, Iowa Tags: Robert Scoble, Senator John Edwards, social media, Scobleizer, Edwards campaign, Rocketboom, DailyKos.com, Paul Lancour</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-29,22009372</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 29 Dec 2006 00:01:52 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001663/Podtech_News_Scoble_Edwards.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Considering the Apple iPhone</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/5196483-Considering-the-Apple-iPhone</link>
      <description></description>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-28,5196483</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 Dec 2006 08:01:58 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="" url="http://media.podtech.net/media/2006/12/PID_001654/Podtech_122506_MJ_iphone_observation.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Considering the Apple iPhone</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009373-Considering-the-Apple-iPhone</link>
      <description>In the flurry of Apple iPhone rumours, we take a moment to talk with two long time Mac watchers about the possibility and philosophy of the "iPhone" (not the new Cisco device, but the long-rumored and name-unknown phone that may be coming soon from the company that brought us the iPod). John Martellaro writes the Hidden Dimensions column for MacObserver.com, and Leander Kahney is managing editor of Wired.com and author of The Cult of Mac and the Cult of iPod. Updated Photo of Alexander Graham Bell: Michael Johnson Tags: Apple, iPhone, Mac, John Martellaro, Hidden Dimensions, MacObserver.com, Leander Kahney, Wired.com, The Cult of Mac</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>In the flurry of Apple iPhone rumours, we take a moment to talk with two long time Mac watchers about the possibility and philosophy of the "iPhone" (not the new Cisco device, but the long-rumored and name-unknown phone that may be coming soon from the company that brought us the iPod). John Martellaro writes the Hidden Dimensions column for MacObserver.com, and Leander Kahney is managing editor of Wired.com and author of The Cult of Mac and the Cult of iPod. Updated Photo of Alexander Graham Bell: Michael Johnson Tags: Apple, iPhone, Mac, John Martellaro, Hidden Dimensions, MacObserver.com, Leander Kahney, Wired.com, The Cult of Mac</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>In the flurry of Apple iPhone rumours, we take a moment to talk with two long time Mac watchers about the possibility and philosophy of the "iPhone" (not the new Cisco device, but the long-rumored and name-unknown phone that may be coming soon from the company that brought us the iPod). John Martellaro writes the Hidden Dimensions column for MacObserver.com, and Leander Kahney is managing editor of Wired.com and author of The Cult of Mac and the Cult of iPod. Updated Photo of Alexander Graham Bell: Michael Johnson Tags: Apple, iPhone, Mac, John Martellaro, Hidden Dimensions, MacObserver.com, Leander Kahney, Wired.com, The Cult of Mac</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-28,22009373</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 Dec 2006 00:01:58 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001654/Podtech_122506_MJ_iphone_observation.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Gaming's Best and Worst of 2006</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/5196473-Gaming-s-Best-and-Worst-of-2006</link>
      <description></description>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-27,5196473</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 27 Dec 2006 08:27:35 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="" url="http://media.podtech.net/media/2006/12/PID_001643/Podtech_Best_Worst_in_Gaming_2006_fina.MP3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Gaming&#8217;s Best and Worst of 2006</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22169349-Gaming%E2%80%99s-Best-and-Worst-of-2006</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 27, 2006 (PodTech News) &amp;#8212; The past year saw significant changes in the world of video gaming. In recent months, both Sony and Nintendo released new consoles (the Playstation 3 and the Wii), while earlier on, Microsoft&amp;#8217;s Xbox Live service was a huge success and Nintendo&amp;#8217;s DS Lite changed the way gamers play in a huge way. Michael Pachter is a securities analyst with Wedbush Morgan. He spoke with PodTech&amp;#8217;s Rio Pesino about the gaming highs and lows of 2006, including his choices for &amp;#8220;game of the year,&amp;#8221; and which company had the most successful console launch. Tags: Sony, Nintendo, Playstation 3, Wii, Microsoft, Xbox Live, DS Lite, Michael Pachter, Wedbush Morgan, Rio Pesino</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 27, 2006 (PodTech News) &amp;#8212; The past year saw significant changes in the world of video gaming. In recent months, both Sony and Nintendo released new consoles (the Playstation 3 and the Wii), while earlier on, Microsoft&amp;#8217;s Xbox Live service was a huge success and Nintendo&amp;#8217;s DS Lite changed the way gamers play in a huge way. Michael Pachter is a securities analyst with Wedbush Morgan. He spoke with PodTech&amp;#8217;s Rio Pesino about the gaming highs and lows of 2006, including his choices for &amp;#8220;game of the year,&amp;#8221; and which company had the most successful console launch. Tags: Sony, Nintendo, Playstation 3, Wii, Microsoft, Xbox Live, DS Lite, Michael Pachter, Wedbush Morgan, Rio Pesino</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 27, 2006 (PodTech News) &amp;#8212; The past year saw significant changes in the world of video gaming. In recent months, both Sony and Nintendo released new consoles (the Playstation 3 and the Wii), while earlier on, Microsoft&amp;#8217;s Xbox Live service was a huge success and Nintendo&amp;#8217;s DS Lite changed the way gamers play in a huge way. Michael Pachter is a securities analyst with Wedbush Morgan. He spoke with PodTech&amp;#8217;s Rio Pesino about the gaming highs and lows of 2006, including his choices for &amp;#8220;game of the year,&amp;#8221; and which company had the most successful console launch. Tags: Sony, Nintendo, Playstation 3, Wii, Microsoft, Xbox Live, DS Lite, Michael Pachter, Wedbush Morgan, Rio Pesino</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-27,22169349</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 27 Dec 2006 00:27:35 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/media/2006/12/PID_001643/Podtech_Best_Worst_in_Gaming_2006_fina.MP3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
      <itunes:keywords>Technology, Gaming, podtech, PodTech News</itunes:keywords>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Gaming's Best and Worst of 2006</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009385-Gaming-s-Best-and-Worst-of-2006</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 27, 2006 (PodTech News) -- The past year saw significant changes in the world of video gaming. In recent months, both Sony and Nintendo released new consoles (the Playstation 3 and the Wii), while earlier on, Microsoft's Xbox Live service was a huge success and Nintendo's DS Lite changed the way gamers play in a huge way. Michael Pachter is a securities analyst with Wedbush Morgan. He spoke with PodTech's Rio Pesino about the gaming highs and lows of 2006, including his choices for "game of the year," and which company had the most successful console launch. Tags: Sony, Nintendo, Playstation 3, Wii, Microsoft, Xbox Live, DS Lite, Michael Pachter, Wedbush Morgan, Rio Pesino</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 27, 2006 (PodTech News) -- The past year saw significant changes in the world of video gaming. In recent months, both Sony and Nintendo released new consoles (the Playstation 3 and the Wii), while earlier on, Microsoft's Xbox Live service was a huge success and Nintendo's DS Lite changed the way gamers play in a huge way. Michael Pachter is a securities analyst with Wedbush Morgan. He spoke with PodTech's Rio Pesino about the gaming highs and lows of 2006, including his choices for "game of the year," and which company had the most successful console launch. Tags: Sony, Nintendo, Playstation 3, Wii, Microsoft, Xbox Live, DS Lite, Michael Pachter, Wedbush Morgan, Rio Pesino</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 27, 2006 (PodTech News) -- The past year saw significant changes in the world of video gaming. In recent months, both Sony and Nintendo released new consoles (the Playstation 3 and the Wii), while earlier on, Microsoft's Xbox Live service was a huge success and Nintendo's DS Lite changed the way gamers play in a huge way. Michael Pachter is a securities analyst with Wedbush Morgan. He spoke with PodTech's Rio Pesino about the gaming highs and lows of 2006, including his choices for "game of the year," and which company had the most successful console launch. Tags: Sony, Nintendo, Playstation 3, Wii, Microsoft, Xbox Live, DS Lite, Michael Pachter, Wedbush Morgan, Rio Pesino</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-27,22009385</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 27 Dec 2006 00:27:35 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001643/Podtech_Best_Worst_in_Gaming_2006_fina.MP3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>2007: The End of the PC?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/5196463-2007-The-End-of-the-PC</link>
      <description></description>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-26,5196463</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 26 Dec 2006 17:54:19 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="" url="http://media.podtech.net/media/2006/12/PID_001637/Podtech_Rob_Enderle_2007_Predictions.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>2007: The End of the PC?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009389-2007-The-End-of-the-PC</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 26, 2006 (PodTech News) -- 2007 Predictions -- everybody's doing it, and analysts do it for a living. Rob Enderle, founder and principal analyst with San Jose-based The Enderle Group, looks into his crystal ball to see what technology trends will drive companies, consumers and politicians in the year 2007. Enderle says increased connectivity will bring about massive changes in travel and work, especially through some of the growth in virtualization. He also says he can see the beginning of the end for the personal computer, as so many other devices begin to take over many of its key functions. He spoke with PodTech's Catherine Girardeau. Further Reading: 2007 Trends from Rob Enderle Readwriteweb's 2006 Trends Review Marketwatch's John Dvorak: An Investor's Perspective on 2007 Trends to Watch Tags: Rob Enderle, The Enderle Group, virtualization, personal computer, Catherine Girardeau</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 26, 2006 (PodTech News) -- 2007 Predictions -- everybody's doing it, and analysts do it for a living. Rob Enderle, founder and principal analyst with San Jose-based The Enderle Group, looks into his crystal ball to see what technology trends will drive companies, consumers and politicians in the year 2007. Enderle says increased connectivity will bring about massive changes in travel and work, especially through some of the growth in virtualization. He also says he can see the beginning of the end for the personal computer, as so many other devices begin to take over many of its key functions. He spoke with PodTech's Catherine Girardeau. Further Reading: 2007 Trends from Rob Enderle Readwriteweb's 2006 Trends Review Marketwatch's John Dvorak: An Investor's Perspective on 2007 Trends to Watch Tags: Rob Enderle, The Enderle Group, virtualization, personal computer, Catherine Girardeau</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 26, 2006 (PodTech News) -- 2007 Predictions -- everybody's doing it, and analysts do it for a living. Rob Enderle, founder and principal analyst with San Jose-based The Enderle Group, looks into his crystal ball to see what technology trends will drive companies, consumers and politicians in the year 2007. Enderle says increased connectivity will bring about massive changes in travel and work, especially through some of the growth in virtualization. He also says he can see the beginning of the end for the personal computer, as so many other devices begin to take over many of its key functions. He spoke with PodTech's Catherine Girardeau. Further Reading: 2007 Trends from Rob Enderle Readwriteweb's 2006 Trends Review Marketwatch's John Dvorak: An Investor's Perspective on 2007 Trends to Watch Tags: Rob Enderle, The Enderle Group, virtualization, personal computer, Catherine Girardeau</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-26,22009389</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 26 Dec 2006 09:54:19 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001637/Podtech_Rob_Enderle_2007_Predictions.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: Al Gore on Science Censorship, and More</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/5196423-PodTech-Weekly-Al-Gore-on-Science-Censorship-and-More</link>
      <description></description>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-24,5196423</guid>
      <pubDate>Sun, 24 Dec 2006 09:28:42 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="" url="http://media.podtech.net/media/2006/12/PID_001633/Podtech_122306_PodTech_News_Weekly.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: Al Gore on Science Censorship, and More</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009406-PodTech-Weekly-Al-Gore-on-Science-Censorship-and-More</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 24, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Former Vice President Al Gore addressed a large crowd of earth scientists and journalists gathered in San Francisco for the American Geophysical Union's fall conference on December 14th. Perhaps because he was talking to a room full of scientists, Gore focused not on the science of climate change, but on the need for scientists to communicate better with the public and to speak out against government interference in their research. PodTech's Catherine Girardeau has excerpts from the keynote. Earlier this month, federal regulations got a little clearer when it comes to required storage and retrieval of electronic business communication. All forms of electronic information will be subject to the rule change. While some companies are already saving large quantities of information, many may be saving more than they need to. While the new rule may clarify what information needs to be stored and discoverable, it may also be laying the gro...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 24, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Former Vice President Al Gore addressed a large crowd of earth scientists and journalists gathered in San Francisco for the American Geophysical Union's fall conference on December 14th. Perhaps because he was talking to a room full of scientists, Gore focused not on the science of climate change, but on the need for scientists to communicate better with the public and to speak out against government interference in their research. PodTech's Catherine Girardeau has excerpts from the keynote. Earlier this month, federal regulations got a little clearer when it comes to required storage and retrieval of electronic business communication. All forms of electronic information will be subject to the rule change. While some companies are already saving large quantities of information, many may be saving more than they need to. While the new rule may clarify what information needs to be stored and discoverable, it may also be laying the groundwork for future legal challenges when it comes to workplace privacy, with private e-mails and text messages being monitored and discoverable. PodTech's Matt Kelly reports. $735 billion. That's how much Americans are carrying in debt. Prosper.com Founder and CEO Chris Larsen saw a Web 2.0 opportunity there, and spoke with PodTech's Michael Johnson about it. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Catherine Girardeau Blogs of interest: Inconvenient Truth Blog Foreign Policy Magazine blog Red State Blog Mother Jones blog Click here for transcript. Tags: Al Gore, climate change, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 24, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Former Vice President Al Gore addressed a large crowd of earth scientists and journalists gathered in San Francisco for the American Geophysical Union's fall conference on December 14th. Perhaps because he was talking to a room full of scientists, Gore focused not on the science of climate change, but on the need for scientists to communicate better with the public and to speak out against government interference in their research. PodTech's Catherine Girardeau has excerpts from the keynote. Earlier this month, federal regulations got a little clearer when it comes to required storage and retrieval of electronic business communication. All forms of electronic information will be subject to the rule change. While some companies are already saving large quantities of information, many may be saving more than they need to. While the new rule may clarify what information needs to be stored and discoverable, it may also be laying the groundwork for future legal challenges when it comes to workplace privacy, with private e-mails and text messages being monitored and discoverable. PodTech's Matt Kelly reports. $735 billion. That's how much Americans are carrying in debt. Prosper.com Founder and CEO Chris Larsen saw a Web 2.0 opportunity there, and spoke with PodTech's Michael Johnson about it. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Catherine Girardeau Blogs of interest: Inconvenient Truth Blog Foreign Policy Magazine blog Red State Blog Mother Jones blog Click here for transcript. Tags: Al Gore, climate change, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sun, 24 Dec 2006 01:28:42 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001633/Podtech_122306_PodTech_News_Weekly.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Wii Strapped!</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009411-PodTech-News-Brief-Wii-Strapped</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 22, 2006 (PodTech News) -- The Nintendo Wii has had a fairly successful rollout, even though it continues to be plagued by problems with the "Wiimote" controller. The problem is now taking the gamemaker to court. Another guilty plea in the U.S. Justice Department's case against memory chip firm Samsung -- this time the president of the U.S. subsidiary Samsung Semiconductor. Pricing of DRAM is being investigated for collusion and price fixing. Sony BMG is settling out-of-court, too. In continued fallout from the company's decision to embed anti-piracy software in certain music CDs, the settlement will see more than $4 million disbursed among 39 states. Also, the Catholic church is home to a lively blogger. Those stories, and the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: ZacharyTirrell via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Nintendo Wii, Wiimote, Stat of the Day</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 22, 2006 (PodTech News) -- The Nintendo Wii has had a fairly successful rollout, even though it continues to be plagued by problems with the "Wiimote" controller. The problem is now taking the gamemaker to court. Another guilty plea in the U.S. Justice Department's case against memory chip firm Samsung -- this time the president of the U.S. subsidiary Samsung Semiconductor. Pricing of DRAM is being investigated for collusion and price fixing. Sony BMG is settling out-of-court, too. In continued fallout from the company's decision to embed anti-piracy software in certain music CDs, the settlement will see more than $4 million disbursed among 39 states. Also, the Catholic church is home to a lively blogger. Those stories, and the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: ZacharyTirrell via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Nintendo Wii, Wiimote, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 22, 2006 (PodTech News) -- The Nintendo Wii has had a fairly successful rollout, even though it continues to be plagued by problems with the "Wiimote" controller. The problem is now taking the gamemaker to court. Another guilty plea in the U.S. Justice Department's case against memory chip firm Samsung -- this time the president of the U.S. subsidiary Samsung Semiconductor. Pricing of DRAM is being investigated for collusion and price fixing. Sony BMG is settling out-of-court, too. In continued fallout from the company's decision to embed anti-piracy software in certain music CDs, the settlement will see more than $4 million disbursed among 39 states. Also, the Catholic church is home to a lively blogger. Those stories, and the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: ZacharyTirrell via Flickr/Creative Commons Tags: Nintendo Wii, Wiimote, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-22,22009411</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 22 Dec 2006 01:37:45 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001623/Podtech_122206_PodTech_News_Fri.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Liquid Lenses, Digital Sales</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009420-PodTech-News-Brief-Liquid-Lenses-Digital-Sales</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 21, 2006 (PodTech News) -- The Federal Communications Commission took a step toward deregulation of video franchises. Good news for the telephone companies, and just in time for Christmas. Also, liquid lenses may finally be coming to a mobile phone near you -- the technology that could one day eliminate moving parts in your zoom has to start somewhere. The BBC is making some of its programming legally downloadable via a peer-to-peer service, while the movie download space got a little more crowded. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: mscaprikell via Flickr/Creative Commons180 Click here for transcript. Tags: Federal Communications Commission, deregulation, liquid lenses, BBC, Stat of the Day, PodTech News</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 21, 2006 (PodTech News) -- The Federal Communications Commission took a step toward deregulation of video franchises. Good news for the telephone companies, and just in time for Christmas. Also, liquid lenses may finally be coming to a mobile phone near you -- the technology that could one day eliminate moving parts in your zoom has to start somewhere. The BBC is making some of its programming legally downloadable via a peer-to-peer service, while the movie download space got a little more crowded. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: mscaprikell via Flickr/Creative Commons180 Click here for transcript. Tags: Federal Communications Commission, deregulation, liquid lenses, BBC, Stat of the Day, PodTech News</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 21, 2006 (PodTech News) -- The Federal Communications Commission took a step toward deregulation of video franchises. Good news for the telephone companies, and just in time for Christmas. Also, liquid lenses may finally be coming to a mobile phone near you -- the technology that could one day eliminate moving parts in your zoom has to start somewhere. The BBC is making some of its programming legally downloadable via a peer-to-peer service, while the movie download space got a little more crowded. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: mscaprikell via Flickr/Creative Commons180 Click here for transcript. Tags: Federal Communications Commission, deregulation, liquid lenses, BBC, Stat of the Day, PodTech News</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-21,22009420</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 Dec 2006 00:09:35 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001616/Podtech_122106_PodTech_News_Thurs_fix.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: NASA Photoshop, Before and After</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009439-PodTech-News-Brief-NASA-Photoshop-Before-and-After</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 20, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Researchers have been working with an series of images to reveal what might be some of the oldest matter in the universe. Meanwhile, closer to home, Sony has settled in the case against embedding dangerous software on protected CDs, the VCR passes a sad milestone, the Koran gets digital, and search engine companies are publishing their year-end top-ten lists. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: NASA/GSFC/JPL/Caltech Click here for transcript. Tags: Stat of the Day, PodTech News</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 20, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Researchers have been working with an series of images to reveal what might be some of the oldest matter in the universe. Meanwhile, closer to home, Sony has settled in the case against embedding dangerous software on protected CDs, the VCR passes a sad milestone, the Koran gets digital, and search engine companies are publishing their year-end top-ten lists. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: NASA/GSFC/JPL/Caltech Click here for transcript. Tags: Stat of the Day, PodTech News</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 20, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Researchers have been working with an series of images to reveal what might be some of the oldest matter in the universe. Meanwhile, closer to home, Sony has settled in the case against embedding dangerous software on protected CDs, the VCR passes a sad milestone, the Koran gets digital, and search engine companies are publishing their year-end top-ten lists. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: NASA/GSFC/JPL/Caltech Click here for transcript. Tags: Stat of the Day, PodTech News</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-20,22009439</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 20 Dec 2006 08:38:22 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001608/Podtech_122006_PodTech_News_Wed.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Working Together</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009444-PodTech-News-Brief-Working-Together</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 19, 2006 (PodTech News) &#8212; Google and NASA are working together to bring the virtual astronaut experience to a computer near you. The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation are working together to improve primary and secondary education in developing nations. MySpace and Cingular are working together to move more to mobile. Those stories of cooperation, and more, plus a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: NASA Click here for transcript. Tags: Google, NASA, Hewlett Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, MySpace, Cingular, Stat of the Day</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 19, 2006 (PodTech News) &#8212; Google and NASA are working together to bring the virtual astronaut experience to a computer near you. The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation are working together to improve primary and secondary education in developing nations. MySpace and Cingular are working together to move more to mobile. Those stories of cooperation, and more, plus a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: NASA Click here for transcript. Tags: Google, NASA, Hewlett Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, MySpace, Cingular, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 19, 2006 (PodTech News) &#8212; Google and NASA are working together to bring the virtual astronaut experience to a computer near you. The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation are working together to improve primary and secondary education in developing nations. MySpace and Cingular are working together to move more to mobile. Those stories of cooperation, and more, plus a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: NASA Click here for transcript. Tags: Google, NASA, Hewlett Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, MySpace, Cingular, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-19,22009444</guid>
      <pubDate>Tue, 19 Dec 2006 00:37:05 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001601/Podtech_121906_PodTech_News_Tues.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: (Very) Remote Control</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009446-PodTech-Weekly-Very-Remote-Control</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 16, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Predicting extreme weather, like Hurricanes, has come a long way with the help of remote control devices. That same technology, or a version of it, has proven an unprecedented success through NASA's Mars Rover project. Originally planned as a three-month project, several factors have allowed the rovers to function for more than three years. Catherine Girardeau looks into the remote control technology behind hurricane and Martian exploration. Also, Lab on a Chip research is becoming a reality. PodTech's Clark Boyd reports on the research that has MIT's Martin Bazant thinking small. And MMORPGs are potentially addictive. A survey by Nottingham Trent University's International Gaming Research Unit looked at more than seven thousand gamers, with some startling results. More than 12 percent of those surveyed showed signs of addiction. Rio Pesino speaks with Nottingham Trent Professor Mark Griffiths about the survey, and what it means for...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 16, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Predicting extreme weather, like Hurricanes, has come a long way with the help of remote control devices. That same technology, or a version of it, has proven an unprecedented success through NASA's Mars Rover project. Originally planned as a three-month project, several factors have allowed the rovers to function for more than three years. Catherine Girardeau looks into the remote control technology behind hurricane and Martian exploration. Also, Lab on a Chip research is becoming a reality. PodTech's Clark Boyd reports on the research that has MIT's Martin Bazant thinking small. And MMORPGs are potentially addictive. A survey by Nottingham Trent University's International Gaming Research Unit looked at more than seven thousand gamers, with some startling results. More than 12 percent of those surveyed showed signs of addiction. Rio Pesino speaks with Nottingham Trent Professor Mark Griffiths about the survey, and what it means for gamers. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: National Aeronautics and Space Administration Click here for transcript. Tags: NASA, Mars Rover, Catherine Girardeau, Lab on a Chip, Clark Boyd, Martin Bazant, MMORPGs, Nottingham Trent University, Rio Pesino, Mark Griffiths</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 16, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Predicting extreme weather, like Hurricanes, has come a long way with the help of remote control devices. That same technology, or a version of it, has proven an unprecedented success through NASA's Mars Rover project. Originally planned as a three-month project, several factors have allowed the rovers to function for more than three years. Catherine Girardeau looks into the remote control technology behind hurricane and Martian exploration. Also, Lab on a Chip research is becoming a reality. PodTech's Clark Boyd reports on the research that has MIT's Martin Bazant thinking small. And MMORPGs are potentially addictive. A survey by Nottingham Trent University's International Gaming Research Unit looked at more than seven thousand gamers, with some startling results. More than 12 percent of those surveyed showed signs of addiction. Rio Pesino speaks with Nottingham Trent Professor Mark Griffiths about the survey, and what it means for gamers. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: National Aeronautics and Space Administration Click here for transcript. Tags: NASA, Mars Rover, Catherine Girardeau, Lab on a Chip, Clark Boyd, Martin Bazant, MMORPGs, Nottingham Trent University, Rio Pesino, Mark Griffiths</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 16 Dec 2006 15:07:26 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001589/Podtech_121606_News_weekly_MarsMMORPGM.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Gore Talks Science</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/4061943-PodTech-News-Brief-Gore-Talks-Science</link>
      <description></description>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-15,4061943</guid>
      <pubDate>Fri, 15 Dec 2006 08:30:30 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="" url="http://media.podtech.net/media/2006/12/PID_001584/Podtech_121506_PodTech_Newscast_Friday.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Gore Talks Science</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009451-PodTech-News-Brief-Gore-Talks-Science</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 15, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Al Gore addressed the American Geophysical Union here Wednesday, on the same day as several recently-published studies on climate change were also in the news. Gore's comments to the scientific gathering focused on the challenges facing scientists when it comes to explaining the importance of their work to a skeptical public. PodTech's Catherine Girardeau was there. Also, holiday shopping news, economic espionage in Silicon Valley, solar flares, and a new kind of Internet-based extortion. Those stories and the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Click here for transcript. Tags: Al Gore, American Geophysical Union, Catherine Girardeau, economic espionage, Silicon Valley, Stat of the Day</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 15, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Al Gore addressed the American Geophysical Union here Wednesday, on the same day as several recently-published studies on climate change were also in the news. Gore's comments to the scientific gathering focused on the challenges facing scientists when it comes to explaining the importance of their work to a skeptical public. PodTech's Catherine Girardeau was there. Also, holiday shopping news, economic espionage in Silicon Valley, solar flares, and a new kind of Internet-based extortion. Those stories and the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Click here for transcript. Tags: Al Gore, American Geophysical Union, Catherine Girardeau, economic espionage, Silicon Valley, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 15, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Al Gore addressed the American Geophysical Union here Wednesday, on the same day as several recently-published studies on climate change were also in the news. Gore's comments to the scientific gathering focused on the challenges facing scientists when it comes to explaining the importance of their work to a skeptical public. PodTech's Catherine Girardeau was there. Also, holiday shopping news, economic espionage in Silicon Valley, solar flares, and a new kind of Internet-based extortion. Those stories and the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Click here for transcript. Tags: Al Gore, American Geophysical Union, Catherine Girardeau, economic espionage, Silicon Valley, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 15 Dec 2006 00:30:30 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001584/Podtech_121506_PodTech_Newscast_Friday.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Left Behind, the Game?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/4061923-PodTech-News-Brief-Left-Behind-the-Game</link>
      <description></description>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-14,4061923</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 14 Dec 2006 08:02:27 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="" url="http://media.podtech.net/media/2006/12/PID_001568/Podtech_121406_podtech_news_thursday.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Left Behind, the Game?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009454-PodTech-News-Brief-Left-Behind-the-Game</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 14, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Samsung's plan to introduce its OneDRAM fusion memory in 2007 could mean much speedier smartphones. The company announced the device this week, amid the year-end predictions from analysts and enthusiasts for everything from cell phones to start-ups. We look to the tech experts at Gartner Inc. for some of their predictions. Also, the Top 20 Wired Colleges, Nintendo conquers Europe, Yahoo and IBM team up to face Google, and a shoot-em-up video game with a call to prayer -- Left Behind: Eternal Forces, from Left Behind Games. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Click here for transcript. Tags: Samsung, OneDRAM, Gartner, Stat of the Day</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 14, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Samsung's plan to introduce its OneDRAM fusion memory in 2007 could mean much speedier smartphones. The company announced the device this week, amid the year-end predictions from analysts and enthusiasts for everything from cell phones to start-ups. We look to the tech experts at Gartner Inc. for some of their predictions. Also, the Top 20 Wired Colleges, Nintendo conquers Europe, Yahoo and IBM team up to face Google, and a shoot-em-up video game with a call to prayer -- Left Behind: Eternal Forces, from Left Behind Games. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Click here for transcript. Tags: Samsung, OneDRAM, Gartner, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 14, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Samsung's plan to introduce its OneDRAM fusion memory in 2007 could mean much speedier smartphones. The company announced the device this week, amid the year-end predictions from analysts and enthusiasts for everything from cell phones to start-ups. We look to the tech experts at Gartner Inc. for some of their predictions. Also, the Top 20 Wired Colleges, Nintendo conquers Europe, Yahoo and IBM team up to face Google, and a shoot-em-up video game with a call to prayer -- Left Behind: Eternal Forces, from Left Behind Games. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Click here for transcript. Tags: Samsung, OneDRAM, Gartner, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-14,22009454</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 14 Dec 2006 00:02:27 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001568/Podtech_121406_podtech_news_thursday.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: What's In a Name?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/4061903-PodTech-News-Brief-What-s-In-a-Name</link>
      <description></description>
      <itunes:subtitle></itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary></itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-13,4061903</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Dec 2006 08:19:15 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="" url="http://media.podtech.net/media/2006/12/PID_001560/Podtech_121306_PodTech_Newscast_Wednes.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: What's In a Name?</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009457-PodTech-News-Brief-What-s-In-a-Name</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 13, 2006 (PodTech News) -- BlackBerry v. BlackJack - a new lawsuit says Samsung is playing games with names. Also, security patches from Microsoft, a security breach at UCLA, increased Internet controls in China, a long-term threat from the Arctic and a bed that floats. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: adobemac via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: BlackBerry, BlackJack, Samsung, Microsoft, Stat of the Day</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 13, 2006 (PodTech News) -- BlackBerry v. BlackJack - a new lawsuit says Samsung is playing games with names. Also, security patches from Microsoft, a security breach at UCLA, increased Internet controls in China, a long-term threat from the Arctic and a bed that floats. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: adobemac via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: BlackBerry, BlackJack, Samsung, Microsoft, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 13, 2006 (PodTech News) -- BlackBerry v. BlackJack - a new lawsuit says Samsung is playing games with names. Also, security patches from Microsoft, a security breach at UCLA, increased Internet controls in China, a long-term threat from the Arctic and a bed that floats. Those stories and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: adobemac via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: BlackBerry, BlackJack, Samsung, Microsoft, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">tag:odeo.com,2006-12-13,22009457</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 Dec 2006 00:19:15 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
      <enclosure type="audio/mpeg" url="http://media1.podtech.net/redirects/feed_media1/2006/12/PID_001560/Podtech_121306_PodTech_Newscast_Wednes.mp3"/>
      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Wii Sued!</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009481-PodTech-News-Brief-Wii-Sued</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 12, 2006 (PodTech News) -- In the news today, Nintendo's Wii surprises the world with its first lawsuit -- it's not an injury! In Vienna, Mozart's works have been brought into the digital age, and they're now living online, absolutely free. Also, a glimpse at memory after flash, the military is looking for a few good... robots, and a closer look at best practices in the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: JessicaSarahS via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Nintendo, Wii, Mozart, Stat of the Day</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 12, 2006 (PodTech News) -- In the news today, Nintendo's Wii surprises the world with its first lawsuit -- it's not an injury! In Vienna, Mozart's works have been brought into the digital age, and they're now living online, absolutely free. Also, a glimpse at memory after flash, the military is looking for a few good... robots, and a closer look at best practices in the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: JessicaSarahS via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Nintendo, Wii, Mozart, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 12, 2006 (PodTech News) -- In the news today, Nintendo's Wii surprises the world with its first lawsuit -- it's not an injury! In Vienna, Mozart's works have been brought into the digital age, and they're now living online, absolutely free. Also, a glimpse at memory after flash, the military is looking for a few good... robots, and a closer look at best practices in the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: JessicaSarahS via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Nintendo, Wii, Mozart, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 12 Dec 2006 00:36:10 -0800</pubDate>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: Tech Abroad, From India to Iran</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009483-PodTech-Weekly-Tech-Abroad-From-India-to-Iran</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 9, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Recent headlines suggest that it's getting harder and harder for citizens in Iran to visit Web sites like the open-source online encyclopedia Wikipedia and even the online home of The New York Times. An academic partnership between several universities is working to give open access to people stuck behind walls of Internet censorship. Clark Boyd reports on the OpenNet Initiative. This week, Cisco Systems announced its intent to invest more heavily in its infrastructure in India. Tech companies are no stranger to India's high tech hub in Bangalore, but what does Western tech's presence mean to the people of Bangalore? Catherine Girardeau speaks with Stanford University Professor Margaret O'Mara about the impact of big business on the city, and the prospects for sustainable urban growth there. This past week saw the 100th anniversary of the Los Angeles Auto Show. On hand, a record number of World or North American debuts. Matt Kelly wa...</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 9, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Recent headlines suggest that it's getting harder and harder for citizens in Iran to visit Web sites like the open-source online encyclopedia Wikipedia and even the online home of The New York Times. An academic partnership between several universities is working to give open access to people stuck behind walls of Internet censorship. Clark Boyd reports on the OpenNet Initiative. This week, Cisco Systems announced its intent to invest more heavily in its infrastructure in India. Tech companies are no stranger to India's high tech hub in Bangalore, but what does Western tech's presence mean to the people of Bangalore? Catherine Girardeau speaks with Stanford University Professor Margaret O'Mara about the impact of big business on the city, and the prospects for sustainable urban growth there. This past week saw the 100th anniversary of the Los Angeles Auto Show. On hand, a record number of World or North American debuts. Matt Kelly was there to see how far design and technology have come since 1906. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: elishka via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Internet censorship, OpenNet Initiative, Cisco, Bangalore, Stanford University, Los Angeles Auto Show</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 9, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Recent headlines suggest that it's getting harder and harder for citizens in Iran to visit Web sites like the open-source online encyclopedia Wikipedia and even the online home of The New York Times. An academic partnership between several universities is working to give open access to people stuck behind walls of Internet censorship. Clark Boyd reports on the OpenNet Initiative. This week, Cisco Systems announced its intent to invest more heavily in its infrastructure in India. Tech companies are no stranger to India's high tech hub in Bangalore, but what does Western tech's presence mean to the people of Bangalore? Catherine Girardeau speaks with Stanford University Professor Margaret O'Mara about the impact of big business on the city, and the prospects for sustainable urban growth there. This past week saw the 100th anniversary of the Los Angeles Auto Show. On hand, a record number of World or North American debuts. Matt Kelly was there to see how far design and technology have come since 1906. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: elishka via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Internet censorship, OpenNet Initiative, Cisco, Bangalore, Stanford University, Los Angeles Auto Show</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 09 Dec 2006 14:54:08 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Apple Still Not Green</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009486-PodTech-News-Brief-Apple-Still-Not-Green</link>
      <description>Apple is once again in Greenpeace's cross-hairs -- the environmental watchdog's Green Electronics Guide put Apple at the bottom of the heap, while Nokia sits on top. Along those lines, a quick look at a conversation that's bound to gain momentum: How much energy does the online world use? While new chips will save us massive amounts of energy, the question of technology's impact on increased consumption is a big one. A blogosphere conversation has been going on this week -- it started on Rough Type, and continued over at Clickable Culture, Guardian Unlimited and The Social Web. Also, more strangeness in Sony's PS3 rollout -- this time in Japan, and Microsoft's got some rosy predictions for sales in the new year. Those stories, and the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Capitan Giona/Salvatore_Barbera via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Apple, Greenpeace, Green Electronics Guide, Stat of the Day</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>Apple is once again in Greenpeace's cross-hairs -- the environmental watchdog's Green Electronics Guide put Apple at the bottom of the heap, while Nokia sits on top. Along those lines, a quick look at a conversation that's bound to gain momentum: How much energy does the online world use? While new chips will save us massive amounts of energy, the question of technology's impact on increased consumption is a big one. A blogosphere conversation has been going on this week -- it started on Rough Type, and continued over at Clickable Culture, Guardian Unlimited and The Social Web. Also, more strangeness in Sony's PS3 rollout -- this time in Japan, and Microsoft's got some rosy predictions for sales in the new year. Those stories, and the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Capitan Giona/Salvatore_Barbera via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Apple, Greenpeace, Green Electronics Guide, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>Apple is once again in Greenpeace's cross-hairs -- the environmental watchdog's Green Electronics Guide put Apple at the bottom of the heap, while Nokia sits on top. Along those lines, a quick look at a conversation that's bound to gain momentum: How much energy does the online world use? While new chips will save us massive amounts of energy, the question of technology's impact on increased consumption is a big one. A blogosphere conversation has been going on this week -- it started on Rough Type, and continued over at Clickable Culture, Guardian Unlimited and The Social Web. Also, more strangeness in Sony's PS3 rollout -- this time in Japan, and Microsoft's got some rosy predictions for sales in the new year. Those stories, and the Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Capitan Giona/Salvatore_Barbera via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Apple, Greenpeace, Green Electronics Guide, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 07 Dec 2006 00:03:29 -0800</pubDate>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: MySpace and Outer Space</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009542-PodTech-News-Brief-MySpace-and-Outer-Space</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 6, 2006 (PodTech News) &#8212; MySpace.com has plans to move further into the wireless space. That -- plus plans to move into China -- may bolster the value of the site that News Corp. boss Rupert Murdoch has hinted he might like to sell. Comcast gaming gets a boost, and NASA prepares to rewire its floating space station, while it dreams of real estate on the moon. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Kowh via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: MySpace.com, Rupert Murdoch, Comcast, Stat of the Day</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 6, 2006 (PodTech News) &#8212; MySpace.com has plans to move further into the wireless space. That -- plus plans to move into China -- may bolster the value of the site that News Corp. boss Rupert Murdoch has hinted he might like to sell. Comcast gaming gets a boost, and NASA prepares to rewire its floating space station, while it dreams of real estate on the moon. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Kowh via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: MySpace.com, Rupert Murdoch, Comcast, Stat of the Day</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 6, 2006 (PodTech News) &#8212; MySpace.com has plans to move further into the wireless space. That -- plus plans to move into China -- may bolster the value of the site that News Corp. boss Rupert Murdoch has hinted he might like to sell. Comcast gaming gets a boost, and NASA prepares to rewire its floating space station, while it dreams of real estate on the moon. Those stories, and a Stat of the Day. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: Kowh via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: MySpace.com, Rupert Murdoch, Comcast, Stat of the Day</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 06 Dec 2006 00:35:00 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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      <title>PodTech News Brief: Ask.com, Newspapers Changing</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009547-PodTech-News-Brief-Ask-com-Newspapers-Changing</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 5, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Search competition may be heating up with Ask.com's revamped services. Other search firms have pumped some ad revenue into the newspaper industry. How are newspapers reacting? They may be starting to look a lot more local -- and a lot more virtual -- before too long. Also, changes online at CNBC, a crack in TiVo's DRM and one more story about cell phone use from Finland. Those stories and a tech stat. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: cobalt123 via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Ask.com, newspaper industry, TiVo, PodTech News</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 5, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Search competition may be heating up with Ask.com's revamped services. Other search firms have pumped some ad revenue into the newspaper industry. How are newspapers reacting? They may be starting to look a lot more local -- and a lot more virtual -- before too long. Also, changes online at CNBC, a crack in TiVo's DRM and one more story about cell phone use from Finland. Those stories and a tech stat. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: cobalt123 via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Ask.com, newspaper industry, TiVo, PodTech News</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 5, 2006 (PodTech News) -- Search competition may be heating up with Ask.com's revamped services. Other search firms have pumped some ad revenue into the newspaper industry. How are newspapers reacting? They may be starting to look a lot more local -- and a lot more virtual -- before too long. Also, changes online at CNBC, a crack in TiVo's DRM and one more story about cell phone use from Finland. Those stories and a tech stat. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: cobalt123 via Flickr/Creative Commons Click here for transcript. Tags: Ask.com, newspaper industry, TiVo, PodTech News</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Tue, 05 Dec 2006 00:29:05 -0800</pubDate>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech Weekly: New Computers, Old Technology</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009550-PodTech-Weekly-New-Computers-Old-Technology</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 2, 2006 (PodTech News) -- "Clean, flat sheets of bronze." That's one way to describe one of your modern PC's progenitors. Researchers at Hewlett-Packard are in the news this week for the interest they've taken in the Antikythera mechanism -- arguably the world's oldest computer. Also in the news this week, supply, demand, eBay, and the war of the gaming consoles. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: NAMA Machine d'Anticythere 1 via Wikipedia Commons and Creative Commons Click here for transcript.</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 2, 2006 (PodTech News) -- "Clean, flat sheets of bronze." That's one way to describe one of your modern PC's progenitors. Researchers at Hewlett-Packard are in the news this week for the interest they've taken in the Antikythera mechanism -- arguably the world's oldest computer. Also in the news this week, supply, demand, eBay, and the war of the gaming consoles. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: NAMA Machine d'Anticythere 1 via Wikipedia Commons and Creative Commons Click here for transcript.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 2, 2006 (PodTech News) -- "Clean, flat sheets of bronze." That's one way to describe one of your modern PC's progenitors. Researchers at Hewlett-Packard are in the news this week for the interest they've taken in the Antikythera mechanism -- arguably the world's oldest computer. Also in the news this week, supply, demand, eBay, and the war of the gaming consoles. It's PodTech News. Photo Credit: NAMA Machine d'Anticythere 1 via Wikipedia Commons and Creative Commons Click here for transcript.</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 02 Dec 2006 14:41:02 -0800</pubDate>
      <itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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    <item>
      <title>PodTech News Brief: Buena Vista</title>
      <link>http://www.odeo.com/episodes/22009554-PodTech-News-Brief-Buena-Vista</link>
      <description>SAN FRANCISCO, December 1, 2006 (PodTech News) -- At long last, Microsoft has launched its Vista operating system for businesses. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer called it the biggest launch in the company's history. It could have been even bigger, though - the other shoe drops at the end of January, with the release of Vista's consumer version. The Department of Homeland Security sent a warning to financial services and stock trading companies - uncorroborated threats from Al Qaeda have them worried about cyber terror. Verisign re-ups with the Commerce Department for another six years of dot-com oversight and Japan's Softbank signs one of the world's biggest refinancing deals - will it start a trend? Those stories, and a tech stat. It's PodTech News. Tags: Vista, operating system, cyber terror, Verisign, tech stat</description>
      <itunes:subtitle>SAN FRANCISCO, December 1, 2006 (PodTech News) -- At long last, Microsoft has launched its Vista operating system for businesses. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer called it the biggest launch in the company's history. It could have been even bigger, though - the other shoe drops at the end of January, with the release of Vista's consumer version. The Department of Homeland Security sent a warning to financial services and stock trading companies - uncorroborated threats from Al Qaeda have them worried about cyber terror. Verisign re-ups with the Commerce Department for another six years of dot-com oversight and Japan's Softbank signs one of the world's biggest refinancing deals - will it start a trend? Those stories, and a tech stat. It's PodTech News. Tags: Vista, operating system, cyber terror, Verisign, tech stat</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:summary>SAN FRANCISCO, December 1, 2006 (PodTech News) -- At long last, Microsoft has launched its Vista operating system for businesses. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer called it the biggest launch in the company's history. It could have been even bigger, though - the other shoe drops at the end of January, with the release of Vista's consumer version. The Department of Homeland Security sent a warning to financial services and stock trading companies - uncorroborated threats from Al Qaeda have them worried about cyber terror. Verisign re-ups with the Commerce Department for another six years of dot-com oversight and Japan's Softbank signs one of the world's biggest refinancing deals - will it start a trend? Those stories, and a tech stat. It's PodTech News. Tags: Vista, operating system, cyber terror, Verisign, tech stat</itunes:summary>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 01 Dec 2006 00:27:36 -0800</pubDate>
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      <itunes:author>PodTech News - Powered by PodTech.net</itunes:author>
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