At the Web 2.0 Summit, New York Magazine's John Heilemann talked to John Doerr (Kleiner Perkins Caufield and Byers) about a myriad of issues, from some of our nation's priorities to the economy to where he sees venture investment going. Heilemann, fresh off a flight from Chicago where he finished covering the presidential election, claimed his first two questions came directly from Barack Obama.
Last month, the world learned that Dan Kaminsky had discovered a seriousl vulnerability with DNS, which he unveiled at this year's Black Hat Conference in Las Vegas. Dark Reading's Site Editor, Tim Wilson, talks with Dan about the flaw.
Computer Security Institute's Senior Editor, Sara Peters, speaks with Shawn Moyer, Sr. Security Consultant with FishNet Securitiy and Nathan Hamiel, Sr. Consultant at Idea Information Security about the inherent flaws in social networks.
Former Vice President Al Gore talked at Web 2.0 Summit, covering topics like his company Current TV, the democratization of the Web, the recently-concluded election and his favorite topic, renewable energy.
InformationWeek's John Foley speaks with Olivier Thierry, President and CEO of FiveRuns. FiveRuns is an Austin based startup that delivers "elegant and affordable products helping developers monitor, analyze, troubleshoot and simply improve the performance and availability of their Ruby on Rails applications."
InformationWeek's John Foley Speaks with MoGoe's President Christa Ross and VP & CTO, Melissa Lucciola. MoGoes is a new application platform that helps users discover and explore a city using their mobile phone as a guide.
Tim O'Reilly speaking about "bold commitments" and "big, hairy, audacious goals." O'Reilly also talks about the necessity of going after big, hard problems.
InformationWeek'sJoh n Foley, speaks with Larry Warnock, CEO of Phurnace Software. Phurnace Software helps you accelerate your delivery of production-ready Java EE? applications.
Intel CEO Paul Otellini demonstrates and discusses the future of collaboration and talks about Intels business model, including how it approaches R&D, at the 2008 Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco.
Though it looks like Saran Wrap, it's more like a bulletproof material for protecting your devices. TechWeb TV's David Berlind gets the scoop from the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
InformationWeek's John Foley speaks with Google's Kamal Nigam, an Engineering Manager working out of the Google Pittsburgh offices. Nigam explains why Pittsburgh was the perfect spot for Google to set up shop.
TechWebTV's David Berlind is in Las Vegas and the Consumer Electronics Show and received a behind the scenes briefing from DisplayLink president and CEO Hamid Farzaneh regarding the company's namesake technology that's capable of distributing video to as many as six displays at a time over USB. In other words, forget all those nasty VGA cables!
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg on stage again at Web 2.0, talking about Facebook Connect, the newest developments in social networking, monetizing social networking and the future of Facebook.
Fritz Nelson, Executive Producer at TechWeb, talks with Tim O'Reilly at the Web 2.0 Expo 2008 in San Francisco. O'Reilly talks about the corporate and IT uses of Web 2.0. He also comments on what he thinks is the future of the web 2.0 space.
TechWeb's Fritz Nelson talks to Saul Griffith at ETech 2008 in San Diego. According to Griffith, there is an ever increasing need to take account of the amount of energy we use as individuals, communities and nations. One of the more popular speakers at ETech, Saul promises that his next appearance at a conference will consume less energy...it will be over the phone.
EMotive was part of IBM's partner showcase booth here at CES, showing off its funky headgear which measures brain activity for emotion and conscious effort. Applications include more rich avatars, gaming, information feedback and much more.
InformationWeek's John Foley speaks with Patrick McGregor, CEO and Co-Founder of BitArmor. According to McGregor, BitArmor offers a software solution that takes a very different approach to protecting data. Unlike most offerings, which either lock down a device or an application, BitArmor protects the data itself.