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HTC VP of Global Communications leaves post, Chief Product Officer said to follow suit

HTC VP of Global Communications leaves post, Chief Product Officer said to follow suit

HTC seems to be encountering a bit of executive brain drain. Jason Gordon, the firm’s vice president of global communications, revealed on Twitter that he ended his nearly seven-year-long stint with the handset maker last Friday, but didn’t divulge why he left or what his future plans include. Now, The Verge is reporting that Chief Product Officer Kouji Kodera has also flown the coop, following a handful of other execs. According to the outlet’s sources, Chief Marketing Officer Ben Ho could be partly responsible for the changes since he’s said to be moving the outfit’s planning and strategy back to its Taipei HQ. With Peter Chou pinning poor marketing as what held the company back in 2012, it’s certainly possible things are being reeled back to home base — not unlike Nokia’s own centralization in recent years. We’ve reached out to HTC to confirm Kodera’s exit and just what the departures mean for the organization as a whole.

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Via: The Verge

Source: Jason Gordon (Twitter)

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NYC’s Chief Digital Officer Rachel Haot on borough hopping with Google Maps and the Macintosh II

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Every week, a new and interesting human being tackles our decidedly geeky take on the Proustian Q&A. This is the Engadget Questionnaire.

This week’s edition of our regular session on inquiry chats with the nation’s first Chief Digital Officer, Rachel Haot. NYC’s CDO discusses navigating the five boroughs with Google Maps and her filtered photo obsession. Head on past the jump for the full set of responses.

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Source: Distro Issue 91

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Nokia’s Smart Devices Chief On Instagram, Android, Phablets & The Continued Lack Of A 41MP PureView Lumia

jo harlowNokia has added another device to its burgeoning Lumia portfolio of smartphones today, with the introduction of the Lumia 925: a sleek, PureView-branded handset that will be its first flagship on T-Mobile U.S. At today’s London launch, Nokia executive VP of smart devices, Jo Harlow, sat down with TechCrunch to field a few questions.
TechCrunch

PayPal’s chief information security officer says passwords’ days are numbered

DNP PayPal's chief information security officer says passwords' days are numbered

Recently speaking at the Interop IT conference, PayPal’s chief information security officer, Michael Barrett, stated that passwords and PINs were operating on borrowed time. Barrett hopes to replace online security keys with a setup that’s a blend of software and hardware-based identification. He also serves as president of the Fast Identity Online Alliance (FIDO) — the organization’s focus is to combine an effective mix of software (passwords and plugins) and hardware (USB drives and fingerprint scanners) for user authentication.

PayPal’s technology boss didn’t allude to his company adopting these new types of security systems for its customers anytime soon. Instead he announced that FIDO-enabled devices will be hitting the market sometime this year. Progress, yes, but until this hardware becomes more widely available, it’s likely that you’ll be spending more time getting acquainted with two-step logins.

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Via: SlashGear

Source: Macworld

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NASA chief Bolden urges Congress to fund private space taxis

American astronauts could be forced to fly on Russian spacecraft beyond 2017 if Congress continues to cut funding for private crewed vehicles, NASA chief Charles Bolden says.
FOX News

Google Sets Its Sights On Gaming, Hires Noah Falstein As Chief Game Designer

MojoKid writes “Google has its hands in every other aspect of the tech industry, so why not gaming, too? It appears as though the company is eyeing a run at the gaming market by hiring Noah Falstein as its “Chief Game Designer”. Falstein’s LinkedIn profile has been updated to reflect his new title, which is the latest in a long career. He started out in 1980 and put in time at (the recently-defunct) Lucasfilm Games as well as 3DO and Dreamworks Interactive.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

NYC police chief: more surveillance cameras coming, privacy is “off the table”

Now more than ever, people are becoming more worried about their privacy, specifically being monitored while out in the public. Whether it’d be commuting to work or going out with friends, people aren’t too comfortable with the idea that there are people watching them. However, it’s not going away anytime soon, according to NYC police

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SlashGear

Obama’s Fmr. Chief Economic Advisor On Bitcoin’s Usefulness: “Hahahaha. ROTFL”

url3Eighty-seven percent of the nation’s top economists think that the digital currency, Bitcoin, has “limited usefulness.” Given the growing popularity of the enigmatic currency, the University of Chicago conducted its famous Initiative on Global Markets (IGM) poll of 38 of the world’s top economists, to see how experts felt about its longterm future. By far the best response came from the former Chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, Austan Goolsbee, who simply wrote, “Hahahaha. ROTFL.” Bitcoin is a digital currency designed by an anonymous programmer that is produced by “miners” who contribute expensive computing power to solving the mathematical puzzles necessary to bring more of the scarce currency into existence. Early speculators and anarchy-friendly buyers gave the crypto-currency an early boost, eventually earning it mainstream acceptance at popular websites, including the home of lonely netizens, OkCupid. Even after months of wild swings in value (from $ 205 to $ 105 during one day), more and more shops are starting to accept bitcoins alongside dollars. (for an awesome explanation, see the Colbert Report video below): The Colbert Report Get More: Colbert Report Full Episodes,Political Humor & Satire Blog,Video Archive The Colbert Report Get More: Colbert Report Full Episodes,Political Humor & Satire Blog,Video Archive It appears that the nation’s top economists don’t have the same faith in Bitcoin as the proprietors of the online dating service. The overwhelming majority surveyed felt that Bitcoin’s crazy fluctuations will inherently “limit its usefulness.” Former editor of the prestigious American Economic Review, Judith Chevalier, wrote: “Unlike government issued fiat money, there is no guarantee it can be used to pay taxes or settle other obligations.” Of course, the expert crowd wasn’t unanimous. Stanford’s Caroline Hoxby wrote: “First part is right: value derives from belief others want to use it for trade. Second part is not obvious: beliefs could stabilize or not.” While this isn’t a glowing endorsement of the nascent currency, it’s worth noting that economists occasionally have difficulty predicting events, such as the massive recession that almost tanked the global economy. Still, people are investing their own money in Bitcoin. Question is, do you want to bet against 87 percent of top economists?
TechCrunch

Big-data science requires SDN, Internet2 chief says

Software-defined networking in universities today is like the early Internet decades ago, and big-data researchers in genomics and other fields already need it for their next set of discoveries, according to the head of Internet2.
Computerworld News

US won’t be returning to moon, NASA chief says

America won’t be repeating that historic one small step anytime soon — not according to NASA chief Charlie Bolden, anyway.


FOX News

Police chief suspended for Facebook pic with gun-toting woman

A Pennsylvania police chief claims his Facebook account was hacked — which doesn’t entirely explain a picture of him displayed there. It features a fetching lady with a bare midriff and two guns. [Read more]


CNET News

IBM's mainframe chief eyes mobile, social workloads

The head of IBM's mainframe group is looking to bring mobile and social workloads into the platform in another move that would help the mainframe stay relevant and fend off competition from lower-cost systems.
Computerworld News

Ouya chief: We’ll launch a new console every year

Although Ouya won’t hit wide retail lease in June, the company plans to launch a new model each year. [Read more]


CNET News

Zynga chief game designer likely to start own game studio

Just a few days ago, we told you that Brian Reynolds, Zynga‘s chief game designer is stepping down from his post after almost four years at the company. At the time, it wasn’t clear what Reynolds planned on doing next, but the man has spoken, and while he’s still not 100% sure what he’s going

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SlashGear

DOE to Lose Nerd in Chief

Energy secretary Steven Chu announced his departure today. He leaves behind a markedly different DOE.

Today U.S. energy secretary Steven Chu announced his decision to step down. Under his leadership, the U.S. Department of Energy has changed the way it does energy research and development. He leaves behind new research organizations that are intently focused on solving specific energy problems, particularly the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Energy as well as several Innovation Hubs. The latter were modeled closely on Chu’s experience working at the legendary Bell Labs, where researchers solving basic problems rubbed shoulders with engineers who knew how to build things. At one Innovation Hub, for example, researchers who are inventing new materials that can absorb sunlight or split water are working together with engineers who are building prototypes that could use those materials to generate fuel from sunlight (see “Artificial Photosynthesis Effort Takes Root”).







New on MIT Technology Review

Chief Game Designer Brian Reynolds Leaves Zynga

ZyngaLogo180x180Another key member of Zynga’s team has left the beleaguered social game maker. This time it’s chief game designer Brian Reynolds, as first reported on Polygon. The company confirmed Reynolds’ departure, but did not offer any details about why Reynolds is leaving or his last day.
TechCrunch

FCC chief calls for gigabit Internet in all 50 states by 2015

Cities around the U.S. will have gigabit-speed Internet access by 2015 if the FCC's wishes come true.
Computerworld News

Apple legal chief joins board of ski resort company

Apple’s general counsel and senior vice president is now on the board of a company that manages ski resorts around the U.S. [Read more]


CNET News

EU Antitrust Chief: Google “Diverting Traffic” & Will Be Forced To Change

Dupple writes “It looks like the EU is coming close to a decision regarding its investigation of Google. While saying he’s ‘still investigating,’ the head of the European Union’s antitrust regulatory body has said that he’s convinced Google is ‘diverting traffic’ and that it will be forced to change its results. From the article: ‘Despite the U.S. Federal Trade Commission’s move earlier this month to let off Google with a slap on the wrist — albeit, a change to its business practices, a move that financially wouldn’t dent Google in the short term but something any company would seek to avoid — the European Commission is looking to take a somewhat different approach: take its time, and then hit the company hard.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Nintendo chief describes Wii U sales as ‘not bad’, says supplies were misjudged at launch

Nintendo chief says Wii U sales are 'not bad', admits overambitious launch

There’s almost a gory fascination with watching Wii U sales right now, because we know they’re short of the thunderous launch of the original Wii and it’s only a question of “by how much?“. Nevertheless, Nintendo President Satoru Iwata has insisted to Reuters that the Wii U’s reception has been “not bad” in terms of hard figures, and that the next-gen console is “selling steadily” even though shelves haven’t been depleted like they were with its predecessor. Satoru admits that trying to launch two versions of the console simultaneously was a “challenge” and that quantities weren’t balanced quite right, with too few of the premium $ 350 option and an excess of the $ 300 model that early adopters didn’t much want. Nintendo sales trends have a habit of doing wild things, of course, so like the pension paperwork says: previous performance isn’t necessarily an indication of future success.

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Source: Reuters

Engadget

Autonomy Chief Says Whitman Is Watering Down HP Fraud Claims

McGruber writes “Possibly the wierdest tax-writeoff of the year happened when Meg Whitman claimed that her US-based multinational corporation HP had been defrauded by British-software firm Autonomy; Ms. Whitman and HP claimed an 8.8 billion dollar write-down. As the Los Angeles Times explains, ‘HP acquired Autonomy in 2011 for $ 11 billion, a move it hoped would turn it away from its dependence on sales of computer hardware with its low profit margins, and into the more profitable business of software. However, the price HP paid was widely criticized for being too high, and in part led to the subsequent ouster of Chief Executive Leo Apotheker.’ The wierdness continues — in its annual report filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, HP claims that the U.S. Department of Justice has opened an investigation into HP’s allegations that HP has uncovered widespread accounting fraud at Autonomy. However, The Guardian points out that former Autonomy CEO Mike Lynch claims that HP ‘is watering down the accusations it had levelled against him over the accounts filed by his old software company.’ Mr. Lynch also says that he has not been contacted by the U.S. Department of Justice, which HP claims is investigating the alleged fraud. Perhaps Slashdot’s users can help make sense of this mess and help explain it to me?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Microsoft’s strategy chief limits role, will retire in 2014

Craig Mundie, who inherited some of Bill Gates’ duties when Gates left his full-time position at Microsoft, will take on the role of “senior adviser to CEO.” [Read more]


CNET News

Microsoft strategy chief Mundie takes new role, will retire in 2014

Craig Mundie has left his role as Microsoft’s chief research and strategy officer to become senior adviser to the CEO, as he winds down before retirement.
Computerworld News

Exclusive: ITU ‘failed,’ says former policy chief

A former telecommunications policy maker at the international organization, which is holding talks in Dubai to expand regulation of the Internet, warns that the group’s conference is “absolutely absurd.” [Read more]


CNET News

Google replacing Mergers and Acquisitions chief

This week it’s been tipped that the man behind Google’s Mergers & Acquisitions group, David Lawee, will be moved to a new investment group inside the company while his position is filled by one Don Harrison. This information comes from an anonymous source speaking with Rueters where they’ve received the information on agreement that this

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SlashGear

FCC Chief Urges FAA To Ease Airplane Electronics Ban

Hugh Pickens writes “AFP reports that Federal Communications Commission chairman Julius Genachowski is calling for an easing of the ban on using mobile phones and other electronic devices on airplanes during takeoff and landing, saying devices such as smartphones ‘empower people’ and can boost economic productivity. ‘I write to urge the FAA to enable greater use of tablets, e-readers and other portable electronic devices during flight, consistent with public safety,’ the FCC chief said in the letter to FAA Administrator Michael Huerta. The ban is in place based on the assumption that devices could interfere with an airplane’s navigation equipment. But a number of news stories have questioned the validity of this claim, and many point out that some people forget to turn off their devices during flights. The FCC studied the question several years ago but found insufficient evidence to support lifting the ban at the time. But not everyone has been forced to put their gadgets away. Earlier this year the FAA approved iPads instead of paper flight manuals in the cockpit for pilots, but the agency still refuses to allow passengers to read on Kindles and iPads during takeoff and landing.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Nokia’s soon-to-be-ex camera chief heading to car company

Damian Dinning, head of imaging and photography for Nokia for nearly a decade, says he’ll be moving on to Land Rover Jaguar. [Read more]


CNET News

Nokia’s Mobile Imaging And Camera Chief Leaving The Company November 30

Screen Shot 2012-11-23 at 12.08.58 PMNokia has recently made efforts to distinguish its smartphones with advanced photographic capabilities, introducing the PureView 808 with a 41MP rear camera. Now, Nokia’s long-time head of imaging and photography Damian Dinning, who has been with the company since 2004, is confirmed to be departing as of November 30. Dinning was also said to have had a key role in Windows Phone imaging software.
TechCrunch

Apple hardware chief sells off $10.7M in stock

Apple’s senior vice president of hardware engineering Dan Riccio let go of a little more than $ 10.7 million in stock this week. [Read more]


CNET News

Sony Mobile Chief Acknowledges Its Smartphones Suck, Promises An iPhone, Galaxy S III Competitor Soon

newxperiasSony makes a lot of really nice things, but it has never taken smartphones seriously. That’s to change if Sony Mobile’s sales chief, Dennis van Schie, is to be believed.

Speaking to the Financial Times Deutschland, he basically acknowledged that Sony’s current phone lineup does not have a direct competitor to the iPhone or Galaxy S III.
TechCrunch

HP PC chief: “Kludgey” Microsoft Surface is “hardly competition”

HP’s PC chief has dismissed Microsoft’s Surface tablet as “slow and a little kludgey” and blamed the tech press for over-hyping what he would “hardly call … competition” to HP’s own products. “Holistically, the press has made a bigger deal out of Surface than what the world has chosen to believe” Todd Bradley told CITEworld, going on

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SlashGear

ARM chief tosses Moore’s Law out with the trash, says efficiency rules all

ARM chief kicks Moore's Law to the curb, says efficiency rules all

ARM CEO Warren East already has a tendency to be more than a bit outspoken on the future of computing, and he just escalated the war of words with an assault on the industry’s sacred cow: Moore’s Law. After some prompting by MIT Technology Review during a chat, East argued that power efficiency is “actually what matters,” whether it’s a phone or a server farm. Making ever more complex and power-hungry processors to obey Moore’s Law just limits how many chips you can fit in a given space, he said. Not that the executive is about to accept Intel’s position that ARM isn’t meant for performance, as he saw the architecture scaling to high speeds whenever there was a large enough power supply to back it up. East’s talk is a bit long on theory and short on practice as of today — a Samsung Chromebook isn’t going to make Gordon Moore have second thoughts — but it’s food for thought in an era where even Microsoft isn’t convinced that speed rules everything.

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ARM chief tosses Moore’s Law out with the trash, says efficiency rules all originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 09 Nov 2012 20:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMIT Technology Review  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Right on Cue: Can iTunes chief fix Apple’s maps and Siri?

An executive shuffle has dropped two troubled services into the hands of Eddy Cue. CNET has a behind-the-scenes look at Apple’s master negotiator and product resuscitator. [Read more]


CNET News

Felix Baumgartner offers UN chief Ban Ki-moon skydiving lesson

Supersonic skydiver Felix Baumgartner wants to teach U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon how to skydive.




FOX News

San Francisco Proposes Revised Open Data Legislation, Plans to Hire Chief Data Officer

ed leeSan Francisco Mayor Ed Lee is unveiling proposed changes to the City of San Francisco’s open data legislation today, creating more structure around how the city’s data is shared with the public.

You can read the proposed revisions here, but the big change appears to be the addition of a Chief Data Officer, who will be “responsible for sharing City data with the public, facilitating the sharing of information between City departments, and analyzing how data sets can be used to improve city decision making.” Each department would also designate a data coordinator to work with the CDO.
TechCrunch

Chief system architect leaves Samsung for Apple

Samsung and Apple have a strange sort of symbiotic relationship. On one hand, Apple uses Samsung for a large number of the components it needs for its devices, and Samsung receives considerable business from Apple. Despite this, the two companies have also been caught up in a series of patent wars, with lawsuits being slung

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SlashGear

Canal Plus chief: Amazon, Netflix will bring video-on-demand to France early next year

DNP Canal Plus chief Amazon will bring videoondemand to France

Amazon might be continuing its European HD streaming video invasion by arriving in France next March, according to Canal Plus’ president, Bertrand Meheu. The executive is well-placed to have that info, as he says his company will be supplying Amazon with content for the service’s launch on the Kindle Fire. If true, it’s not known yet if it would be in the form of Lovefilm, which launched in Germany and the UK recently, or if it would be available on PCs, Macs, Xbox 360 consoles or Smart TVs as it is elsewhere. Canal Plus has been fighting to keep such competitors out of the notoriously protectionist country, but it was recently blocked by a state watchdog from hoarding VOD rights exclusively for its own networks. The company also said that Netflix would arrive in France by “early 2013″ — another credible claim, considering the huge amount of content it produces that the US streaming service would surely need.

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Canal Plus chief: Amazon, Netflix will bring video-on-demand to France early next year originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 10 Oct 2012 17:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Hollywood Reporter  |  sourceBFMTV France (translated)  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

FCC chief lays out plans to boost mobile carriers' spectrum

FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski detailed plans on Thursday to free up more wireless spectrum that carriers say they need to offer high-speed mobile services.
Computerworld News

Republicans pitch new oversight, 10-year term for NASA chief

Citing systemic problems and a lack of vision within NASA, House Republicans have proposed a new board to run the space agency — helmed by an administrator appointed to a decade-long term.




FOX News

Sources: Zynga Chief Security Officer Nils Puhlmann Has Resigned From Company

Nils_PuhlmannWe’re hearing that Nils Puhlmann, the cloud security expert who has worked as Zynga’s Chief Security Officer since 2009, resigned from the company yesterday, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

Details on Puhlmann’s supposed departure are scarce at the moment, and we’ll update this story with more information we receive. When contacted this morning, a representative for Zynga declined to issue a confirmation or denial, and said the company was “not commenting” on the matter…

TechCrunch

Ale To the Chief: White House Releases Beer Recipe



wiredmikey writes “Sam Kass, White House Assistant Chef and the Senior Policy Advisor for Healthy Food Initiatives, after much buzz, today released the recipe for White House Honey Ale and White House Honey Porter, two brews made right on site at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. According to Kass, the White House Honey Brown Ale is the first alcohol brewed or distilled on the White House grounds, as far as they know. “George Washington brewed beer and distilled whiskey at Mount Vernon and Thomas Jefferson made wine but there’s no evidence that any beer has been brewed in the White House. (Although we do know there was some drinking during prohibition),” Kass wrote in a blog post. The recipe can be found here along with a short video ‘Inside The White House Beer Brewing’ which shows the brewing in process. Your tax dollars hard at work yet again!”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Zynga’s creative chief resigns to start new company

Mike Verdu is leaving the company to start another gaming firm, which will have financial backing from Zynga.
[Read more]
CNET News

Chief Creative Officer Mike Verdu Leaves Zynga To Found New, Zynga-Backed Startup

41623_1489225494_4554_nZynga announced today that Chief Creative Officer Mike Verdu will leave the company after three years to lead his own startup. This might raise questions for some investors, as Verdu has been a driving force behind Zynga’s success over the years.

But, it’s not a complete separation. Zynga will “be on the ground floor” and be an investor in Verdu’s new startup. Verdu’s new company has not yet been announced.
TechCrunch

Dell names new enterprise chief as profit drops 18 percent

Dell has tapped a former Hewlett-Packard executive to run its server, networking and storage division, an important area for Dell as it tries to expand its data center business and reduce its dependence on PCs.
Computerworld News

RIM chief: we looked ‘seriously’ at Android, didn’t want to join the herd

Thorsten Heins of RIM in formal photo

RIM’s current CEO Thorsten Heins has been very candid about his company’s plans and past, but he has usually given the impression that the company wouldn’t even consider deviating from its one true vision of a BlackBerry OS future. Although BlackBerry 10 is very much the center of RIM’s universe today, Heins has revealed to The Telegraph that his firm’s eyes did stray briefly — at one point, it “seriously” investigated Android as a platform. The company ended up backing away after deciding a “me-too” strategy didn’t fit the productivity-obsessed BlackBerry crowd, the executive says. RIM decided, like Nokia, that it couldn’t differentiate enough in Google’s ecosystem. There’s still some time to go before we learn whether or not the gamble on the in-house OS pays off. If Heins’ comments still leave you dreaming of what might have been, though, don’t worry: at least a few companies are providing their own visions in a slightly more tangible form.

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RIM chief: we looked ‘seriously’ at Android, didn’t want to join the herd originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 03 Aug 2012 12:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink BGR  |  sourceThe Telegraph  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

NSA chief asks hackers at Defcon for help securing cyberspace

National Security Agency Director General Keith B. Alexander addressed the attendees of the Defcon hacker conference in Las Vegas on Friday and asked for their help to secure cyberspace.
Computerworld News

NSA Chief To Address Hackers At DEF CON



wiredmikey writes “Later this week, theNSA’s organizational leader and head of the U.S. Cyber Command – General Keith Alexander — will address an audience of hackers at DEF CON. News of General Alexander’s talk at Def Con broke on Friday. Up until that point, the 12:00 Track 1 slot was kept secret, leaving attendees to the world’s largest hacker conference to speculate. The buzz was that it would be something interesting – if only because this year is Def Con’s 20th anniversary.General Alexander will be giving a talk titled ‘Shared Values, Shared Responsibility,’ which is outlined as a presentation that will focus on the shared core values between the hacker community and the government’s cyber community. Namely, the vision of the Internet as a positive force, the fact that information increases value by sharing, the respect and protection of privacy and civil liberties, and the opposition to malicious and criminal behavior.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

VMware CEO Paul Maritz Named EMC’s Chief Strategist – Next Job CEO?

icon-vmwareAs expected, EMC shuffled the deck today. It named COO Pat Gelsinger as the new VMware CEO, replacing Paul Maritz who has moved into a new role as EMC’s chief strategist.

Yesterday I reported that Maritz was out as VMware’s CEO and was being considered as a replacement for EMC CEO Joe Tucci, who is expected to retire by the end of next year. We also reported Maritz is a candidate to lead Cloud Foundry, the successful open-source platform as a service (PaaS) that has the potential to become a core part of EMC’s core cloud offering.  It has been reported that Cloud Foundry will be spun out as a subsidiary of EMC. VMware is a subsidiary of EMC.

TechCrunch

Apple hardware engineering chief Mansfield retires

The Apple executive in charge of hardware engineering for the iPhone, iPad and other Apple products is retiring from the company, Apple said Thursday.
Computerworld News

Former Tumri CEO Calvin Lui Joins Unified As President And Chief Strategy Officer

Calvin Lui HeadshotSocial ad startup Unified just announced that it has hired Calvin Lui as its president and chief strategy officer.

Lui was formerly president and CEO of online ad startup Tumri. He also served as chief operating officer for Internet marketer Connexus and SVP of sales and marketing for Ticketmaster. At Unified, Lui says he’ll be looking at companywide strategy, as well as corporate and business development. He’ll report directly to CEO Sheldon Owen, who will oversee day-to-day operations and sales.

TechCrunch