Intel vPro Expert Center Blog

2 Posts tagged with the desktop tag
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With the launch of Intel Centrino with vPro technology - several medium to large customers (with 1000 or more PCs in the infrastructure) have asked for Intel's help with building the financial business case for the new technology. Given this need, Intel asked WiPro to survey senior IT managers from 41 companies about current notebook PC management costs that could potentially be reduced by taking advantage of the new technology. WiPro specifically focused on PC maintenance costs that IT usually budgets for on an annual basis (these are "hard dollar costs", such as help desk calls, help desk visits (especially for hardware and software malfunctions - such as OS blue screens and hard drive failures), auditing, security incidents, software patch deployment costs, major application (such as Office) deployment costs into the infrastructure, etc.).

WiPro's findings are as follows:

  • Estimated hard dollar savings of up to ~$140 / PC / year with Intel Centrino with vPro technology vs. the mobile PC in the installed PC base today
  • Reduces the need for hardware-related desk-side visits by as much as 58% and for software-related desk-side visits by as much as 57%
  • Up to 51% faster patch saturation per incident and reduces number of inventory failures by 62%
  • Enterprises can take advantage of most of the Intel Centrino with vPro technology features (including remote diagnosis and repair) in the mobile PC form factor for about 16 hours a day (the other 8 hours, on average, the mobile PC is asleep or off-line, and an IT manager cannot use the Intel vPro technology features)

For those interested in the report, please read about it here: http://www.intel.com/business/business-pc/roi/centrinoprowhitepaper.pdf

In order to help customers model the "hard dollar" savings in your environment, Intel has created the Intel Centrino with vPro technology and Intel Core2 with vPro technology ROI Estimator that is based on the data from the above study, as well as another study that focused on desktops with Intel Core2 with vPro technology that was published last year. This ROI Estimator is located here: http://www.intel.com/business/business-pc/roi/demo.htm

To learn more about the ROI Estimator and the desktop and mobile PC studies, please listen to Josh, me and WiPro talk about them in this PodTech videocast: http://www.podtech.net/home/4679/roi-intel-vpro-technology-in-the-enterprise

Cheers -

Justin Van Buren

Intel Business Marketing Manager

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Encryption Technology as we know it today had it's beginnings over 4000 years ago stemming back to Egyptian hieroglyphs and cipher codes and Intel is working on delivering a hardware based data encryption technology to make it a simpler task for desktop users to secure data. Intel's Encryption Technology (codename Danbury) is due to be released with the next generation vPro "Eaglelake" chipset in 2008. As you can see in the image, the next generation of vPro technology will contain 45nm CPU, the Eaglelake Chipset, Danbury Technology, and Intel GbE network components.

http://img515.imageshack.us/img515/3885/inteldanbury1gf9.jpg

Most likely, if you've heard about Intel Danbury Technology it was during IDF 2007 and some software vendors (Credant & Wave Systems) have already announced their partnership as well for the "to be released" technology.

Intel's Director of Business Client Architecture, Steve Grobman gave an audio cast at IDF, very informative, and if you missed it you can listen here. Steve was also recently interviewed in this article Intel adds Encryption to vPro which elaborates a bit more on the technology. Danbury Technology will help IT Administrators deal with challenges in data encryption on the desktop.

While I can't divulge too much information I'd like to bring some of the key 'look ahead' points in Danbury Technology:

  1. Danbury Technology can work in standalone mode or in conjunction with Intel Active Management Technology (iAMT) as they both share the Management Engine "common services" architecture for networking, security, and provisioning tools and applications.
  2. Expect increased performance in a hardware based encryption solution versus existing software encryption technologies
  3. Danbury Technology is OS agnostic - no OS drivers will be needed for data encryption
  4. Both in-band and out of band remote solutions will work with PBA (Pre Boot Authentication)
  5. Full drive encryption is available for SATA and e-SATA drives, including Intel Matrix Storage Technology

So why does Danbury Technology matter to IT/IS administrators? Why would a company want to encrypt their desktop data? If you don't know the answers to those questions - I suggest you checkout Credant Resource Center (login required) or Wave Systems Trusted Computing Primer

As more items become available for public consumption, I hope to spread the word through the vPro Expert Center Blog section... so keep reading!

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