2. En los momentos de crisis, sólo la imaginación es más importante que el conocimiento. Albert Einstein
3. DeclaraciónMinisterial de Granada para la Agenda Digital Europea: Acordada el 19 de abril de 2010 Nosotros, los ministros responsables de las Políticas de la Sociedad de la Información de los Estados Miembros de la Unión Europea, y del Área Económica de Europa, bajo la Presidenciade D. Miguel SebastiánGascón, Ministro de Industria, Turismo y Comercio, y con la presencia de la Vicepresidenta NeelieKroes, Comisaria Europea de la Agenda Digital, con ocasión de la Reunión Informal de Ministros en Granada, España, 18-19 de abril de 2010, hemos acordado lo siguiente: El inicio de la fase de recuperación de un ciclo económico es el momento más efectivo para llevar a cabo la reestructuración de servicios y la renovación de las infraestructuras necesarias para crear el marco de un crecimiento a largo plazo. El sector TIC es fundamental para el crecimiento y la creación de empleo en la economía de la UE y contribuye en un 50% al aumento de la productividad Capacitar a los ciudadanos para que se puedan integrar plenamente en el entorno digital, reforzando su confianza y habilidades para la compra de bienes y servicios en línea. DNI-digital el uso generalizado de las TIC en la educación y el aprendizaje
6. El equipamiento PC compatible, se ha convertido en el terminal Universal y es una pieza clave de la eficiencia y flexibilidad de una fuerza laboral. Incluso más allá del uso tradicional
7. 7 Percepción y uso del PC por los empleados Uni-directional Bi-directional multi-directional human values Motivación & Eficiencia human needs & motivations user experiences Social communication collaboration Individual tasks Routine task Automatic tasks Back-ground tasks
9. Consumoenergético Printers (6%) LAN and Office Telecoms (7%) “Los centros de datos son normalmente el centro de atención al concentrargran parte de los recursos Sin embargo el impacto de los PC dado suvolumenes mucho mássignificativo Mobile Telecoms (9%) PCs & Monitors (39%) Fixed-Line Telecoms (15%) Servers, including cooling (23%) Source: Gartner Inc. “Tera-Architectures A Convergence of New Technologies” by Martin Reynolds July 26, 2007
10. Nuestravisión de laEco-Tecnología Responsabilidad Medioambiental La mayor compáñía compradora, voluntariamente, de energía verde en los Estados Unidos − Más de 1.43B kilowatios hora/año Por el programa EPA de Asociación Verde Respeto al entorno Fabricación Sostenibleg Productos eficientes Politicas globales
12. La Ley de Moore Core Integer Performance Over Time* Power reduction Over Time* 10000 1.E+00 Core™ 2 Duo Extreme QX6700 Core™ 2 Duo Processor X6800 1.E-01 Pentium® -D Processor 1000 Pentium® 4 Processor EE 1.E-02 Pentium® 4 Processor 1.E-03 Pentium® -IIi Processor Pentium® -II Processor 100 1.E-04 Pentium® Pro Processor Pentium® Processor 1.E-05 10 i486DX2 1.E-06 i486 1.E-07 1 386 1970 1980 1990 2000 2005 2010 1986 2008 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 Single Core Moore’s Law
13. Mejorando la eficienciaenergética Consumomedio(Watts) Tamaño(mm2) Más del 85% De reducción Más del 90% De reducción 2006 2009 2006 2009 Source: Intel
14. Un ejemplo: Nuestro IT 5,700 IT empleadosquesoportan… 80,000 Intel employees in 150 sites >90,000 PCs and ~100,000 servers 97 Data Centers consuming 440,000 sq ft 55,000 kW (per day) 148 million e-mail messages (per month) 2,183 terabytes of WAN traffic (per month) 18 PB of storage and ~1,000 applications Source: Intel. Internal estimates as of September, 2009
Slide to cover who we are and who we support. A broad multi-national environmentWe have four distinct environments we support - DOME2 very UNIQUE to our business and critical to our competitiveness as a business (Design and Manufacturing)2 very STANDARD to any enterprise (Office and Enterprise) Note: you will likely find similar structures in other IT shops . Standard services plus what they see as Critical (business or mission) services that get investment priority -----------Slide Purpose: Identify the WHO WE SUPPORT as an IT organization (our customers) – goal is to establish relevance of Intel IT operations to audienceKey Messages: Intel IT supports a multi-national business with diverse set of employees and datacenters around the world (discuss the key stats as they are interesting to audience) Over 5,000 IT employees supporting 80,000 employees worldwide operating a little less than 100 data centers Intel IT supports areas that are unique to our business inside Intel (like Design / Manufacturing), but also standard to any IT organization (Office / Enterprise)Intel IT has also created a program (called IT@Intel) that enables open and honest peer to peer (IT to IT) dialogue around enhancing the value of IT and sharing best practicesSpeaking Points:We support a multi-national business that supports four areas of our business that we call DOME – some of which is unique to Intel and some of which is standard to any IT shop. These environments encompass a wide range of employees, data center environments and business processes. Design very unique to our business as this supports our chip design and development. Largest area of compute demand and servers. Represents between 70-80% of our servers (~100,000 servers, ~100 datacenters consuming 55,000 kw per day, Manufacturing also unique to our business (silicon mfg) and an area of competitive differentiation for Intel … Intel is one a few remaining companies that continues to both design and manufacture … enabling this aspect of our business is critical for successOffice this is traditional IT services found in any business … mostly aimed at our employees, customers and with an extremely diverse and dynamic employee base (>90k PCs in 60 countries and 150 sites with ~150M email messages and Enterprise this is also traditional IT services for standard business process .. However, this is also where we support our ERP network and supply chain