Posts tagged as:

Obama

Mr. Barack Obama, President of the United States, had dinner with around 11 CEOs of different “top” Tech companies. The White House has released the photos of the Big Tech Dinner event on it’s official Flickr account.

The event took place in Silicon Valley, San Fransisco.

Tech Dinner with Barack Obama
President Barack Obama joins a toast with Technology Business Leaders at a dinner in Woodside, California, Feb. 17, 2011.

Steve Jobs is sitting just besides Mr. Obama in the above picture. Steve has lost a lot of weight (might be due to his medical conditions). We hope he gets well soon. God Bless him.

Tech Dinner with Barack Obama
President Barack Obama talks with Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg before a dinner with Technology Business Leaders in Woodside, California, Feb. 17, 2011. Also pictured, left to right, are Carol Bartz, Yahoo! President and CEO; Art Levinson, Genentech Chairman and former CEO; Steve Westly, Founder and Managing Partner, The Westly Group; and Eric Schmidt, Executive Chairman and CEO of Google.

The tech executives who attended the dinner were:

  • Steve Jobs, CEO of Apple
  • Eric Schmidt, Chairman of Google
  • Mark Zuckerberg, President and CEO of Facebook
  • Carol Bartz, President and CEO of Yahoo!
  • Steve Westly, Managing Partner and Founder of The Westly Group
  • John Chambers, CEO and Chairman of Cisco Systems
  • Dick Costolo, CEO of Twitter
  • Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle
  • Reed Hastings, CEO of Netflix
  • John Hennessy, President of Stanford University
  • Art Levinson, Chairman and former CEO of Genentech

[Images via Flickr]

Incoming search terms:

  • art levinson
  • mr obama dinner it
  • Mr Obama with Mr Jobs
  • blackberry and mr steve mark
  • obama dinner tech

Related Posts
Related Websites

{ 0 comments }

Renovation for White House site by Obama

by Mahesh Kukreja on January 21, 2009

The White House of President Barack Obama went online Tuesday with a promise that its slick new website would provide a “window for all Americans into the business of the government.”

In a posting on the blog of whitehouse.gov, Macon Phillips, the White House Director of New Media, said the site “will serve as a place for the President and his administration to connect with the rest of the nation and the world.”

“Change has come to WhiteHouse.gov,” Phillips wrote after the website of former president George W. Bush went offline at 12:01 pm (1701 GMT) and was replaced by that of Obama.

Noting that the Internet played a key role in Obama’s November 4 election victory, Phillips said: “WhiteHouse.gov is just the beginning of the new administration’s efforts to expand and deepen this online engagement.

“Just like your new government, WhiteHouse.gov and the rest of the Administration’s online programs will put citizens first,” he added.

Phillips said the White House’s new media efforts would focus on “communication,” “transparency” and “participation.”

He said the site “will feature timely and in-depth content meant to keep everyone up-to-date and educated” and encouraged users to sign up for email updates, a technique Obama’s team used very successfully during his campaign.

“President Obama has committed to making his administration the most open and transparent in history, and WhiteHouse.gov will play a major role in delivering on that promise,” Phillips said.

“The President’s executive orders and proclamations will be published for everyone to review, and that’s just the beginning of our efforts to provide a window for all Americans into the business of the government,” he added.

Phillips said “citizen participation will be a priority for the Administration, and the Internet will play an important role in that.”

Following through on an Obama campaign promise, he said “we will publish all non-emergency legislation to the website for five days, and allow the public to review and comment before the President signs it.”

Phillips also encouraged users to send ideas about improving whitehouse.gov.

Prominently displayed on the homepage of the new website was a message from the Office of Public Liaison and a link to an email form which members of the public can use to send their thoughts to the White House.

Whitehouse.gov was also undergoing some early teething pains on Tuesday.

It noted on the blog that Obama had issued a proclamation moments after taking office calling on Americans to serve one another, but said in another area on the site that he had not yet issued any proclamations.

The website has been widely expected to be the window for what is being touted as a bold experiment in interactive government.

Change.gov, the official website of the Obama transition team, contained such features as the “Citizen’s Briefing Book,” in which users were invited to submit ideas by email and “rate or offer comments on the ideas of others.”

Another feature, “Your Seat at the Table,” called for the proceedings of meetings between the transition team and outside organizations to be published on change.gov and allowed members of the public to comment on them.

Whitehouse.gov also features a detailed look at the new president’s agenda on topics ranging from the economy to energy to the environment and biographies of Obama and his vice president, Joe Biden.

There’s also a slideshow of US presidents beginning with George Washington and a trivia section called “White House 101″ featuring “facts and fun for all ages.”

It also includes links to the websites of other federal agencies and a primer on the role of the legislative and judicial branches of government.


Related Posts
Related Websites

{ 0 comments }

Obama Plans to Put Every Child Online

by Mahesh Kukreja on December 9, 2008

U.S. President-elect Barack Obama has outlined an ambitious plan to give every child in the U.S. access to the Internet and to connect the nation’s hospitals with “cutting edge technology.”

The items are part of his plan to generate or save 2.5 million jobs over to the next two years and boost the flagging economy. They were outlined in his weekly video address posted on the Change.gov Web site.

“It is unacceptable that the United States ranks 15th in the world in broadband adoption,” Obama said. “Here, in the country that invented the Internet, every child should have the chance to get online, and they’ll get that chance when I’m President — because that’s how we’ll strengthen America’s competitiveness in the world.”

He also pledged to modernize the nation’s schools, make them energy efficient with new heating and lighting systems and put new computers in classrooms.

He also plans to put Internet connections into schools, libraries and hospitals. The latter is part of a plan to connect the healthcare industry.

“We will make sure that every doctor’s office and hospital in this country is using cutting edge technology and electronic medical records so that we can cut red tape, prevent medical mistakes, and help save billions of dollars each year,” he said.


Related Posts
Related Websites

{ 0 comments }

Verizon staff had unauthorized access to Obama’s cell

by Mahesh Kukreja on November 21, 2008

Verizon Wireless said on Thursday that some employees had gained unauthorized access and viewed a personal cell phone account held by President-elect Barack Obama that is now inactive.

An Obama aide said his voice-mail messages and e-mails were not breached in the incident.

“We were notified yesterday that employees had accessed the records of an old cell phone no longer in use,” the Obama aide said. “No voice or e-mails were listened to or read.”

The company said the device in question was a simple voice phone, not a Blackberry or other device designed for e-mail or other data services.

In a statement, Verizon Wireless President and Chief Executive Lowell McAdam apologized to Obama and said all employees who had had access to Obama’s account, whether authorized or not, were put on immediate leave with pay.

Telecom analyst Michael King of Gartner said that a telephone employee accessing billing information could likely see the numbers a customer had called, how long conversations with those people were and when he called them.

King said he could not recall a high-profile case where an employee had unauthorized access to records and that recent public cases involved company outsiders finding ways to check other people’s records.

Verizon said it will soon impose disciplinary action against those who accessed Obama’s account improperly.

Asked to disclose exactly what kind of information was viewed, the duration and frequency of the unauthorized access, Verizon Wireless spokesman Jeffrey Nelson declined comment beyond the company’s statement.

Verizon Wireless is a venture of Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group Plc.


Related Posts
Related Websites

{ 0 comments }