vPro is for the corporate customer as Centrino is for mobile and Viiv is for the consumer. While vPro technology has hardly become a household name, analyst Roger Kay reasons that's because it's sold to business
"CIOs don't like to talk about the sorts of things they consider it a competitive advantage and don't want to tell you what they have," Kay, principal analyst for Endpoint Technologies, told internetnews.com. "I think at least some of that is the explanation for why [Intel] are talking about having a big ramp but we don't know much about it."
Mike Ferron-Jones, director of digital office platform marketing for Intel said: "We're very satisfied with the ramp of vPro and the uptake we're getting from everyone from customers to software providers." At its Web site, Intel (Quote) claims vPro is its fastest ramping platform to date. The chip giant unveiled its vPro technology just about a year ago.
The updated vPro hardware will include a new CPU and chipset, updated Active Management Technology (AMT), support for the Desktop Mobile Working Group and WS-MAN standards and Intel Trusted Execution Technology, or TXT (formerly code named LaGrande Technology).
Weybridge consists of a Core2 Duo E6x50 processor, a new chipset called the Q35 Express w/ ICH9-DO and Intel82566DM gigabit networking. Ferron-Jones said Intel plans to refresh the components in the vPro family annually, but will retain backwards compatibility for driver and application compatibility.
AMT originally came with 64 filters settings to scan network traffic for malicious activity, but they did nothing in response. They were unprogrammed until set by third party software, such as LANDesk or Altiris.
Weybridge adds new sensoring technology to detect if one or multiple ports are being hammered an inordinate amount of time in a short period. If they are, the software security is alerted and an alarm goes off.
Kay called this a smart move. "They know they can't catch every activity that's going to come in, but they know some things about outbound activity. If there's one port being pounded on, they'll prevent that," he said.
Also getting updated is remote management via the new WS-MAN Web service. The Alert Standard Format (ASF) technology defines how a central management console can contact a client computer, but never told it what to do beyond the wake-up command.
By adding support for DMWG, Intel has now standardized how a box will wake up. WS-MAN commands will tell the computer what to do on waking, so it describes what the processor, chipset and BIOS should do.
This article was first published on InternetNews.com. To read the full article, click here.
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