Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Intel brings vPro to Sandy Bridge CPUs, makes losing your work laptop slightly less painful

Imagine, if you will, business travelers gallivanting across the globe with nary a care in the world -- secure in the fact that should they lose their laptop by hook or by crook, they can disable it with a simple text message. Well, the dream is now a reality as Intel has put its third-gen vPro technology in Sandy Bridge Core i5 and i7 business chips, giving users the ability to lock down and reactivate a PC remotely via SMS. Not exactly a fresh idea, but nice to see it passed on to more modern chipsets. To further simplify the lives of IT professionals, the new version of vPro also has an encryption login requirement upon awakening from sleep mode, 1920 x 1200 resolution remote management, and host-based configuration to allow the set up of countless PCs at once. Of course, that assumes your employer's willing to pony up for Chipzilla's new gear -- the economic downturn's almost over, right?

2 comments:

  1. Was this feature brought about with McAfee's input? I'm not so confident behind them when they were still a security firm prior to Intel. Maybe this feature will make super everything secure that even people with alzheimers can't open it if they remember how.

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  2. Couldn't a thief just use a different cpu?

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