November 17, 2008 By Matt Williams
President-elect Barack Obama will videotape his weekly address and post it on YouTube, the popular video-sharing Web site, an Obama spokesperson told The Washington Post.
This is a first for a U.S. president or president-elect. Obama's address will also be aired on the radio, as has been precedent. According to the newspaper, Obama's technology team will also add online Q&As and video interviews to Change.gov, the presidential transition team's official Web site.
Observers say these are the first steps of expanded online presence for the U.S. president, which Obama and his campaign has been cultivating since he announced his candidacy in Springfield, Ill., nearly two years ago. Some experts speculate that Obama could use the millions of supporters and contributors who signed up on MyBarackObama.com and other social media to mobilize grass-roots support for his legislative agenda when he's inaugurated Jan. 20, 2009.
The Obama campaign used YouTube throughout the presidential campaign to post video of Obama's stump speeches and campaign stops. When the Wall Street crisis struck, the campaign also released a short documentary on YouTube about Republican candidate John McCain's past associations with disgraced savings-and-loan owner Charles Keating.
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Until recently, there was no alternative to the familiar desktop computer, and its expensive upgrades and maintenance requirements. For cash-strapped local governments, the desktop computer is quickly becoming an unsustainable option for future progress. Now, a technology known as virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) offers an alternative. It can be significantly more affordable than buying individual computers for every employee, and it provides similar capability. This paper shows how VDI is the future of the desktop and is a game-changer for local governments.
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