Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • I'm Stephanie Essin, and this is the Intel Developer Zone

  • update.

  • This time we're talking about what Intel brought to CES;

  • what you can build with DPDK-In-A-Box;

  • and we're talking about what you can expect to see

  • at FemmeHacks.

  • Links are below to learn more.

  • CES 2017 brought more than the latest gadgets and compute

  • boards.

  • This year Intel offered full VR experiences.

  • At the news conference for the event,

  • Intel CEO Brian Krzanich asked lead attendees

  • through a handful of VR adventures,

  • starting with a wingsuit flight over Moab, Utah.

  • The next stop, through the Ban Gioc Waterfall in Vietnam;

  • an inspection of a Nevada solar plant, using a drone;

  • the final destination was a VR zombie apocalypse

  • in the new game, Arizona Sunshine.

  • All the experiences were powered by seventh generation Intel

  • core processor PCs and Oculus headsets.

  • You can see what else happened at CES by visiting the Intel

  • newsroom, to see what was announced each day of the show.

  • Next, you can learn to build a DPDK-based traffic

  • generator by checking out this article online.

  • The instructions are tested on our DPDK-In-A-Box,

  • as well as on an Intel Core i7 5960x Haswell-E desktop.

  • You can use any Intel architecture platform

  • to build your own device.

  • See how you can use LibRealSense and PCL to generate point cloud

  • data, and display that data in the PCL viewer

  • by checking out this article.

  • After completing the steps, you will have a starting point

  • to create your own LibRealSense and PCL applications.

  • You won't want to miss us at FemmeHacks 2017, starting

  • February 24, at the University of Pennsylvania.

  • Intel-sponsored FemmeHacks is a hackathon

  • that encourages beginners to come together and learn,

  • and create hacks with other women.

  • They host a panel that explores different career paths in tech,

  • and various workshops like Intro to Git,

  • web development, and hardware.

  • There's also plenty of community-building

  • opportunities in a tech environment

  • that is inclusive to women.

  • The winner of the best hardware hack prize from last year,

  • Tiffany KO, used an Intel Edison to build

  • the terrain-sensing device that attaches to a wheelchair.

  • Sending data to a back end that processes the information,

  • it then produces an optimal accessibility route

  • for wheelchair users.

  • As team member, Amelia Goodman, puts it,

  • "We think it's pretty rad and basically all thanks

  • go to Intel to providing means for her to make this."

  • We hope to see equally awesome contributions happening

  • this year at FemmeHacks.

  • Don't forget to check out the links to access more

  • info on anything we covered.

  • And remember to like this video and subscribe to the Intel

  • Software YouTube channel, to keep getting all of your Intel

  • Developer Zone updates.

  • And check us out on Facebook.

  • [INTEL AUDIO SIGNATURE]

I'm Stephanie Essin, and this is the Intel Developer Zone

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it