David Coursey

About

One of technology's most recognized bylines, David Coursey is Special Correspondent for eWeek.com, where he writes a daily Blog (blog.ziffdavis.com/coursey) and twice-weekly column. He is also Editor/Publisher of the Technology Insights newsletter and President of DCC, Inc., a professional services and consulting firm.Former Executive Editor of ZDNet AnchorDesk, Coursey has also been Executive Producer of a number of industry conferences, including DEMO, Showcase, and Digital Living Room. Coursey's columns have been quoted by both Bill Gates and Steve Jobs and he has appeared on ABC News Nightline, CNN, CBS News, and other broadcasts as an expert on computing and the Internet. He has also written for InfoWorld, USA Today, PC World, Computerworld, and a number of other publications. His Web site is www.coursey.com.

Short Leash Fits Microsoft

For many years Ive been saying the only way to deal with antitrust in the technology business is to get out in front of it. By the time the legal system can deal with problems the damage has been done, and the industry has moved on. Its good to see regulators may have finally learned […]

A Genuine Pain in the Neck

Its funny to read how Microsoft is apparently going ahead with plans to let hackers help the company battle pirates. What else can you call a program that denies security fixes to users whose systems havent been certified “genuine” by Microsoft? The idea, I think, is for these machines to sit around unprotected until they […]

Dell Could Take Hint from Apples Style

Theres an interesting story on our ExtremeiPod site in which Dell CEO Kevin Rollins calls Apples music box “a fad.” In another story there, the head of Creative calls the iPod shuffle “a big letdown,” accusing Apple of rehashing “a four-year-old product … worse than the cheapest Chinese player.” Why are these two competitors going […]

SCOs Short-Term Win Wont Salvage Its Future

SCOs win in its request for a boatload of IBM Unix code and documentation is likely to accomplish only one thing: It will delay the trial on SCOs charges that IBM has violated its intellectual property rights. What will be left of SCO when the case comes to trial is becoming a serious question. Originally […]

Intel Reorganizes With Hope of Inspiring Buyers

As many times as Intel has reorganized lately—four times since 1997 according to published accounts—I have to wonder whether it really matters how the company is structured. About the time the old order is out and the new order is in the new order becomes the old order and the process starts anew. This years […]

Do New Apple Products Make the Grade?

If Apples new products were school projects and I were the teacher, Id grade them like this: an A for the Mac mini, a B+ for iWork, a C+ for iLife 05, and a C- for the iPod shuffle. I purposely avoided Steve Jobs Macworld keynote, instead relying on the Apple Web site, news releases […]

Can the Mac Do Without Microsoft Office?

Can the Macintosh survive without Microsoft Office? Its a question that has followed Steve Jobs since his return to Cupertino in 1996. At the time, Apple was in deep financial trouble, and a bailout from Microsoft—of all people—got the company back on its feet. The concern isnt that the typical Macintosh “consumer” customer requires MS […]

Microsoft Hasnt Changed With the Times

Its barely started, but 2005 already looks like a challenging year for Microsoft. In fact, the company faces more challenges than it ever has, and serious ones, too. No, Microsoft isnt sinking, but its not gaining very much, either. The Microsoft that everyone used to fear no longer exists. This is in part because Microsoft […]

Lenovo Must Invest to Keep IBM Brands Lure

This is one of these “and then the other shoe dropped” stories, and it involves the IBM-Lenovo deal that sent Big Blues PC business to the Chinese. It turns out, according to SEC filings reported in The Register, that IBMs PC business wasnt just a low-margin business. Rather, it had lost nearly a billion dollars. […]

Does Microsofts Bigtop Plan Hint at New Direction?

The problem with the future is that its often blocked by the present, which in Microsofts case is as hard to get beyond as it is to change. I am thinking about this because Ive just read Mary Jo Foleys story about “Bigtop,” the code name for a future grid-computing operating system that my friend […]