Eric Lundquist

About

Since 1996, Eric Lundquist has been Editor in Chief of eWEEK, which includes domestic, international and online editions. As eWEEK's EIC, Lundquist oversees a staff of nearly 40 editors, reporters and Labs analysts covering product, services and companies in the high-technology community. He is a frequent speaker at industry gatherings and user events and sits on numerous advisory boards. Eric writes the popular weekly column, 'Up Front,' and he is a confidant of eWEEK's Spencer F. Katt gossip columnist.

Keep Tech Decisions as Simple as Possible

Sometimes, maybe all the time, the simplest way to implement a technology is the best way. My latest evidence of this truth came from a discussion with James Walsh, vice president of IT at Tumi, a South Plainfield, N.J., luggage maker. After being somewhat apologetic for carrying an Ogio rather than a Tumi, I got […]

Gumming Up Your USB Drive: How and Why

What happens when the data on your lost USB drive could get someone killed? Thats the question raised by the staggering and troubling lead story in April 13s L.A. Times. In that story, L.A. Times Staff Writer Paul Watson explains how for $40 an L.A. Times reporter bought a gigabytes worth of apparently sensitive American […]

Pennant Fever Grips IT

Ah, baseball. OK, im a fair-weather fan, as likely to head for the refreshment stand as to stay seated for nine innings and watch every pitch. But that doesnt stop me from listening to the commentators make their early picks of the teams likely to make a run for the pennant. Despite the overriding truth […]

The Real Boot Camp Lesson: Moving Beyond the OS

Now that Apple has rescinded its past distaste of all things Windows and is allowing the Macintosh to share space (albeit a walled-off one) with Windows, shouldnt the company just go all the way? All the way would be licensing Dell, HP and Lenovo to run OS X on the Windows systems leaving their factories. […]

A CIOs Guide to Life

The last time i played golf with Gregory Smith, vice president and CIO of the World Wildlife Fund, in Washington, he was playing his typical game and I mine. At the SAS Pro-Am Golf Tournament in 2004, his drives would rocket straight down the fairway. My drives had that great randomness that makes for great […]

An Homage to Steve Jobs, and Apple

How to pay homage to Steve Jobs and Apple as the company turns 30? I certainly cant add onto the plaudits being handed out by the millions. These days everyone loves Steve. Steves even bigger than Bill, who is plenty big in his own right. Steve came up with the earthshaking concept that high-tech products […]

Innovation Takes Commitment

All in favor of innovation, please stand up. Just what I thought, not a person left seated. Now that weve all agreed that innovation is a good thing, lets talk about whether a hacker creating a new computer virus is as worthy an innovator as someone creating a new way to kill that virus. Both […]

Lundquists Guide To Not Getting Fired for Losing Your Laptop

How often do we have to read about someone losing a laptop with a bunch of client data? Ive included some links to recent stories: Stolen Fidelity Laptop Exposes HP Workers and Lost Fidelity Laptop Stirs Fear of ID Theft. Stop and think for a second. You are a high-powered road warrior jetting around the […]

Aliens Land in Texas

The aliens have landed in Round Rock, Texas. No, not a group of Bostonians looking bewildered at the strip mall and Wal-Mart that must be passed before getting to the Dell headquarters, but a company that makes high-end gaming boxes—Alienware. You can read the whole story about Alienware here, and I would be remiss not […]

Mr. RFID Discusses RFID Security

BOSTON—I caught up with Kevin Ashton just as he was getting back into Boston following a red-eye flight. Kevin is currently the vice president of marketing at RFID vendor ThingMagic in Cambridge, Mass. Moreover, he was one of the co-founders of MITs Auto-ID Center, and was an associate director at Proctor and Gamble. Hes about […]