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.

Tokyo, Las Vegas Offer Glimpse into Tech Evolution

Tokyo to Las Vegas is a big leap in distance and culture. Tokyo features a risk-averse, polite culture based on tradition. Las Vegas is based on money, gambling and consumption. I visited both cities in the past few weeks and, from a technology perspective, found a reversal in my expectations. In many ways, Japans mobile, […]

Japanese IT Companies Find World Stage Elusive

This was supposed to be the time when Japans technology-driven economy would hold the prime spot in much of the worlds business. The country, lacking natural resources, bet on technology, exports and a worldview of industrial development. With the Think Globally, Act Locally theme, the big Japanese companies would be in the forefront of worldwide […]

Expect More Acquisitions and Executive Exits in Tech Market

As you are reading this, I am in Tokyo for a round of meetings with several groups of Japanese high-tech vendors. While Im over in Japan, here is what I expect to be reading about the U.S. technology business. The first guess is easy. Every week, some U.S. vendor is being acquired by another company. […]

MLBs Budding Star: Business Intelligence

Its Opening Day at Fenway Park, and Im in Philadelphia. But at least Im speaking with Justin Shaffer, vice president and chief architect of MLB.com. If I dont get to see the Red Sox play their home opener, at least I can talk about the future of baseball and technology. Shaffer is having a very […]

Systems Integration Advances, But More Work Remains

How much gasoline did your company use last week? What will be the effect of rising gasoline prices on your companys bottom line? By the time your financial analysts have performed an analysis, the price per gallon will have changed. The reason I bring up the changing prices at the pumps isnt because Im wearing […]

IT Gets Down to the Nitty-Gritty

QWIP, QYX and VYDEC. Remember them? Of course you dont, but at one time those companies were key in Exxons plans to become a major player in office automation systems. By 1985—and after about $2 billion in lost investments—Exxon figured out that people dont necessarily want to buy information processing where they buy gasoline. Sometimes […]

To Survive, HPs Hurd Must Stay Ahead of the Pack

The most common reaction upon hearing that Mark Hurd has been named HPs new CEO is a shoulder shrug followed by “Who?” In selecting Hurd, HPs board has gone for substance over flash, suit and tie over hip, and someone more at home talking about databases and enterprise infrastructure than about the grand convergence of […]

Desktop OS Will Be a Key Choice for Business Users

Your next desktop operating system is taking shape now; your decision regarding which OS to adopt may be your key technology choice for the year. This is not a step back in time nor a failure to see service-oriented architectures, high-function handhelds or even voice-based applications as contenders to win “most important technology” designations. However, […]

SunGard Deal Extends Back-Room Trend

The back room of technology is suddenly at the forefront of investor demand. The latest example: SunGard Data Systems. A consortium of private investors on Monday put up $11.3 billion for a company that started life as a diversification effort by Sun Oil in 1983. SunGard is a major player in managing financial transactions of […]

Ascential Is Essential to IBM

If I were working for a company that I wanted IBM to acquire, Id hire Peter Gyenes right away. His win/loss stats are 2-0 with last weeks $1.1 billion acquisition by IBM of Ascential Software, headed by Gyenes. For record keepers out there, he was the president of Informix when IBM bought the database company […]