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.

Government Could Teach BSA a Lesson

Heres a suggestion. In an economic period when layoffs mount with ever-increasing frequency and forecasts of recovery stretch out every day, you probably dont want to anger your current customers. But, in my opinion, anger and resentment are exactly what are being created by the Business Software Alliances anti-piracy campaign. As this weeks report starting […]

Beware of Jumping the Gun on Web Services

Connect, transact, analyze and correct. following a cross-country jaunt that took me from Boston to Raleigh to San Jose last week while digging into the status of Web services, I found those four terms seem to do a decent job at getting to the basics of what this services business will become. I say “will […]

Finding a Business Plan That Rocks

Remember Todd Rundgren? Besides giving everyone weary of the daily work grind that great anti-work anthem, “Bang on the Drum All Day,” Rundgren was also early on the Web, in the forefront of multimedia concerts and quick on using technology to further his artistic efforts. After a week of talking to company execs trying to […]

Tis a Far Better Thing We Do Who Serve

Whether striding up to the microphone or sliding in by the side door, computer makers are busy recasting themselves as service organizations. The reasoning behind this collective salute to service is not hard to understand. You can still make money selling service, but it gets harder and harder to make money selling boxes. When did […]

Direction of Technology Proves Elusive

As if we didnt have enough worries with cell phones, what with all our concerns over our brains being fried while yakking, driving into bridge abutments while copying the grocery list and being found to be where we shouldnt by internal GPS locators, now weve got one more worry. All those billions weve spent on […]

Some Tech Fuel to Propel the Economy

By all evidence, we are not yet dealing with maturing technologies that, after having sparkled for a half-decade, are now in the process of fizzling out.” Larry Ellison? Marc Andreessen? Bill himself? No. That quote is from Fed chief Alan Greenspan speaking before economists in New York last month. Greenspan was talking about the use […]

Security: That Most Thankless of Tasks

As weve said for several years now, security is the first and last step in building an e-business enterprise. It is also the part of the infrastructure task that garners the least applause for a job well done. No one will thank you for keeping all those bad guys out of the companys network. Someone […]

Can Microsoft Take on AOL Time Warner

Office XP looks like a winner for having the wisdom to kill Clippy and replace that helpless helper with smart tags and task panes that are actually useful. But will neat new productivity and group features be sufficient to get Office XP a home on corporate desktops? Given that the removal of an annoying character […]

Riding Out the Twists and (Down)Turns

In a cab from Austins Bergstrom Airport, the driver told us that with the slowdown at Dell, it was tough to make $100 for a 16-hour shift these days. That was a far cry from a year ago, when cabs for the Austin-to-Round Rock ride were always in demand. It was also a far cry […]

Stealth Mode Works for Middleware

The next big change in Internet-based computing will be one that most users wont see. And thats a good thing. Last week, IBM was the latest to trumpet its plans for middleware offerings that may finally deliver on the promise of Internet-based computing. Aside from the ongoing irony of what was once the most proprietary […]