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.

Keeping Net Gear in Sync With Economy

“Turn down your AC from high to medium, or rolling blackouts start in 10 minutes.” That seems the type of message that would be worthy of your attention. And that is the type of content that will create a pur-pose for all the network gear I saw while wandering the aisles of the NetWorld+Interop show […]

Tiptoeing at the Edge of the IT Chasm

Stabilize was a word much in the news last week as an array of commentators from stock pundits to hopeful investors looked for signs that the downtrodden markets had finally stabilized. The hope being that, once stabilized, the business of business can once again resume its advance. Odd that stabilization, especially in high technology, is […]

Its Not All Doom and Gloom for Techs

I was with a group of consumer and tech journalists having dinner last week at The Globe restaurant in San Francisco. The Globe is at ground zero of the dot-com meltdown, and as the wine flowed, talk turned to those execs we felt did the best and the worst job at handling the digital downturn. […]

Can Semel Establish Yahoos Identity?

Yahoo has a new honcho. Can the guy who helped Clint Eastwood find success after a start as the jet squadron leader battling a giant spider in “Tarantula” help the Yahoo crowd figure out how to make a fistful of dollars? I think Terry Semels move from Warner Bros. to Yahoo was a great choice […]

Crash-Proof Is Fine, but Give Me Security

I have Microsofts Jim Allchin on the phone, and in my head Im counting up the number of Windows versions Im running at home. Theres the old 3.1 system running WordPerfect, which never crashes and is a favorite of the kids for typing. There is the 98 machine, which crashes if the cat walks by, […]

Even the Tech Cloud Has a Silver Lining

The bad news was that attendance at Comdex in Chicago was mighty sparse. The good news was that very few techies seemed inclined to jump headfirst into Lake Michigan as all the tech news continued to pile up in bad-news waves. Despite Web-based polling and instant news via the Web, technology shows are still a […]

Global Warming Becoming a Hot Topic

Remember Energy Star? It was in 1992 that the U.S. department of Energy (www.energystar.gov) came up with the program to identify and promote energy-saving devices to counter carbon dioxide emissions. The purpose was noble, the logo including a star and a globe was far more artistic than most government labels, and after a brief burst […]

Its No Contest: Busboy 200, Fat Cats Zip

Heres the lineup: 200 of the richest people in the United States vs. a scruffy-looking pot scrubber armed with a copy of Forbes and sitting at a wheezing computer at the New York Public Library. Final score: busboy 200, rich folks zippo. I was walking down Park Avenue toward our Manhattan office when I saw […]

Learning Basics of Network Building

Novell and Cambridge Technology partners? At first blush, I thought it was a really goofy combination, but, on a bit more reflection, I think it makes a lot of sense. Heres why. The biggest problem with technology consulting companies is their inability to translate grand-sounding strategic plans into realistic information architectures delivered on time and […]

Mother Natures Not to Be Trifled With

All that forecast snow that was supposed to bury the East Coast last week missed you and was dumped, instead, on my driveway and back yard near the Massachusetts/New Hampshire border. That nature herself decided to focus her wrath on my house (I promise to recycle more) rather than spread it out over the length […]