Jason Brooks

About

As Editor in Chief of eWEEK Labs, Jason Brooks manages the Labs team and is responsible for eWEEK's print edition. Brooks joined eWEEK in 1999, and has covered wireless networking, office productivity suites, mobile devices, Windows, virtualization, and desktops and notebooks. Jason's coverage is currently focused on Linux and Unix operating systems, open-source software and licensing, cloud computing and Software as a Service.

64-Bit Desktop Challenge

Desktop systems based on IBMs PowerPC 970 and Advanced Micro Devices Inc.s Athlon 64 processors place 64-bit computing within the reach of mainstream users without closing the door to 32-bit applications. This is important because for now—and for the foreseeable future—its a 32-bit world. eWEEK Labs recently tested Apple Computer Inc.s Power Mac G5, driven […]

Is Novell Committed to Open Source?

With the acquisition of SuSE and Ximian, Novell has made a serious investment in the idea that a software company can make money without exclusively owning the code it sells. Novell now leads a number of important open-source projects, but its approach to licensing the proprietary software it controls will be the true test of […]

Ximian Takes Evolutionary Step Forward

This months release of Evolution 1.5 provides an early look at whats set to change when Ximian Inc.s popular e-mail and calendar application for Linux reaches its major Version 2.0 update in March. Evolution 1.5 is a development release intended for testing and bug hunting. In eWEEK Labs tests, we found the development label an […]

Linux Vendors Challenged

Im an enterprise user of desktop Linux, but I dont use an enterprise Linux distribution. My home and office desktops are running Fedora, the so-called developer and enthusiast variant of Red Hat Linux. See ExtremeTechs review of Fedora Core 1. My distribution preference has less to do with being on the bleeding edge than with […]

Suns JDS Rivals Windows, Office

Its debut week for Java Desktop System— a product in which Sun Microsystems Inc. has combined Linux, Mozilla, GNOME and StarOffice—creating a credible challenger to Microsoft Corp.s Windows and Office on the corporate desktop. In eWEEK Labs tests of the final build, we found Java Desktop System (formerly code-named Mad Hatter) approachable and functional, with […]

Sun Shines on China

A few years ago, a James Bond film hit the screens that centered on a scheme to secure exclusive TV broadcasting rights in China for 100 years. Aside from demonstrating just how lame the Bond series had become, the plot pointed to the enormous promise of the 1.3-billion-person Chinese market. At last months Comdex, Sun […]

Axim X3, X3i Handhelds Demonstrate Dell Has Done Its Homework

Dells first entry in the handheld computer space—last years Axim X5—was capable, but I found it too bulky to consider carrying around. The latest Axims—the X3 and X3i—best the X5 yet remain affordable. An X3 powered by a 300MHz Intel XScale with 32MB of RAM costs $229, and a version with a 400MHz chip and […]

Tech Outlook 2004: A Look Ahead at Linux, Open Source

In the year to come, open-source software will continue its kudzulike spread through IT. For example, Sun Microsystems Inc. has been adamant about having “no Linux strategy,” but its forthcoming Java Desktop System (which, by the way, has nothing more to do with Java than Windows does) may prove to be the best corporate desktop […]

Treo 600 Dials Up Handheld Strengths

Palmone Inc.s Treo 600 strikes a good balance between wireless handset and handheld computer, improving on previous Treo models in both regards. The Treo 600s form is more phonelike than that of the Treo 270 and Treo 300, and it ditches the flip-open design that made earlier Treos fairly unwieldy when open and blocked the […]

Red Hats Desktop Linux Isnt Going Away

The death of Red Hat Inc.s desktop Linux ambitions has been greatly exaggerated. When Red Hat sent customers an e-mail with updates on the fast-approaching, end-of-life dates for Red Hat Linux 7.1 through 9, many interpreted the message as an announcement that Red Hat was quitting the desktop Linux market, but this is not the […]