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.

A Modest Connection to the Future

The last time I wrote this column, it was from the floor of CTIA 2002, where tech industry execs spoke of the wireless broadband future that awaits us once 3G networks are fully deployed. The thinking seems to be that wireless data services wont be truly attractive to enterprises until they reliably reach 3G speeds […]

CTIA Showcases a More Manageable Wireless Environment

I’m writing to you today from the sunny, humid environs of Orlando, Fla., where the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association is hosting its biannual wireless extravaganza-complete with blaring keynote address soundtracks, tantalizing product demos and even a personal technology fashion show. While I’ve yet to encounter any stop-the-presses product announcements, this gathering of wireless device, […]

Technology Giveth, Technology Taketh Away

Theres very little legal, high-quality digital content available over the Internet today, and according to Sen. Fritz Hollings, its the failure of entertainment and technology industries to come up with a rigorous anti-copying scheme thats to blame. Hes right. While the popularity of peer-to-peer file sharing software and of the MP3 music format has demonstrated […]

Best Way to Build Your Mobile Enterprise

In the past 10 years, handheld computers have developed from overpriced, underpowered electronic oddities to become legitimate business tools. And thats not surprising—the history of computing has been marked by a trend toward increasingly convenient and widely distributed terminals. In this installment of IT Agenda, eWeek Labs examines the state of enterprise handheld computing and […]

States Off-Target With Modular Windows Demand

The Microsoft antitrust saga stretches onward, and in our latest thrilling installment, the attorneys general from the states rejecting the settlement proposed by the Department of Justice and Microsoft are demanding that Microsoft produce a modular version of Windows—free of applications deemed (by whom Im not sure) as extraneous to the operation of the OS. […]

Wireless Breakthroughs Worth Watching

As the ordained gadget guru here at eWEEK Labs, I get a lot of questions about which cool new device to buy, and almost everyone defines “cool new device” along the same lines—small, cheap and wireless. Of course, “small, cheap and wireless” has often been too tall an order for mobile device makers. Palm will […]

Rdesktop Keeps Devices in Touch

One of the first ways I tested Windows XPs remote desktop feature was by connecting to my desktop with my aged IBM z50 Windows CE device, using a terminal services client from Microsoft. Even though Ive since ditched Windows CE on the z50 for NetBSD, Ive been able to continue connecting to my XP box […]

Ultra Wideband Is Important Step Forward

On Feb. 14 the Federal Communications Commission gave the green light to a new generation of wireless communications, imaging and radar systems by approving the commercial use of Ultra Wideband wireless technology. I was telepresent at the proceedings, courtesy of an FCC streaming media feed. UWB transmissions consist of low power, short duration signals sent […]

Nostalgic Tales From OS Crypt

Its now been more than two years since the now-defunct Be Inc. released Version 5 of its innovative desktop operating system, BeOS. Unfortunately, Be shifted its focus to the Internet appliance operating system market around the same time—a gamble that succeeded in sealing Bes doom, ensuring that BeOS would never see another release. However, BeOS […]

Palm Cant Afford to Live in the Past

I finally got around last week to installing NetBSD on my IBM z50 Workpad—a subnotebook-sized unit that teamed excellent design and capable hardware with the extremely poor-performing Windows CE 2.11 operating system. Id picked up the z50 a year or so back when IBM pulled the plug on it and the devices could be had […]