John Taschek

About

As the director of eWEEK Labs, John manages a staff that tests and analyzes a wide range of corporate technology products. He has been instrumental in expanding eWEEK Labs' analyses into actual user environments, and has continually engineered the Labs for accurate portrayal of true enterprise infrastructures. John also writes eWEEK's 'Wide Angle' column, which challenges readers interested in enterprise products and strategies to reconsider old assumptions and think about existing IT problems in new ways. Prior to his tenure at eWEEK, which started in 1994, Taschek headed up the performance testing lab at PC/Computing magazine (now called Smart Business). Taschek got his start in IT in Washington D.C., holding various technical positions at the National Alliance of Business and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. There, he and his colleagues assisted the government office with integrating the Windows desktop operating system with HUD's legacy mainframe and mid-range servers.

Ricoh i700s Focus Is Fine

Ricohs RDC-i700 is perhaps the most powerful digital camera on the market. In other words, its overkill for snapshot-shooting consumers. Fortunately for Ricoh, it is targeting the corporate market with the i700 and, for the most part, hits the bulls-eye. On the surface, the $1,300 i700 looks like an ordinary high-end digital camera. Beneath the […]

Toshiba: In the Drivers Seat With Its PCs

Studies show that people relate to and remember positive reviews more than negative ones. These hypotheses usually focus on movies and cars, but I suppose they should apply to the computer industry. Now Im wondering what it says about me when everyone I know dwells on whats wrong with this industry and how things dont […]

Geekspeak: April 23, 2001

Toshiba takes a new approach to web server appliances with the Magnia SG10. take a cheap Intel Celeron-based system, have it run Linux, put a couple of IBM Travelstar drives in it, dress it up and make it totally usable from the get-go. Then sell Web-based services around it to keep it running flawlessly with […]

Of Arrogance and Embedded Systems

One of the most overlooked segments in computing is embedded systems, which by nature could be bigger—in terms of units shipped—than the server and desktop PC markets combined. Unfortunately, the embedded market is so full of flagrantly arrogant poseurs that confusion will abound for years. The bonus is that Im going to have many field […]

For the Next 3 Seconds, I Predict …

For about 3 seconds last year, I thought that there were only three sustainable Internet companies: Commerce One, Ariba and i2, not necessarily in that order. That was a foolish 3 seconds. At the time, I was convinced that integration was the key to building the Internet economy. No matter how many fads came and […]

Dot-Com Deaths Pave the Way for Sybase

One positive thing to emerge from the dot-com disasters is that there is much less traffic congestion along the San Francisco peninsula. My commute may get even easier. A new report by Rosen Consulting, a real estate research company, shows that 80 percent of the dot-coms in the San Francisco area may implode within the […]

Geekspeak: April 2, 2001

Like a streaming-media rendition of a multimillion-dollar imax setup, Be Heres 360° Video lets content providers create amazing videos with a complete 360-degree perspective. Be Heres chief technology resides in the lens, which optically captures the image data, which Be Here then transfers to an ordinary analog or digital video camera. The result is something […]

Can Microsoft Weather the Hailstorm?

Microsofts hailstorm: you may love it, hate it or stir up litigation over it, but do you know exactly what it is? Im not sure even Microsoft knows. But one thing is clear: Choosing an interesting, overly aggressive code name will get a company in trouble, even if that code name sounds more like an […]

Bad Economys Good for Open Source

Now that the economy has encouraged computer technologists to re-enter reality, its time to take a look at how open source will weather the downturn. A prolonged bad economy will be bad for everyone, including open-source programmers. It will be especially bad for those who work at companies whose business models are based on Linux. […]

Peering Into the Future of Peer-To-Peer

Napster-like companies may come and go, but P2P is here to stay. At least thats what peer-to-peer companies say. Why these companies think they can eke out a business plan inspired by a company that made only its lawyers rich and ultimately collapsed is another question. This doesnt mean that there arent interesting companies in […]