John Quain is the Wireless Center Editor and wireless columnist for Ziff Davis Media. He is also the on-air Computer Consultant for CBS News, appearing regularly on the network's overnight newscast Up to the Minute for over 7 years. In addition, Quain does occasional reports for CBS News The Early Show and has been reporting on technology and related business and entertainment news for over 20 years. Quain has appeared regularly on ABC News, CNN, CNNfn, MSNBC, and CNBC.In addition to his online and on-air work, Quain currently contributes articles about computers, the Internet, consumer electronics, and technology to PC Magazine, Popular Science, Esquire, and The New York Times. Other publications Quain contributes to include Rolling Stone, Entertainment Weekly, Men's Journal, Tech Edge, and Good Housekeeping.Past positions Quain has held include working as a Contributing Editor at Fast Company magazine for 4 years and at PC Magazine for 9 years. He also wrote a technology column for Brill's Content magazine, was the gadgets columnist at My Generation magazine, was the daily Internet columnist for Time Warner's Pathfinder, and was the computer columnist at The Globe and Mail newspaper.
After several months searching for a new marketing head of its wireless and mobile devices division, Microsoft has hired Suzan DelBene as vice president of marketing for its wireless phone and handheld-organizer software division. DelBene has already done time at Microsoft. She spent nearly a decade at the company in various executive positions, including a […]
The hang-up with video-conferencing has always been that its a hassle to set up and use. And who wants to be bound to a computer just to call someone? D-Link is hoping it has solved that problem with its wireless broadband videophone. The new D-Link Wireless i2eye videophone ($230 street) is designed to work with […]
Information at your fingertips. Seamless computing. Call it what you will, its convergence by any other name. Of course, you cant converge anything without getting everything connected, and you cant have everything connected unless you go wireless. So a year ago Microsoft introduced a program for making quotidian objects wirelessly connected to the great big […]
UPDATED: It may be the year of the monkey in the Chinese calendar but according to the tech calendar, this is going to be the year of the mobile worker. Why? Because wireless communication is finally a practical tool for small and large businesses. Wi-Fi, for example, was once a novelty in coffee shops and […]
If there is one clear signal to be detected in the ether of the wireless world, it is the voice of the end user. And when it comes to wireless, users want it, and they want it bad. Consider the cell phone marketplace: Once only for affluent business travelers, today you cant walk down a […]
First your company launched a wireless network. Then you set one up in your home. Whats next? How about having Wi-Fi in your cell phone, MP3 player, or even your digital camera? If chipmaker Broadcom Corp. has its way, the Wi-Fi juggernaut will keep rolling along. The company recently took the wraps off its tiny, […]
Ultimately, fighting the war on terrorism may have less to do with giant aircraft carriers and more to do with atomic-scale detection and prevention systems. Nanotechnology, which is expected to transform everything from computer processors to drug delivery systems, may also be the key to homeland security, argues a new book. In Nanotechnology and Homeland […]
No good spam-fighting deed goes unpunished, or thats how things seem when youre Microsoft. After initiating high-profile lawsuits against spammers and pleading with Congress for tougher regulations, Microsoft itself is taking heat for assisting the targets of its actions. Apparently much unsolicited e-mail comes from the companys own services including Hotmail, and critics charge that […]