Lots of articles in lots of magazines. And
lots of books.
HP
Newquist's writing spans a vast array of interests and
industries. In the late 1980s and 1990s he wrote
extensively about artificial intelligence (AI), compiling
a body of work that is arguably the most extensive
coverage of the AI business created to date.
Newquist became an
editorial columnist for Computerworld, and a
contributor to Newsweek, Popular Mechanics, the
Financial Technology Report, and Music
Technology magazine. These led, perhaps not so
naturally, to a series of books on international finance
for Lafferty UK, and the Editor-In-Chief position at
GUITAR magazine. He contributed to a host of other
music magazines, including Billboard, Guitar Player,
Guitar Shop, InTune, and Musician's Planet.
Along the way, he
wrote two documentary films--one of which was nominated
for an Emmy Award--and created technology entries for
Microsoft's Encarta encyclopedia, while writing
architecture and travel pieces for The New York
Press. He wrote more books, and oversaw development
of numerous publications including Teradata,
Critical Technology Trends, and the Lou Dobbs
Moneyletter, which was cited as one of the most
successful portfolio publications during its run. His
articles on travel and finance continued to appear in
inflight and technology magazines, including Computer
Technology Review, Database, and Gulf Air.
Meanwhile, his work was cited and reviewed in The New
York Times, The Economist, Variety, The Los Angeles
Times, The Wall Street Journal, and hundreds of other
publications around the world. He won some awards in the
process.
Newquist's books
cover the same array of topics as his magazine articles,
from brain science and space exploration to legendary
guitarists and the strangeness of the Internet. To date,
he has written over two dozen books. And he's already
committed to writing many more.
The pages on this
website contain a great deal of Newquist's writing, in
either PDF form or links. Click and enjoy.
