John C. Dvorak
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John C. Dvorak (Template:IPAc-en; born 1952) is an American writer and broadcaster in the areas of technology and personal computing.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He has been a columnist for multiple magazines since the 1980s and has written or co-authored over a dozen how-to books on software and technology. He was vice president of Mevio, and has been a host on TechTV and TWiT.tv. He is currently a co-host of the No Agenda podcast.
Early life
Dvorak was born in 1952 in Los Angeles, California.<ref name="smart">Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> He is a nephew of sociologist August Dvorak, creator of the Dvorak keyboard.<ref name="pournelle198509">Template:Cite news</ref>
Writing career
Periodicals
Dvorak started his career as a wine writer.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
He has written for various publications, including InfoWorld, PC Magazine (two separate columns since 1986), MarketWatch, BUG Magazine (Croatia), and Info Exame (Brazil). He has been a columnist for Boardwatch, Forbes, Forbes.com, MacUser, MicroTimes, PC/Computing, Barron's Magazine, Smart Business, and The Vancouver Sun. (The MicroTimes column ran under the banner Dvorak's Last Column.) He has written for The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, MacMania Networks, International Herald Tribune, The San Francisco Examiner and The Philadelphia Inquirer, among numerous other publications.
Dvorak created a few tech running jokes. In episode 18 of TWiT (This Week in Tech) he claimed that, thanks to his hosting provider, he "gets no spam."<ref name="TWiT">Template:Cite podcast</ref>
Books
Dvorak has written or co-authored over a dozen books, including Hypergrowth: The Rise and Fall of the Osborne Computer Corporation with Adam Osborne and Dvorak's Guide to Desktop Telecommunications in 1990, Dvorak's Guide to PC Telecommunications (Osborne McGraw-Hill, Berkeley, California, 1992), Dvorak's Guide to OS/2 (Random House, New York, 1993) with co-authors David B. Whittle and Martin McElroy, Dvorak Predicts (Osborne McGraw-Hill, Berkeley, California, 1994), Online! The Book (Prentice Hall PTR, October, 2003) with co-authors Wendy Taylor and Chris Pirillo and his latest e-book is Inside Track 2013.
Awards and honors
He was the creator and lead judge of the Dvorak Awards (1992–1997).
In 2001, he received the Telluride Tech Festival Award of Technology.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
He has received the title of Kentucky Colonel, the highest title of honor awarded by the Commonwealth of Kentucky.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In July, 2016, Dvorak and co-host Adam Curry won the "Best Podcast" Podcast Award for No Agenda, in the News & Politics category.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
TV and online media
Dvorak was on the start-up team for CNET Networks, appearing on the television show CNET Central. He also hosted a radio show called Real Computing, and later 'Technically Speaking' on NPR, as well as a television show on TechTV (formerly ZDTV) called Silicon Spin. Dvorak helped develop the game Dvorak On Typing.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
He appeared on Marketwatch TV and This Week in Tech, a podcast audio and now video program hosted by Leo Laporte and featuring other former TechTV personalities such as Patrick Norton, Kevin Rose, and Robert Heron. Dvorak was once banned from the show.<ref name="JCD">Template:Cite web</ref> In March 2006, he started a new show called CrankyGeeks, where he led a rotating panel of "cranky" tech gurus in discussions of technology news stories of the week. The last episode (No. 237) aired on September 22, 2010.
In 2007, Mevio hired Dvorak as vice president and Managing Editor for a new Mevio TECH channel, where he manages content from existing Mevio tech programming. He also hosted the show "Tech5", where he discussed the day's tech news in approximately five minutes; it ended production in late 2010.<ref name="MevioTech">Template:Cite web</ref> He co-hosts a podcast with Mevio co-founder Adam Curry called No Agenda. The show is a conversation about the week's news, happenings in the lives of the hosts and their families, and restaurant reviews from the dinners Dvorak and Curry have together when they are in the same city (usually San Francisco). Curry usually has more outlandish opinions of the week's news or world events, while Dvorak plays the straight man in the dialogue.
Since early 2011, Dvorak has been one of the featured "CoolHotNot Tech Xperts," along with Chris Pirillo, Jim Louderback, Dave Graveline, Robin Raskin, Dave Whittle, Steve Bass, and Cheryl Currid, at CoolHotNot's web site, He shares his "Loved List" of favorite consumer electronics, his "Wanted List" of tech products he'd like to try, and his "Letdown List" of tech products he found disappointing.<ref name="CoolHotNot">Template:Cite web</ref>
Dvorak hosted the show X3, which, like the defunct Tech 5, was a short tech-focused cast. Unlike Tech 5, it was in video format, with two co-hosts. The last update was 24 June 2012.<ref name="X3 Episode List">Template:Cite web</ref>
Since September 2009, Dvorak has hosted the DH Unplugged podcast with personal money manager Andrew Horowitz.
He is a co-founder, with Gina Smith and the late Jerry Pournelle, of the web site aNewDomain.net, where he is also a columnist.<ref name="aNewDomain.net Bio">Template:Cite web</ref>
In September 2015, Leo Laporte infamously "banned" Dvorak—his long-time friend and frequent guest—from TWiT for comments Dvorak made on Twitter. In reply to Dvorak's comments that Laporte was biased, Laporte told Dvorak "you won't ever have to worry about it again",<ref name="JCD"/> insinuating that he never wanted Dvorak back on TWiT. Dvorak returned to TWiT on December 23, 2018.<ref>Template:Cite podcast</ref>
Criticism of new technology
Template:Undue weight On February 19, 1984, in an article in The San Francisco Examiner, Dvorak listed the mouse as a reason the Macintosh computer might not be successful: "The Macintosh uses an experimental pointing device called a ‘mouse’. There is no evidence that people want to use these things."<ref>Jan. 1984: How critics reviewed the Mac - Fortune</ref><ref>2004: The Mac Meets the Press - Apple Confidential 2.0</ref> In 1987 he revisited the article and recanted, writing "The Mac mouse is great. I've been converted."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 1985, following Steve Jobs leaving Apple, Dvorak wrote, "Maybe when the smoke clears, we will have heard the last of Steve Jobs as guru, seer, visionary and hapless victim too ... He'll go the way of pet rock, electric carving knives, silly putty, Tiny Tim, and the three-tone paint job. Let's hope so."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
In 2005, Dvorak wrote "Creative Commons Humbug", an opinion piece criticizing Creative Commons licensing.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In his 2007 article for MarketWatch regarding the iPhone, Dvorak wrote, "If [Apple's] smart, it will call the iPhone a 'reference design' and pass it to some suckers to build with someone else's marketing budget. Then it can wash its hands of any marketplace failures. [... ] It should do that immediately before it's too late."<ref name="iPhone">Template:Cite web</ref> Although he later admitted having been wrong about its success, he criticized Apple's iPad when it first appeared in 2010, stating that it was no different from other previous tablets that had failed: "I cannot see it escaping the tablet computer dead zone any time soon."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2018, he claimed on Medium that he was fired from PC Magazine because of an article he wrote questioning the safety of 5G.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Personal life
Dvorak married Mimi Smith-Dvorak on August 8, 1988.<ref>DHUnpplugged #245:Blame It On The Polar Vortex | DH Unplugged</ref> He is listed as a minister of the Universal Life Church.<ref>John Dvorak - Universal Life Church Ministers</ref> He said on show #600 of No Agenda that he occasionally posts online under the pseudonym Mark Pugner.<ref>No Agenda Episode 600 - "Seven Proxies"</ref>
References
External links
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- PC Magazine: John C. Dvorak's column Template:Webarchive
- PC Magazine: John C. Dvorak's profile
- PC Magazine: John C. Dvorak's Inside Track
- MarketWatch: John C. Dvorak's Second Opinion
- aNewDomain.net: John C. Dvorak's column archive
- CrankyGeeks official site Template:Webarchive
- No Agenda Show Podcast
- Dvorak's current list of best, most wanted, and worst tech products
- DH Unplugged
- The Oasis on Substack
- Amateur radio people
- American male journalists
- American male bloggers
- American bloggers
- American columnists
- American people of Czech descent
- University of California, Berkeley alumni
- Living people
- TechTV people
- American technology podcasters
- 1952 births
- 21st-century American non-fiction writers
- Berkeley Macintosh Users Group members