Craig James Johnston has been involved with technology since his high
school days at Glenwood High in Durban, South Africa, when his school was
given some Apple 2 Euro Pluses. From that moment, technology captivated him,
and he has owned, supported, evangelized, and written about it ever since.
Craig has been involved in designing and supporting large-scale enterprise networks
with integrated email and directory services since 1989. Craig has held
many different IT-related positions in his career, ranging from sales support engineer
to mobile engineering a 35,000-smartphone infrastructure at a large bank.
In addition to designing and supporting mobile computing environments, Craig
writes about them for Smartphone Essentials and CrackBerry.com, a leading
BlackBerry blog. Craig also co-hosts the CrackBerry.com podcast and his own
Mobile Computing Authority podcast.You can also see Craig’s previous published
work in his books Professional BlackBerry and My BlackBerry Curve.
Craig enjoys high-horsepower, high-speed vehicles and tries very hard to keep
to the speed limits while driving them.
Originally from Durban, South Africa, Craig has lived in the United Kingdom,
the San Francisco Bay Area, and New Jersey, where he now lives with his wife
Karen and a couple of cats.
Joe Hutsko is the author of Green Gadgets for Dummies and Macs All-in-One for
Dummies, Second Edition. For more than two decades, Joe has written about
computers, gadgets, and video games for numerous publications and websites,
including The New York Times, Macworld, PC World, Fortune, Newsweek, Popular
Science, TV Guide, The Washington Post, Wired, Gamespot, MSNBC, and Salon.
Joe’s first novel, The Deal,was recently rereleased in trade paperback with a
new foreword by the author (tinyurl.com/hutskodeal), and you can find links to
Joe’s stories on his tech blog, JOEyGADGET.com.
As a kid, Joe built a shortwave radio, played with electronic project kits, and
learned the basics of the BASIC programming language on his first computer,
the Commodore Vic 20. In his teens, he picked strawberries to buy his first
Apple II computer. Four years after that purchase (in 1984), he wound up working
for Apple, where he became the personal technology guru for the company’s
chairman and CEO. Joe left Apple in 1988 to become a writer and worked
on and off for other high-tech companies, including Steve Jobs’ one-time NeXT.
He authored a number of video game strategy guides, including the bestsellers
Donkey Kong Country Game Secrets: The Unauthorized Edition and Rebel
Assault: The Official Insiders Guide.
All comments, suggestions, and feedback are welcome, including positive and
negative.