Brad Moon

Brad Moon

Brad Moon is a Canadian technology journalist with a fintech business background. He has been writing for InvestorPlace since 2012.

Brad has been a Senior Contributor for Forbes since 2015 and has written technology, business, and consumer electronics-focused articles for a range of outlets over the past decade.

This includes seven years with Wired, 15 years with the Webby award-winning GeekDad, four years as a contributor with Kiplinger, three years with About.com, and three years writing for Shaw Media. He has also written articles that have been published by MSN Money, Yahoo Finance, Gizmodo, Lifehacker, Business Insider, and others. He wrote a weekly technology column in The Winnipeg Free Press, a monthly tech column for London Business Magazine, and has made numerous radio and conference appearances speaking about technology trends. For the past decade Brad has been the Computing Solutions Editor for Best Buy Canada’s blog.

As a consultant, Brad has been part of the launch of multiple ventures in Canada including several wind farms and a web-based remote collaboration platform.

Prior to his writing career, Brad was a senior Product Manager and Research Analyst with a leading Canadian financial technology firm for 13 years after spending six years working at the Richard Ivey School of Business. He holds a BA from the University of Western Ontario.

Recent Articles

Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) Takes on Apple With New Surface Pro

Microsoft (MSFT) announced the new Surface Pro tablet, with a 50% boost in battery life, Kaby Lake CPUs and the option of LTE connectivity.

Trouble Looms for Apple Inc. (AAPL) With Apple Pay Lawsuit

Boston’s Universal Secure Registry has launched an Apple Pay lawsuit, going after AAPL and Visa over secure payment patent infringements.

Alphabet Inc (GOOGL) Challenges BlackBerry Ltd (BBRY) With Android Automotive

Alphabet (GOOGL) is pushing Android Automotive, an attempt to have an embedded Android control car functions ranging from infotainment to power windows.

Alphabet Inc’s (GOOGL) Photo-Taking Just Got Smarter With Google Lens

Google I/O 2017 introduced Google Lens, Alphabet's AI-powered technology that brings contextual awareness your to your smartphone camera.

Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) Doesn’t Owe You an Apology

In the WannaCry fallout, fingers are being pointed at Microsoft (MSFT) for not patching a Windows vulnerability. But it's not MSFT's fault.