Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Expertise: Technology, Biotech, Renewable energy

Education: M.S,J. Northwestern (Medill School) 1978; B.A. Rice University, History and Political Science 1977

Awards & Accomplishments: Tech reporter since 1982, Freelance since 1983, on Internet since 1985. Created first online coverage of Internet with a magazine, Interactive Age, 1994 Co-wrote BBS Systems for Business in 1991, Wrote Guide to Field Computing in 1992 Wrote technology history now called "Living with Moore's Law" in 2001, 2010, 2021 Author of over a dozen books, both fiction and non-fiction

About Dana:
Dana Blankenhorn has been a financial journalist since 1978, a technology journalist since 1982, and an Internet journalist since 1985. He writes a Substack newsletter, Facing the Future, which covers technology, markets, and politics.

He has written a half-dozen technology books, several novels available at the Amazon Kindle store, and covered beats ranging from education to e-commerce, and from open source to renewable energy. He lives in Atlanta.

Recent Articles

Starbucks: Howard Schultz’ End Game

Legendary CEO Howard Schultz has gotten a rough reception since returning to the big chair but there's a great successor available.

You Can Buy the Bounce on PayPal But Be Cautious

Analysts were wrong to ignore PYPL Stocks' problems last year and investors lost money PayPal fell with international tensions, the rising cost of money, and an abortive effort to buy Pinterest. It's now cheap enough to buy.

Meta Platforms Is Too Cheap to Keep Selling

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has proven detractors wrong before, and his company has prospered from it. Now his top-down vision faces its stiffest test. FB Stock has bounced off its lows but technology analysts continue to doubt the top-down future of its CEO.

Buying American Airlines Is Betting on an Earnings Beat

AAL stock may be an interesting speculation with the pandemic ending, but it's still not an investment.

Affirm Stock Is a Good Short-Term Buy

Buy Now, Pay Later was seen as a tech play when Affirm stock was rising last year. Now banks have matched the technology. AFRM stock has bounced off its lows, but it may never hit the heights of last year, when Buy Now Pay Later was the future of shopping.