Edgelings.com is a news and features website founded by a team of prominent Silicon Valley media and technology executives. Providing constantly-updated news, reviews and commentary from technology regions around the globe, Edgelings provides easily-accessible views on high tech culture, lifestyles and celebrities, including bleeding-edge profiles of new companies, gadgets and business trends.
Management Team
Mike Malone—Editor-in-Chief Mike Malone has been Silicon Valley’s leading journalist for 30 years. He is the author of a dozen best-selling business books including The Virtual Corporation, Going Public, Infinite Loop (the Apple story), Virtual Selling, One Digital Day and the definitive history of Silicon Valley, The Big Score. His latest book is Bill and Dave: How Hewlett and Packard Built the World’s Greatest Company (Portfolio, March 2007). The Silicon Insider, Malone’s weekly technology column for ABCNews.com is read by 80,000 daily readers. Malone also contributes regularly to the Wall Street Journal, Wired, Fast Company. He was a columnist for the New York Times and from 1998 to 2001 was editor-in-chief of Forbes ASAP, the world’s largest circulation business-technology magazine. Recently, Malone was co-producer of the four-hour PBS primetime miniseries, “The New Heroes”, hosted by Robert Redford.
Tom Hayes—Co-Founder Tom Hayes’s 25-year career in Silicon Valley has run the full circuit. He worked in the chip business for AMD, the computer business at HP and was vice president of corporate marketing at the network software company, Enea. But he is best known for his role as vice president of Applied Materials, where his marketing strategies helped transform a once-little-known chip equipment company into a $10 billion powerhouse and a NASDAQ darling. Along the way, Hayes was also the founding chairman and CEO of Joint Venture: Silicon Valley, a public-private partnership that revitalized the Valley’s sagging economy in the 1990s. In a feature story on him, Fast Company magazine called Hayes “A Model Citizen for the 21st Century” for his many efforts to increase charitable giving among high tech companies. His new best-selling business book, Jump Point: How Network Culture is Revolutionizing Business, was published in February by McGraw-Hill.




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3 Comments
1. danny bloom:mike
Apr 13, 2009 - 9:22 pm 2. David:You’ve mentioned Globish a few times as the potential language of the net. And yet no one can say exactly what it looks like or how it acts.
You can read a couple of chapters of the real thing — IN Globish — from the new book Globish The World Over now at http://www.globish.com or read reviews at Eyrolles publishers, http://izibook.eyrolles.com/9782212865424/Globish+The+World+Over
One thing you may not know is that Jean-Paul Nerriere was the IBM International Marketing VP who first turned IBM from selling iron to selling services…and probably saved that company.
Jul 19, 2009 - 4:20 pm 3. JDCTX:Enjoyed Karlgaard’s piece on Wriston’s Law. Hope to see more business-side criticism from you guys. Thanks
Jul 23, 2009 - 9:13 am