In addition to publishing scientific journal articles, mainly in the IEEE journals,[6] he also edited the two early introductions to networking, Understanding the new local network technologies (BBN, 1978) and A practical view of computer communications protocols (IEEE, 1978).
He started McQuillan Consulting in Concord, MA (1982), became a columnist to Business Communications Review as well as an annual organizer of the Next Generation Network (NGN) conferences. He became partner in International Venture Partner (1996).Today, he is the director of McQuillan Ventures, that invests in network infrastructure companies.[7]
His father, John McQuillan (died 1984), was a communications engineer and a participant in the first trans-Atlantic radio conversation.[8]
^John McQuillan (2009). David Walden (ed.). "The Birth of Link-State Routing". IEEE Annals of the History of Computing. 31: 68–71. doi:10.1109/MAHC.2009.17. S2CID2385847.
^Matthew Lyon and Katie Hafner (1996). Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins Of The Internet. Simon & Schuster, Inc. New York, NY, USA. ISBN0-684-83267-4.
^"John McQuillan Joins IVP As Venture Partner; Pioneer in Advanced Networks Adds Strength in Internet, High Performance Networking and Bandwidth to the Home as Areas of Investment Opportunities." Business Wire, 30 July 1996, p. 7300063. Business Collection, http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A18540586/GPS?u=tplmain&sid=GPS&xid=9618e020 . Accessed 30 May 2019.