Code Conference




And a word about that Uber report ...


It’s going to be a busy three days.


The embattled CEO says he has to stay at the office due to the delayed Holder report on Uber’s troubled culture.


Tech meets philanthropy and politics.


A big lineup gets bigger.


We’ll see you in late May.


The leaders of Andreessen Horowitz, Netflix and Planned Parenthood join a powerhouse lineup. More to come!


Here are the first speakers we’re announcing for the annual tech and media conference.
Is the future of food meatless?
Humans on Mars by 2025, Musk predicts.
The Washington Post owner talks a big game about defending the media.

The full video.


We still have more speakers to announce, but get ready for Code 2016, coming May 31 to June 2.


More amazing players take to our stage in May to talk tech, media and much more.


It is our biggest speaker roster ever in 14 years, with the top names in tech, media, commerce, politics and more.


Our annual conference is shaping up to be our biggest speaker roster ever in 14 years, with the top names in tech, media, commerce, politics and more.


The prolific blogger and Andreessen Horowitz partner says that there will ultimately be 750 million iPhones and 3.5 billion Android phones on earth.


The crew behind Fox’s “Empire” talks social media and TV at the Code Conference.


The former Google executive talks about the company’s international expansion, including a long-term hope to sell phones in the U.S.


Sprint is barely clinging to third place among carriers in terms of number of customers. The CEO has a plan.


Why GoPro is not just a “device maker,” according to Nick Woodman, who showed off a new spherical camera at Code.


The retail chain’s future is much brighter than its past, says Brian Cornell.


Discussed: Likability. Microaggressions and mansplaining. “The pipeline issue.” Unconscious bias. And the diversity officer.


The virtual reality pioneer’s CEO preaches potential, advises patience.


The full Code Conference interview with Google’s business boss Omid Kordestani.


“We think to be regulated is to be recognized,” Chesky said.


Apple’s senior vice president of operations talked onstage at Code about watches and wearables, competitors and third-party apps -- and those ever-elusive sales numbers.


At Code, the CEOs of Twitter and Twitter-owned upstart Periscope talked about content ownership and privacy, and the pressure of being a CEO in a volatile industry.


“I think the age of the 200 channel universe is slowly dying,” Moonves said, but added that the role for CBS and other networks remains central.


BuzzFeed’s main brains say the site still gets lots of traffic from cats -- and dresses -- but is increasingly doing high-impact journalism on multiple platforms.




Walt quizzes the auto executive on how GM plans to adapt to the rapid tech coming for the car.


The Massachusetts senator took the Code stage to talk about Silicon Valley libertarianism, and called for collective investment in education, infrastructure and research.


Here’s Meeker’s fast-paced jaunt through her latest massive Internet trends report, on the twentieth anniversary of her first one.


Snapchat’s young co-founder and CEO joined the Re/code bosses onstage at Code for a conversation about issues that won’t go away anytime soon.


The footage was captured with GoPro’s forthcoming Six-Camera Spherical Array.


Would you rather hug a sweaty Steve Ballmer, or go to battle with Marc Andreessen on Twitter?


The typical answer: Not so much.


“The ... problem for us is avoiding the feeling of okay, we’ve done it.”