Code Conference




Keep it simple, stupid.


Fighting bigger companies over a once-in-a-generation shift.


Will BlackBerry make Android phones?


Tune in, turn on, tweet out.


“Maybe a random 25-year-old wants to come and build something actually amazing.”


BlackBerry’s CEO won’t go as far as to say that the company will shift to Android, but won’t rule it out either.


A loss of focus cost the company, Chen says.


CEO Dick Costolo doesn’t expect China to unblock Twitter anytime soon.


“I am quite confident that we’ll be able to save the patient.”


Things got a little funny, a little testy and just a little bit weird.


He declined to answer questions about the prospective acquisition of T-Mobile by Sprint.


Making the cellular “booga booga” easy.


“Now it’s kind of a joke -- you always need a private violinist on a jet.”


Computer literacy is for everyone.


The leader of the world’s largest retailer speaks!




The rules have allowed monopolists to grow stronger, he says.


Thirty-five million students have now taken Code.org’s “Hour of Code” course.


Tough luck, humans.


SoftBank holds a 37 percent stake in Alibaba.


Still, people don’t like cable guys.


Son has faced and overcome obstacles before, but in trying to rebuild Sprint, he faces one of his toughest tasks yet.


A year into the job, Intel’s chief knows he is still playing catch-up on phones and tablets.


“We aspire to sell more.”


“I text before I speak in the morning. And the dawn is interrupted by the illumination of my cellphone.”


Plenty of people would disagree.


America’s biggest cable company wants to get bigger, and its CEO says that’s a good thing.


Walmart versus Amazon and more ...


Computing that you wear on your “eyes, ears, wrist and torso.”


But the plan is not to miss the next shift in computing.


In her annual slideshow, the venture capitalist says we’re nowhere near 2000.


Intel’s Mike Bell shows Re/code’s Lauren Goode a “smart” shirt that measures your heart rate and is powered by Intel chips.


The chip company shows off its open source robot that can talk, dance and tweet.


What do the titans of tech do to relax?


Courtesy of Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Snapchat. Which one of these things is not like the other?


Mobile data traffic is up 81 percent with accelerating growth, driven in part by video.


Plus, a way to check Meeker on her past work, which is now posted and organized in one place online.


A quick rundown of the highlights from yesterday’s appearances by Satya Nadella, Gwyneth Paltrow and Sergey Brin.


Google co-founder unveils a car sans steering wheel, sounds off on patent law.