The Truth About Marissa Mayer: An Unauthorized Biography
A 22,000-word profile of the Yahoo CEO.
A 22,000-word profile of the Yahoo CEO.
Nicholas Carlson Business Insider Aug 2013 1h30min Permalink
The emerging political consciousness of Silicon Valley.
George Packer New Yorker May 2013 40min Permalink
The con man who cost Google $500 million.
Jake Pearson Wired May 2013 20min Permalink
The writer, entering her thirties single and adrift, heads to San Francisco to spend time with Kink.com’s Princess Donna Dolore and attend a gangbang “where all the men were dressed as panda bears.”
Emily Witt n+1 May 2013 35min Permalink
For the first time, the giants of the tech industry are spending more on creating, buying, and fighting patents than they are on R&D.
Part of New York Times’ ongoing iEconomy series.
Charles Duhigg, Steve Lohr New York Times Jan 2012 20min Permalink
A look inside Google’s Ground Truth.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Sep 2012 Permalink
How Google’s utopian/dystopian plan to scan the world’s books failed and the Harvard-led team that’s picking up the pieces.
Nicholas Carr Technology Review Jun 2012 15min Permalink
Competing teams, some powered by billionaires and some by open-sourced code and volunteers, race to land a robot on the surface and claim a massive prize from Google.
Wade Roush Xconomy Apr 2012 20min Permalink
On the ever-expanding world of targeted online advertising.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Feb 2012 15min Permalink
How the U.S. government used a serial con who was caught running a mail-order steroid pharmacy in Mexico to prove that Google was knowingly placing ads for illegal drugs.
Thomas Catan The Wall Street Journal Jan 2012 Permalink
On YouTube’s shift towards professionally created content.
John Seabrook New Yorker Jan 2012 25min Permalink
Apple vs. Google vs. Facebook vs. Amazon.
Farhad Manjoo Fast Company Oct 2011 30min Permalink
On the Google conundrum:
It’s clearly wrong for all the information in all the world’s books to be in the sole possession of a single company. It’s clearly not ideal that only one company in the world can, with increasing accuracy, translate text between 506 different pairs of languages. On the other hand, if Google doesn’t do these things, who will?
Daniel Soar London Review of Books Oct 2011 15min Permalink
On how search and advertising became indistinguishable, the finer points of not being evil, and why privacy is by nature immeasurable. How Google made us the product:
“Google conquered the advertising world with nothing more than applied mathematics,” wrote Chris Anderson, the editor of Wired. “It didn’t pretend to know anything about the culture and conventions of advertising—it just assumed that better data, with better analytical tools, would win the day. And Google was right.”
James Gleick New York Review of Books Aug 2011 20min Permalink
“The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads.”
Ashlee Vance Businessweek Apr 2011 Permalink
The next frontier of search is… everything. Voice recognition, image recognition, and why Google’s data set is one of the most valuable scientific tools of our age.
Wade Roush Xconomy Jan 2011 30min Permalink
Best Article History Tech Media
The challenges facing the historians of the internet.
Ariel Bleicher IEEE Spectrum Mar 2011 15min Permalink
How J.C. Penney gamed Google and became the top result for searches on everything from “area rugs” to “skinny jeans.”
David Segal New York Times Feb 2011 Permalink
A requiem for the ‘content portal’ era.
Fred Vogelstein Wired Feb 2007 10min Permalink
A working definition of ‘net neutrality’, a bestiary of the major players, and why the issue isn’t a cut and dry case of good vs. evil.
Farhad Manjoo Slate Dec 2010 Permalink
Where the actual online money is centralized, and where Google will have to go to continue chasing it.
Charles Petersen New York Review of Books Dec 2010 20min Permalink
DecorMyEyes is a online eyewear store with an unusual business plan; the owner harasses and intimidates customers who complain in order to get negative reviews posted across the web, in turn making his website more visible to Google searchers.
David Segal New York Times Nov 2010 Permalink
The perpetually underpaid author takes a moonlighting job with Demand Media, publisher of search-engine optimized articles with titles like “Hair Styles for Women Over 50 With Glasses”, absurdity ensues.
Jessanne Collins The Awl Nov 2010 10min Permalink
Google’s founders and CEO as they moved from the search business into… everything.
Ken Auletta New Yorker Jan 2008 25min Permalink
One of the founders of Google discovered that he carried a gene that meant a 50% chance of developing Parkinson’s. In response, he is working to change and expedite the way that Parkinson’s research is conducted.
Thomas Goetz Wired Jun 2010 30min Permalink