Decoder with Nilay Patel

En podcast af The Verge

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861 Episoder

  1. Serial Box CEO Molly Barton wants to change how you read

    Udgivet: 7.1.2019
  2. Keith Rabois on innovation, Trump and Saudi Arabia

    Udgivet: 5.1.2019
  3. Why Weight Watchers is now WW

    Udgivet: 2.1.2019
  4. The ups and downs of Reddit's history

    Udgivet: 31.12.2018
  5. How Imgur avoids the ugliness of social media

    Udgivet: 26.12.2018
  6. What's next for Amazon's Alexa? Maybe buying stuff for you automatically.

    Udgivet: 24.12.2018
  7. Four magic words for entrepreneurs: ‘Do your fucking job.’

    Udgivet: 19.12.2018
  8. Why salad chain Sweetgreen thinks like a tech company

    Udgivet: 17.12.2018
  9. How Peter Jackson’s team made WWI footage look new

    Udgivet: 15.12.2018
  10. Ezra Klein and Kara Swisher on the future of journalism

    Udgivet: 12.12.2018
  11. Why it's OK to be analog in a digital world

    Udgivet: 10.12.2018
  12. Should Mark Zuckerberg fire himself?

    Udgivet: 8.12.2018
  13. NBC's Chuck Todd, Andrea Mitchell and Hallie Jackson (Live)

    Udgivet: 5.12.2018
  14. Facebook and Google are “the enemies of independent thought”

    Udgivet: 3.12.2018
  15. Casey Newton and Louie Swisher on social media, video games and 300 Recode Decodes

    Udgivet: 1.12.2018
  16. Silicon Valley loves to break the rules. Is that a good thing?

    Udgivet: 28.11.2018
  17. How disinformation poisoned a ‘Facebook nation’

    Udgivet: 26.11.2018
  18. Undocumented immigrants are people, not political props

    Udgivet: 24.11.2018
  19. After 20,000 workers walked out, Google said it got the message. The workers disagree.

    Udgivet: 21.11.2018
  20. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff on Facebook, homelessness in SF and buying Time

    Udgivet: 19.11.2018

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Decoder is a show from The Verge about big ideas — and other problems. Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel talks to a diverse cast of innovators and policymakers at the frontiers of business and technology to reveal how they’re navigating an ever-changing landscape, what keeps them up at night, and what it all means for our shared future.

Visit the podcast's native language site