The former tech worker is now trying to highlight the industry's unseen faces.
How to learn from failure in the tech industry and, even more importantly, how to move on.
Is this the end of private car ownership?
The race to own the ride-sharing business is on.
Same-day shipping is not the holy grail.
Cisco got its start in hardware, but it's moving into more software and services.
Artificial intelligence will affect every business decision soon, she says.
Mckesson said he has blocked 19,000 Twitter accounts, "one at a time."
He has huge ambitions, but still wants to sell shoes.
Vaccines, condoms and Donald Trump.
He's with her.
"They can't expect to hide entirely in the shadows."
Humans on Mars by 2025, Musk predicts.
Machine learning, artificial intelligence, deep simulation — or, as IBM’s CEO insisted, cognitive computing — were front and center for nearly every Code Conference speaker.
The voice-assistant craze is right around the corner.
Direct democracy, anyone?
"Really nobody on eBay anymore is subjected to fraud.”
The chair of the Clinton campaign says tech leaders need to know she's "on the level."
Politicians usually don't want to talk about it, but they shouldn't be ashamed, John Podesta says.
A startup is a series of near-death experiences (often followed by death itself).
"In a weird way, not being the CEO is exactly what helped me learn what it means to be a CEO."
Currently, users can only identify themselves and their dating interests as either male or female.
"I'd rather have a billion unique items that arrive in three days than a billion commodity items that arrive in an hour."
Life is but a Dreamcast?
Gawker's Nick Denton is in the building.
Mars, artificial intelligence and more.
A shootout on the Mexican border delayed trunk carpeting shipments.
After Mars, are neural laces next?
Though he said it may be too late for Apple.
Going to Mars, however, is a bit more complicated.
The head of Tesla and SpaceX is at Code Conference.