American technology news and media website
For other uses, see
Verge
.
The Verge
is an American
technology news
website
headquartered
in
Lower Manhattan
,
New York City
and operated by
Vox Media
. The website publishes news, feature stories, guidebooks, product reviews,
consumer electronics
news, and
podcasts
.
[3]
[5]
The website was launched on November 1, 2011, and uses Vox Media's proprietary multimedia publishing platform Chorus.
[6]
[7]
In 2014,
Nilay Patel
was named
editor-in-chief
and Dieter Bohn executive editor; Helen Havlak was named editorial director in 2017.
[8]
[9]
The Verge
won five
Webby Awards
for the year 2012 including awards for Best Writing (Editorial), Best Podcast for
The Vergecast
, Best Visual Design, Best Consumer Electronics Site, and Best Mobile News App.
[10]
[11]
History
[
edit
]
Original The Verge wordmark (2011?2016)
Second The Verge wordmark (2016?2022)
Origins
[
edit
]
Between March and April 2011, up to nine of
Engadget
'
s writers, editors, and product developers, including
editor-in-chief
Joshua Topolsky
, left
AOL
, the company behind that website, to start a new gadget site.
[12]
[13]
[14]
The other departing editors included managing editor
Nilay Patel
and staffers Paul Miller, Ross Miller, Joanna Stern, Chris Ziegler, as well as product developers Justin Glow, and Dan Chilton.
[12]
[15]
[16]
In early April 2011, Topolsky announced that their unnamed new site would be produced in partnership with sports news website
SB Nation
, debuting some time in the fall.
[15]
[17]
Topolsky lauded
SB Nation
's
similar interest in the future of publishing, including what he described as their beliefs in independent journalism and in-house development of their own content delivery tools.
[15]
[16]
SB Nation's
Jim Bankoff
saw an overlap in the demographics of the two sites and an opportunity to expand SB Nation's model..
[15]
Bankoff previously worked at AOL in 2005, where he led their
Engadget
acquisition.
[18]
Other news outlets viewed the partnership as positive for both
SB Nation
and Topolsky's staff, and negative for AOL's outlook.
[19]
[20]
[21]
[22]
Bankoff,
chairman
and
CEO
of
Vox Media
(owner of
SB Nation
), said in a 2011 interview that though the company had started out with a focus on sports, other categories including consumer technology had growth potential for the company.
[23]
Development of Vox Media's
content management system
(CMS), Chorus, was led by Trei Brundrett, who later became the
chief operating officer
for the company.
[24]
This Is My Next
[
edit
]
Following news of his untitled partnership with
SB Nation
in April 2011, Topolsky announced that the
Engadget
podcast hosted by Patel, Paul Miller, and himself would continue at an interim site called
This Is My Next
.
[15]
[25]
By August 2011, the site had reached 1 million unique visitors and 3.4 million page views.
[25]
By October 2011, the site had 3 million unique views per month and 10 million total page views.
[2]
Time
listed the site in its Best Blogs of 2011,
[25]
calling the prototype site "exemplary".
[26]
The site closed upon
The Verge
'
s launch on November 1, 2011.
[
citation needed
]
On June 11, 2014,
The Verge
launched a new section called "This Is My Next", edited by former editor David Pierce, as a buyer's guide for consumer electronics.
[27]
By 2022, this section had been retitled simply "Buying Guide".
[28]
Launch
[
edit
]
The Verge
launched November 1, 2011,
[4]
along with an announcement of a new parent company: Vox Media.
[2]
According to the company, the site launched with 4 million unique visitors and 20 million pageviews.
[29]
At the time of Topolsky's departure,
Engadget
had 14 million unique visitors.
[12]
[21]
Vox Media overall doubled its unique visitors to about 15 million during the last half of 2012.
[29]
The Verge
had 12 former Engadget staffers working with Topolsky at the time of launch.
[2]
It hired Tom Warren, former
Neowin
editor-in-chief and WinRumors blogger, as their new United Kingdom based senior editor.
[30]
In 2013,
The Verge
launched a new science section,
Verge Science
, with former
Wired
editor Katie Drummond leading the effort.
[31]
Patel replaced Topolsky as editor-in-chief in mid-2014.
[32]
Journalist
Walt Mossberg
joined
The Verge
's
editing team after Vox Media acquired
Recode
in 2015.
[3]
By 2016, the website's advertising had shifted from display advertisements, matched with articles' contents, to partnerships and advertisements adjusted to the user.
[33]
2016?present
[
edit
]
Vox Media revamped
The Verge
's
visual design for its fifth anniversary in November 2016.
[34]
Its logo featured a modified
Penrose triangle
, an
impossible object
.
[35]
On November 1,
The Verge
launched version 3.0 of its news platform, offering a redesigned website along with the new logo.
[36]
In September 2016,
The Verge
fired deputy editor Chris Ziegler after it learned that he had been working for
Apple
since July.
[37]
Helen Havlak was promoted to editorial director in mid-2017.
[38]
In 2017,
The Verge
launched "Guidebook" to host technology product reviews.
[39]
In May 2018,
Verge Science
launched a
YouTube
channel, which had more than 638,000 subscribers and 30 million views by January 2019. The channel received more than 5.3 million views in November 2018 alone.
[40]
As of August 2023, the channel has over 100 million views and 1.15 million subscribers.
In March 2022, Dieter Bohn announced his resignation from The Verge in his position of Executive Editor, and that he would be moving to a new position at
Google
.
[41]
The Verge
rebranded and redesigned its website in September 2022 with a sharper, more simplistic logo, more colorful visual design, and new typefaces. Its new home page format resembled a Twitter feed, incorporating external conversations from social media and reporting from other publications. The new format will, in part, reduce aggregation reporting.
[42]
Content
[
edit
]
Podcasts
[
edit
]
The Verge
broadcasts a live weekly
podcast
,
The Vergecast
. The inaugural episode was November 4, 2011. It included a video stream of the hosts.
[43]
A second weekly podcast was introduced on November 8, 2011. Unlike
The Vergecast
,
The Verge Mobile Show
was primarily focused on mobile phones.
[44]
[45]
The Verge
also launched the weekly podcast
Ctrl-Walt-Delete
, hosted by
Walt Mossberg
, in September 2015.
[46]
The Verge
's
What's Tech
podcast was named among iTunes's best of 2015.
[47]
The podcast
Why'd You Push That Button?
, launched in 2017 and co-hosted by Ashley Carman and Kaitlyn Tiffany,
[48]
received a
Podcast Award
in the "This Week in Tech Technology Category" in 2018.
[49]
[50]
Editor-in-chief Nilay Patel hosts a weekly interview podcast called Decoder.
[51]
On February 8th, 2024, Patel announced Decoder would now do two episodes per week.
[52]
Video content
[
edit
]
On The Verge
[
edit
]
On August 6, 2011, in an interview with the firm
Edelman
,
The Verge
co-founder
Marty Moe
announced it was launching
The Verge Show
, a
web television
series. After its launch, the show was named
On The Verge
. The first episode was recorded on Monday, November 14, 2011, with guest
Matias Duarte
.
[53]
The show is a
technology news
entertainment show, and its format is similar to that of a
late-night talk show
, but it is broadcast over the
Internet
, not on
television
. The show's first episode was released on November 15, 2011.
Ten episodes of
On The Verge
were broadcast, with the most recent episode going out on November 10, 2012.
[54]
On May 24, 2013, it was announced that the show would return under a new weekly format, alongside a new logo and theme tune.
[55]
Other video content
[
edit
]
On May 8, 2013, editor-in-chief Topolsky announced Verge Video, a website that contains the video backlog from
The Verge
.
[56]
Circuit Breaker
, a
gadget
blog, launched in 2016,
[57]
has amassed nearly one million Facebook followers and debuted a live show on Twitter in October 2017. The blog's videos average more than 465,000 views, and Jake Kastrenakes serves as editor-in-chief, as of 2017.
[58]
Also in 2016,
USA Network
and
The Verge
partnered on
Mr. Robot Digital After Show
, a digital
aftershow
for the television series
Mr. Robot
.
[59]
In December, Twitter and Vox Media announced a
live streaming
partnership for
The Verge
's
programs covering the
Consumer Electronics Show
.
[60]
The series
Next Level
, hosted and produced by Lauren Goode, debuted in 2017 and was recognized in the "Technology" category at the 47th annual
San Francisco / Northern California Emmy Awards
(2018).
[61]
[62]
In August 2017,
The Verge
launched the web series
Space Craft
, hosted by science reporter Loren Grush.
[63]
In 2022, The Verge produced the show
The Future Of
for
Netflix
.
[64]
Controversy
[
edit
]
2018 PC build guide
[
edit
]
In September 2018,
The Verge
published the article "How to Build a Custom PC for Editing, Gaming or Coding" with a companion YouTube video entitled "How we Built a $2000 Custom Gaming PC". The video was criticized for containing errors on almost every step presented by its host, Stefan Etienne,
[65]
such as applying a liberal amount of
thermal paste
onto the processor as opposed to a small amount.
[66]
An online harassment campaign against Etienne ensued.
[66]
In February 2019, lawyers from
The Verge
's
parent company
Vox Media
filed a
DMCA
takedown notice, requesting that YouTube remove videos critical of
The Verge
'
s video, alleging copyright infringement. YouTube took down two of the videos, uploaded by YouTube channels BitWit and ReviewTechUSA, while applying a copyright "strike" to these two channels.
[65]
[67]
YouTube later reinstated the two videos and retracted the copyright "strikes" after a request from
Verge
editor Nilay Patel, although Patel acknowledged that he agreed with the legal argument that led to their removal.
[68]
[69]
Timothy B. Lee of
Ars Technica
described this controversy as an example of the
Streisand effect
, saying that while law regarding
fair use
is unclear regarding this type of situation, "the one legal precedent ... suggests ... that this kind of video is solidly within the bounds of copyright's fair use doctrine."
[65]
Nearly three years after the erroneous build, PC builder and YouTuber
Linus Sebastian
collaborated with Etienne in a video entitled "Fixing the Verge PC build", to rectify the mistakes thereof. In it, Etienne admitted not being an experienced builder at the time (having built only four computers at that point, with
The Verge
build being his first on camera), and revealed that before the video went live,
The Verge
was unwilling to hear from him to address what he saw were editing issues, insisting that the video be uploaded regardless.
[66]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
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