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Kara Swisher

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Occupation
  
Columnist

Spouse
  
Megan Smith (m. 1999)

Role
  
Columnist


Name
  
Kara Swisher

Children
  
2

Education
  
Georgetown University

Kara Swisher httpslh5googleusercontentcomDu6R3LP5HDsAAA


Born
  
January 25, 1963 (age 61) (
1963-01-25
)

Books
  
There Must Be a Pony in Here Somewhere: The AOL Time Warner Debacle and the Quest for a Digital Future

Profiles

Bio shorts kara swisher on mark zuckerberg and the social network


Kara Swisher (born 1963) is an American technology journalist and co-founder of Recode. Previously she wrote for The Wall Street Journal, serving as co-executive editor of All Things Digital.

Contents

Kara Swisher kara Adam Tow News AllThingsD

Interview steve jobs and bill gates by kara swisher and walt mossberg at d5 conference 2007 avi


Early life

Kara Swisher Kara Swisher Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Swisher graduated from Georgetown University's Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service with a B.S. degree in 1984 [citation needed]. She wrote for The Hoya, Georgetown's school newspaper. In 1985, she earned an M.S. in journalism from Columbia University.

Career

Kara Swisher The Yahoo Board Was Very Careful To Keep The Marissa Mayer

Swisher worked at an alternative newspaper in Washington, D.C. and The Washington Post, where she started as an intern and was later hired full-time.

Wall Street Journal

Swisher joined The Wall Street Journal in 2003 and launched the AllThingsD conference and later expanded it into a website.

Swisher created and wrote Boom Town, a column which appeared on the front page of the Wall Street Journal's Marketplace section and online. She subsequently appeared on founded and served as the co-executive editor with Walt Mossberg.

Swisher wrote on technology for the paper. During that period, she was cited as the most influential reporter covering the Internet by the Industry Standard magazine.

In partnership with her fellow Journal columnist Walt Mossberg, Swisher created, produced, and hosted the Journal's annual D: All Things Digital conference, in which top technology leaders, such as Bill Gates and Steve Jobs appear on stage with or without prepared remarks, or slides, and are interviewed by the two columnists.

Books

She is the author of aol.com: How Steve Case Beat Bill Gates, Nailed the Netheads and Made Millions in the War for the Web, published by Times Business Print Books in July 1998. The sequel, There Must Be a Pony in Here Somewhere: The AOL Time Warner Debacle and the Quest for a Digital Future, was published in the fall of 2003 by Crown Business Print Books.

Recode

On January 1, 2014, Swisher and Mossberg struck out on their own with the Recode site, based in San Francisco, California.

Other projects and accolades

Swisher has also served as a judge for Mayor Michael Bloomberg's NYC BigApps competition in NYC.

Newsweek has said "many regard [Swisher] as Silicon Valley's premier journalist." In a profile headlined "Kara Swisher is Silicon Valley’s Most Feared and Well-Liked Journalist. How Does That Work?", New York Magazine said Swisher is one of the "major power brokers of tech reporting" whose "combination of access and toughness has made [her] a preeminent arbiter of status in a Silicon Valley."

In 2016, Swisher announced she planned to run for mayor of San Francisco in 2023.

Works

  • Aol.com : how Steve Case beat Bill Gates, nailed the netheads, and made millions in the war for the web. New York: Random House International, 1999. ISBN 9780812931914, OCLC 313499003
  • Kara Swisher; Lisa Dickey There must be a pony in here somewhere : the AOL Time Warner debacle and the quest for a digital future New York : Three Rivers Press, 2003. ISBN 9781400049646, OCLC 58726021
  • Personal life

    Swisher has two sons and is separated from her wife, former U.S. CTO Megan Smith.

    References

    Kara Swisher Wikipedia