- Joshua Topolsky
- The Verge
Joshua Topolsky is an authoritative voice on technology and consumer electronics, and the resident tech expert for NBC’s Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. He is the former editor-in-chief of Engadget, one of the largest tech destinations on the Web, and makes regular appearances on CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News. A lifelong gadget enthusiast, Joshua used his first computer at age 6 (a Texas Instruments TI-99/4A), and has been breaking apart and reassembling gadgets since phones had rotary dialers. He is the founding editor-in-chief of The Verge, a technology news Web site.
- Nexus 7 review: Can Google finally begin to make an impact in a crowded tablet market?
- With Surface tablet, Microsoft ready to start a new chapter as cool
- WWDC 2012: Apple’s show satisfies, but is it saving real fireworks for later?
- At E3, a look at the future of video games
- Steve Jobs’s successor takes center stage
- Uninspiring by design
- In the era of Angry Birds, the challenge is finding the great things amid the junk
- ISO civility in online comments
- BlackBerry 10: Can the device retain its loyal following without a keyboard?
- Google Drive: A step closer to no-fuss cloud storage?
- Malicious software infecting more Androids, and even Apple finds it’s not immune
- Was Facebook’s purchase of Instagram motivated by fear?
- Nokia Lumia 900: Microsoft’s big bet on the smartphone market has software issues
- Why Mike Daisey had to lie to tell the truth about Apple
- Apple iPad review: ‘Retina Display’ technology makes screen look like glowing paper
- Apple’s new iPad: ‘Retina Display’ is a stunner that out-pixels your HDTV
- Lytro camera a ‘game-changer’ in world of photography
- Apple’s big chance to ‘act different’ on labor
- Privacy controversy over Path for iPhone, iPad should be a wake-up call
- Review: Sony PlayStation Vita handheld gaming system
- Google’s new search services and privacy policy have some calling for a boycott
- Maybe it’s time for Google to rethink its ‘Don’t be evil’ motto
- SOPA and PIPA: The wrong tools to combat online piracy
- At CES 2012, companies roll out smart TVs with motion control, voice commands
- At CES 2012, the worlds of tablets and super-thin laptops will start to blur
- Amazon’s Kindle Fire: $199 tablet is focused on ‘lean-back experiences’
- 2011: The year when it became the norm for the device in your pocket to be the center of your world
- Why is Microsoft really leaving CES?
- AT&T’s retreat from T-Mobile deal is a chance to make wireless future brighter
- The secret behind the Apple iPad 2 and other popular gadgets: It’s all about the software
- Dear Carrier IQ: If you want to track me, you need to ask me first
- Android’s identity crisis
- Black Friday 2011: Joshua Topolsky’s tips for how to shop like a geek
- Kindle Fire review: Changing the landscape of the tablet game
- Nook Tablet, Amazon Kindle Fire ‘mini-tablets’ will shake up market
- Apple’s iTV, Steve Jobs’s last project, may transform home entertainment
- Nokia hopes to get back into the game with Microsoft Windows smartphones
- Google’s new Galaxy Nexus: a phone with a soul
- Ice Cream Sandwich coupled with Galaxy Nexus equals a heady mixture
- Apple iPhone 4S review: It’s the software that’s a surprise
- Steve Jobs’s Apple legacy
- Apple Siri: the next big revolution in how we interact with gadgets?
- The new iPhone: physically nothing really notable, story is all about the software
- Apple’s iPhone event (live blog)
- Amazon’s Kindle Fire sets the stage for major disruption in tablet space
- Microsoft breaks with PC world, reinvents itself with Windows 8
- Want better wireless service in America? Socialize it.
- Motorola’s Droid Bionic proves a nice (but expensive) phone
- Sony’s new Tablet S: A handsome device with software issues
- Report: Apple dabbling in television technology
- Steve Jobs resigned, but he’s still Apple’s employee No. 2
- How HP’s $99 TouchPad fire sale could bring webOS back to life
- BlackBerry redux: RIM polishes up the familiar with three new phones
- Google plan to buy Motorola Mobility an explosive development in tech world
- With interface advances and the cloud, the PC isn’t dying; it’s coming to life
The Post Most: BusinessMost-viewed stories, videos and galleries int he past two hours
World Markets from
Other Market Data from
Key Rates from





