Mariya Abdulkaf | The Verge The Verge is about technology and how it makes us feel. Founded in 2011, we offer our audience everything from breaking news to reviews to award-winning features and investigations, on our site, in video, and in podcasts. 2025-01-28T17:03:12+00:00 https://www.theverge.com/authors/mariya-abdulkaf/rss https://platform.theverge.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2025/01/verge-rss-large_80b47e.png?w=150&h=150&crop=1 Mariya Abdulkaf <![CDATA[Join us for a screening and panel discussion of Springboard at the Computer History Museum]]> https://www.theverge.com/2022/4/6/23011326/springboard-screening-computer-history-museum 2022-04-06T12:00:00-04:00 2022-04-06T12:00:00-04:00

A decade before Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone, a tiny team of renegades attempted to build the modern smartphone. Nearly forgotten by history, a little startup called Handspring tried to make the future before it was ready. In Springboard: the secret history of the first real smartphone, Dieter Bohn talks to the visionaries at Handspring and dives into their early successes and eventual failures.

Join us at the Computer History Museum (CHM) in Mountain View, California, on Friday, May 6th, at 7PM PT for a screening of Springboard and a panel discussion featuring Dieter Bohn, former Handspring CEO Donna Dubinsky, and former Handspring president and COO Ed Colligan.

ATTENDING IN PERSON

Registration for the free event is open now. Everyone who enters CHM must be vaccinated, including all staff, volunteers, and visitors. Please review CHM’s health and safety guidelines prior to visiting the Museum.

ACCESS TO THE VIRTUAL PROGRAM 

The program will also be livestreamed using Zoom. Make sure to sign up for virtual access using the registration form. Guests registered for the virtual program will receive a link to join 24 hours prior to the event date. 

WATCH THE TRAILER

Springboard is also streaming online. You can watch it on The Verge’s YouTube channel or our new app on Android TV, Amazon Fire, Roku, or Apple TV.

To watch on your TV, visit your preferred streaming device’s app store and search for “The Verge,” or follow these instructions for each of the streaming devices.

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Mariya Abdulkaf <![CDATA[Is Elizabeth Holmes’ guilty verdict a wake-up call for startups?]]> https://www.theverge.com/2022/1/7/22872063/elizabeth-holmes-theranos-guilty-startups 2022-01-07T13:25:29-05:00 2022-01-07T13:25:29-05:00

After a long trial, former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes has been found guilty of four out of the 11 charges brought against her, including three counts of wire fraud and conspiracy to defraud investors in her now-defunct blood testing company. The verdict caps a journey filled with both promises and disappointments, one that ultimately led to the downfall of what could have been one of the most successful companies, and entrepreneurs, to come out of Silicon Valley in over a decade.

While the verdict is a milestone in holding startup founders accountable for false promises, it actually further complicates the difference between fraud and the “fake it til you make it” mindset of many startups. The Verge’s deputy editor Liz Lopatto breaks down the outcome of the trial and what to expect in the months to come. With Holmes’ business partner, Sunny Balwani, getting ready to stand trial later this month, the story is far from over.


Related:

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Mariya Abdulkaf <![CDATA[Why Theranos failed, but other researchers might not]]> https://www.theverge.com/22858603/theranos-elizabeth-holmes-blood-testing-future 2025-01-28T10:39:33-05:00 2021-12-30T10:00:00-05:00

Jurors are still deliberating over the fate of Elizabeth Holmes, the founder of defunct biotech company Theranos. They’re deciding if she intentionally misled investors, patients, and doctors about what her company’s blood testing technology could do. Because despite big promises, the tech the company claimed to have invented… didn’t actually exist.

And the technology might never be a reality — at least not in the way Holmes described it. In this episode of our three-part series on Theranos, we look at what researchers actually think is possible in the field of blood testing and what the future could look like.

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Mariya Abdulkaf Dieter Bohn <![CDATA[Springboard: The Secret History of the First Real Smartphone is out now]]> https://www.theverge.com/2021/10/7/22711230/springboard-handspring-documentary-secret-history-first-real-smartphone 2025-01-28T10:39:34-05:00 2021-12-07T09:01:40-05:00

A decade before Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone, a tiny team of renegades imagined and tried to build the modern smartphone. Nearly forgotten by history, a little startup called Handspring tried to make the future before it was ready. In Springboard: the secret history of the first real smartphone, The Verge’s Dieter Bohn talks to the visionaries at Handspring and dives into their early successes and eventual failures. 

It’s a half-hour-long documentary featuring the key players at Palm and Handspring: Donna Dubinsky, Jeff Hawkins, Ed Colligan, and more. It’s one of our most ambitious video projects to date, and we can’t wait to show it to you.

Handspring may no longer be a household name, but it was briefly one of the fastest growing businesses in American history, selling Visor personal digital assistants. But the company had bigger aspirations: it saw a mobile future and took the first steps toward what would become the modern smartphone — even as it faced skepticism from the entire industry.

The dream of the Handspring Treo turned out to be too far ahead of its time — before either the technology inside smartphones or the industry that sold them was ready for it. And a number of bad internal decisions and outside disasters would stall Handspring long enough that Apple would go on to do what Handspring couldn’t.

Springboard is also a look at an earlier time in tech — when the dot com bubble was bursting, but big tech hadn’t coalesced into five or six titanic monoliths. It was a time when many futures seemed possible, even one where a tiny startup could win the coming smartphone wars.

Springboard is now streaming worldwide. You can watch it on The Verge’s YouTube channel or our new app on Android TV, Amazon Fire TV, Roku, or Apple TV.

To watch on your TV, visit your preferred streaming device’s app store and search for “The Verge,” or follow the instructions for each of the streaming devices you can use:

AMAZON FIRE

  • From the Amazon Fire Home screen, select “Find.”
  • Select “Search.”
  • In the search box, type “The Verge” and then select the search icon.
  • From the results feed, scroll down to “Apps & Games.”
  • Scroll through until you find “The Verge.”
  • Select “The Verge” and then click on “Download.”

ANDROID TV

  • From the Android TV Home screen, scroll to Apps.”
  • Select the Google Play store app.
  • Navigate to the search bar on the upper right hand side and then type “The Verge.”
  • Scroll through search results until you find “The Verge.”
  • Select “The Verge” and click “Install.”

ROKU

  • From the Roku Home screen, scroll to “Streaming channels.”
  • Scroll down to “Search Channels.”
  • In the search box, type “The Verge.”
  • Scroll through search results until you find “The Verge.”
  • Select “The Verge” and then select “Add Channel.”

APPLE TV

  • From your Apple TV Home screen, scroll down to “App Store.”
  • Navigate to the search bar and then type “The Verge.”
  • Scroll through search results until you find “The Verge.”
  • Select “The Verge” and click “Get.”

WHERE TO WATCH

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Mariya Abdulkaf <![CDATA[The Verge is now on your smart TV]]> https://www.theverge.com/22680029/verge-tv-app-android-amazon-fire-roku-apple 2021-12-07T09:01:00-05:00 2021-12-07T09:01:00-05:00

The Verge is now available on your TV — in 4K for free. You can now watch our product reviews, in-depth tech and science explainers, exclusive documentaries, and much more on your favorite streaming devices: Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Android TV, and Apple TV.

The app includes years of Verge videos, many available in 4K for the first time. You can binge your favorite videos from our team of journalists — including Dieter Bohn and Becca Farsace. The app will also be the first to stream our new documentary on the forgotten history of the Treo featuring The Verge’s executive editor, Dieter Bohn. Here’s a teaser: Springboard: the secret history of the first real smartphone.

You can also follow playlists of feature reporting and first looks or dive deep into topics like gaming and materials. And you can even use your TV to listen to your favorite podcast episodes from The Vergecast, Decoder with Nilay Patel, and Why’d You Push That Button? hosted by Ashley Carman. 

Visit your preferred streaming device’s app store and search for “The Verge,” or follow the instructions for each of the streaming devices you can use:

Amazon Fire

  • From the Amazon Fire Home screen, select “Find.”  
  • Select “Search.” 
  • In the search box, type “The Verge” and then select the search icon. 
  • From the results feed, scroll down to “Apps & Games.” 
  • Scroll through until you find “The Verge.” 
  • Select “The Verge” and then click on “Download.”

Android TV

  • From the Android TV Home screen, scroll to Apps.”  
  • Select the Google Play store app.
  • Navigate to the search bar on the upper right hand side and then type “The Verge.” 
  • Scroll through search results until you find “The Verge.” 
  • Select “The Verge” and click “Install.”

Roku

  • From the Roku Home screen, scroll to “Streaming channels.” 
  • Scroll down to “Search Channels.”
  • In the search box, type “The Verge.” 
  • Scroll through search results until you find “The Verge.”
  • Select “The Verge” and then select “Add Channel.”

Apple TV

  • From your Apple TV Home screen, scroll down to “App Store.”
  • Navigate to the search bar and then type “The Verge.” 
  • Scroll through search results until you find “The Verge.” 
  • Select “The Verge” and click “Get.”

If you spot any bugs or have any feedback, please send a message to support@theverge.com.


WHERE TO WATCH

Update January 13th, 5PM ET:

Last year, The Verge launched its very first app and streamed 4K videos on Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Android TV, and Apple TV, but as of January 13th, 2023, it will no longer be updated or available for new downloads. 

However, you can still find our best reviews, series, and explainers on all of The Verge’s major social channels, including our most ambitious review to date on the Apple Watch Ultra. Check it out here:

<strong>Five pros review the Apple Watch Ultra (diving, running, hiking, teardown, skiing)</strong>

For the rest of 2023, be on the lookout for new series and hosts, especially on our renewed science video channel, Seeker by The Verge. 

Seeker by The Verge takes a deep dive into our science reporting, exploring the fascinating world of materials and their impact on advancing technologies. In one of our recent episodes, Verge science reporter Justine Calma explores the US’s continued reliance on Russian uranium as a source of nuclear power. The team even interacts with a real radioactive chunk of uranium in our studio. Check it out here: 

To keep up with all of our latest videos, here’s everywhere you can watch and follow The Verge and Seeker by The Verge

The Verge

Seeker by The Verge

If you spot any bugs or have any feedback, please send a message to support@theverge.com.

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Mariya Abdulkaf <![CDATA[This metal is more valuable than gold]]> https://www.theverge.com/22403864/catalytic-converter-palladium-gold-theft-precious-metal 2025-01-28T10:39:48-05:00 2021-04-27T10:00:00-04:00

Palladium is a precious metal that is more valuable than gold, and its price has skyrocketed over the last couple of years. In 2018, it was worth nearly $1,000 an ounce. Now, a single ounce is worth nearly $3,000. But as its value has risen, devices that use palladium have become magnets for thieves.

The metal is primarily used inside of a catalytic converter, a device that converts harmful emissions such as carbon monoxide and nitrous oxide into less harmful ones before being released into the atmosphere. Since their adoption into the automobile industry in the 1970s, catalytic converters have led to a significant drop in carbon monoxide and nitrous oxide emissions. And the more palladium they use, the more efficient they are at combating these emissions — making them the perfect target for thieves.

Over the years, catalytic converter theft has drastically risen due to the increasing value of palladium. According to a study of reported thefts, on average, 108 catalytic converters were stolen per month in 2018. That number rose to 282 monthly thefts in 2019 and 1,203 thefts per month in 2020.

With more and more manufacturers trying to reduce their impact on the environment and as stricter emissions regulations come into effect in places like Europe and China, the demand for palladium will only continue to escalate.

Verge Science spoke with a chemical engineer and one of the leading recyclers of catalytic converters in the country to find out what makes palladium so valuable — and what it would take to find new alternatives for this precious resource. Watch our latest video to see what we discovered.

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Mariya Abdulkaf <![CDATA[Scientists created this seaweed to save the planet]]> https://www.theverge.com/22297685/seaweed-methane-greenhouse-gas-climate-change-livestock 2025-01-28T10:39:53-05:00 2021-02-25T09:00:00-05:00

A new seaweed-based supplement could reduce a potent greenhouse gas released in burps — sheep burps, that is.

Diana Zlotnikov is a farmer in New York with plenty of burping sheep who release methane as a byproduct of their digestion system. Methane is a gas that has 28 times the warming capacity of carbon dioxide. Farming can produce a ton of CO2 and methane gas — two of the largest threats in greenhouse gases. Together they make up nearly 50 percent of all emissions and threaten the climate of our planet.

Five years ago, Diana started her farm with regenerative agriculture principles in mind — she implemented practices that would not only reduce the carbon footprint of her livestock but would help negate it. Diana has designed her farm to act as a carbon sink that can pull carbon from the atmosphere and trap it in the soil.

But reducing the methane gas coming from her sheep was a much more difficult problem. Based on some research, she tried a mixture of feeds (garlic, legumes, alfalfa), but nothing worked.

One day her daughter Nicole, a sophomore in high school, came home from school in a researching frenzy. She had recently learned how methane gas was contributing to global warming and was determined to find a way to reduce the methane emissions caused by their farm. She came across asparagopsis taxiformis, a type of red seaweed, as an effective solution. It is not yet commercially available, but there are some people trying to change that.

Chemist and entrepreneur Alexia Akbay is one of them. Her company, Symbrosia, produces a red seaweed-based supplement that could reduce livestock methane production dramatically, but what will it take to get it to small farmers like Diana and Nicole? Check out the video above to see how Alexia and her team are domesticating a new seaweed species to tackle climate change — one sheep at a time.

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Mariya Abdulkaf <![CDATA[Recording police brutality: how one snap decision changed this town]]> https://www.theverge.com/21378157/police-brutality-violence-recording-videos-black-lives-matter-consequences 2025-01-28T12:03:12-05:00 2020-08-31T09:10:00-04:00

As Black Lives Matter protests have spread across America, more and more people have begun sharing clips of police violence online. It’s not just happening at protests, either: sometimes police violence is captured in everyday life, which is what happened to Isaiah Benavides on June 2nd, outside a convenience store in Baytown, Texas.

 

Capturing The Police is a Verge-wide editorial project that’s meant to both examine the experience of civilians who document and share police violence and to record the larger political moment we find ourselves in.

Read and watch more here.

That day, Benavides saw his friend, Jostin Moore, being stopped by a police officer who had previously been accused of targeting and harassing African Americans. Benavides took out his cellphone and hit record. He, along with his two friends, Skylar Gilmore and Isaiah Phillips, began questioning the arrest.

“They pulled you over for nothing.”

“‘Cause he Black, huh?

“That’s fucked up.”

“Black lives matter.”

Officer Nathaniel Brown, of the Baytown Police Department, approached the bystanders as Benavides filmed. He then slammed Gilmore onto the ground and kneed him in the face. Gilmore and Philips were both arrested, and Benavides caught it all on tape. After Benavides posted the video online, it went viral and eventually led to Brown’s firing.

Benavides spoke with The Verge to explain the cost of standing up to police violence. The virality of the video created a path to accountability for the Baytown Police Department, but it might have also put Benavides in harm’s way.

“It made me feel like I was going to get picked up by a black van one day,” he said.

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Mariya Abdulkaf <![CDATA[It’s bad tech etiquette to take other peoples’ phone chargers]]> https://www.theverge.com/2019/11/15/20961604/phone-charger-tech-etiquette-dami-lee-animation-series-pet-peeves 2019-11-15T09:16:59-05:00 2019-11-15T09:16:59-05:00

Technology turns people into weird creatures — and not the Instagram filter kind. It breeds gross behavior, like texting on the toilet, or tempts you into swiping through somebody’s entire camera roll when they show you just one picture.

Since there’s no official manual to tech etiquette and everyone has their own opinions, we’re launching an animated series documenting our personal tech peeves. Will airing these out finally put an end to one-word, no punctuation “hey” messages? Or stop your grandmother from sending her entire email message in the subject line? Maybe. Or maybe not. 

Our new series Tech Etiquette is about calling people out the weird, quirky, and sometimes infuriating things humans do with technology. May these personal confessions be the unofficial guide to tech etiquette we all need.

Nothing inspired this series more than working in an open office where your phone charger is up for grabs to literally anyone within reach. 

The first episode is all about these lawless creatures.

Let us know in the comments: what are some of your biggest tech peeves?

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Mariya Abdulkaf <![CDATA[Enter our phone wallpaper design contest for a chance to be featured in a review]]> https://www.theverge.com/2018/4/25/17270940/verge-phone-wallpaper-design-contest 2018-04-25T09:55:39-04:00 2018-04-25T09:55:39-04:00

In honor of our new wallpaper page, we are excited to announce a phone wallpaper design contest! The winning wallpaper will be featured on a phone in an upcoming phone video review on The Verge.

Judging criteria

  • Originality — we will do a Google image search…
  • Creativity — make The Verge’s art director jealous
  • Something that echoes The Verge’s artistic aesthetic

Here’s our color palette, but you can definitely diverge from this color scheme:

Throughout the duration of the contest, we will reach out to finalists for a high-resolution file of their submission(s) in the following format: PNG file at a minimum resolution of 2160 x 3840 pixels, 72 ppi, and RGB colors. Please be prepared to deliver it upon request.

How to enter the contest:

  • Follow The Verge on Instagram
  • Publish a vertical crop of your design on your Instagram page, tag @verge, and use the hashtag #VergeArtContest in your caption.

Follow @verge on Instagram

Follow for original photography, videos, stop-motion, and Instagram Stories from The Verge’s staff.

Prizes

  • The winning wallpaper design will be featured in an upcoming video phone review that will be published on The Verge and on our YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram pages as the wallpaper on the gadget
  • The winning design will also be made available to download
Electric lines wallpaper

Eligibility

  • No purchase necessary; open internationally. The contest starts on Wednesday, April 25th at 12PM ET and ends Monday, May 7th at 9AM ET. Contest open to those who, at the time of entry, are at least 18 years of age and are registered members of Instagram. Void where prohibited. Click here for official rules.

BONUS:

  • To submit a second entry for the contest, in addition to the steps above, follow our new @TheVergeArt Instagram page.
  • Here’s a Facebook Live tutorial led by The Verge’s art director William Joel on how he created the Galaxy S8 wallpaper.
  • Because we want to make this contest open to everyone, especially our international Verge audience, we could not include a physical prize in the contest due to the laws of certain countries that make running contests that include a physical prize very difficult. However, since we appreciate our Verge fans dedicating their time and energy to make these great entries, we’re planning on showing some Verge branded love back to our favorite entries (even the ones that might not win).

The winner will be notified via Instagram DM on May 8th. Good luck!

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