But will viewers pay for a sports service that doesn't include ESPN?
A year ago Disney freaked out the TV business by talking about subscriber losses at ESPN. Now it has a plan to sell an ESPN-branded digital subscription service that won't actually include ESPN. The service will be powered by pro baseball's BAM Tech, and Disney is buying a chunk of that company for $1 billion, as Recode readers already knew.
[Edmund Lee | Recode]
Intel is trying to incorporate machine learning technology into its silicon by shelling out more than $400 million for startup Nervana Systems.
[Ina Fried | Recode]
Yelp shares climbed more than 10 percent after the consumer reviews site surprised Wall Street by posting a slim profit and boosting its guidance.
[Aishwarya Venugopal | Reuters]
Sony is going to unveil an upgraded PlayStation 4 are expected at a Sept. 7 event. That's the week Apple traditionally shows off its new iPhones, by the way...
[Tom Warren | The Verge]
In its quest to free people from the drudgery of actually eating, Soylent introduced Coffiest, a breakfast-in-a-bottle with the caffeine of a couple cups of coffee and the calories of a Sausage McMuffin.
[David Pierce | Wired]
Facebook
The biggest advertiser in the world just reminded us why Facebook wants to be TV
By Peter Kafka
The tube still rules when it comes to brand advertising.
Rio Olympics 2016
This Olympic fencer shows why you never bring a phone to a sword fight
By Ina Fried
Sorry, can’t talk now. There’s a guy trying to stab me.
Recode Decode
Full transcript: 'Chaos Monkeys' author Antonio García-Martinez on Recode Decode
By Eric Johnson
“The book isn’t nice because Silicon Valley isn’t a nice place.”
Facebook
Even Facebook says ad blocking is a problem, so it’s going to show ads to people who use ad blockers
By Kurt Wagner
Desktop ads are still a huge revenue source for the social network.
Twitter
Twitter will soon let anyone create a Twitter Moment
By Kurt Wagner
You can make a moment. And you can make a moment. And you ....
Elaborate crime scene dioramas built by 'the mother of forensic science'
In the '40s and '50s, Frances Glessner Lee, heir to the International Harvester fortune, indulged her fascination with police work by building incredibly detailed, dollhouse-scale recreations of actual crime scenes that are used to this day to train investigators.