Skip to main content

The context you need, when you need it

When news breaks, you need to understand what actually matters — and what to do about it. At Vox, our mission to help you make sense of the world has never been more vital. But we can’t do it on our own.

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join now

SXSW in Pictures: The Beautiful Brand Melange

A long weekend in the belly of the startup beast.

Recode.net

The South By Southwest Interactive tech week is a visually fantastic festival.

Startups and corporate tech firms completely consume downtown Austin for days, plastering flyers all over the walls, rebranding the bars and pedicabs and barbecue joints. Thousands of technologists, reporters and executives fly in to partake of the brand-subsidized free flow of snacks and booze.

SXSW started as a music festival and then expanded into tech, briefly becoming a destination for tech news (Twitter blew up there). Now, it has returned to its roots, folded back into itself and emerged — as a celebrity-infused startup concert, a city-wide tech festival. The meat on the SXSW bone is not in Marriott conference rooms but in the Driskill hotel lobby, the celebrities aligning with venture capitalists, the costumed marketers and the midnight chaos on cordoned-off streets.

And while it may never be a serious tech conference where companies launch their products, maybe we don’t need another one of those. Maybe a subsidized tech party week is actually just the thing. And in all the playful excess, the hot viral apps (Meerkat!) that will come and go, the futuristic humor (holo-grandma sessions) and the guest-list-who’s-here jostling, we can learn something about the tech world today.

This year, Re/code’s Vjeran Pavic documented the beautiful brand melee.

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

See More:

More in Technology

Podcasts
Are humanoid robots all hype?Are humanoid robots all hype?
Podcast
Podcasts

AI is making them better — but they’re not going to be doing your chores anytime soon.

By Avishay Artsy and Sean Rameswaram
Future Perfect
The old tech that could help stop the next airborne pandemicThe old tech that could help stop the next airborne pandemic
Future Perfect

Glycol vapors, explained.

By Shayna Korol
Future Perfect
Elon Musk could lose his case against OpenAI — and still get what he wantsElon Musk could lose his case against OpenAI — and still get what he wants
Future Perfect

It’s not about who wins. It’s about the dirty laundry you air along the way.

By Sara Herschander
Life
Why banning kids from AI isn’t the answerWhy banning kids from AI isn’t the answer
Life

What kids really need in the age of artificial intelligence.

By Anna North
Culture
Anthropic owes authors $1.5B for pirating work — but the claims process is a Kafkaesque messAnthropic owes authors $1.5B for pirating work — but the claims process is a Kafkaesque mess
Culture

“Your AI monster ate all our work. Now you’re trying to pay us off with this piece of garbage that doesn’t work.”

By Constance Grady
Future Perfect
Some deaf children are hearing again because of a new gene therapySome deaf children are hearing again because of a new gene therapy
Future Perfect

A medical field that almost died is quietly fixing one disease at a time.

By Bryan Walsh