OpenAI’s CEO turmoil might impact the company, but generative-AI tools are here to stay.
Joanna Stern
Senior Personal Technology Columnist, The Wall Street Journal
Joanna Stern is an Emmy Award-winning journalist who has spent the better part of two decades covering gadgets and apps, and helping people make smarter tech decisions. Her documentary “E-Ternal: A Tech Quest to Live Forever” won the 2021 Emmy in the category of outstanding science, technology or environmental coverage.
Ms. Stern is a CNBC contributor and often appears on national television and radio programs. Before joining the Journal in 2013, she was the technology editor at ABC News and before that a reviewer and editor at The Verge. She graduated from Union College in Schenectady, N.Y., and lives in New Jersey with her wife, sons and dog.
Latest Articles
The home, work and travel items so good we spent our own money on them, from a retro camera with a modern twist to an AI-powered bird feeder.
She brings deep product-development and management experience as she steps in for Sam Altman.
Los Angeles County has more public electric-vehicle fast chargers than any other in the country. WSJ’s Joanna Stern hit up 30 charging locations in a Rivian R1T and ran into problems at 40% of them. Here’s what’s being done to fix the charging mess. Illustration: Annie Zhao
Our columnist’s Los Angeles power struggle featured out-of-order signs, payment errors and connection problems.
The “Scary Fast” computers get powerful M3 chips, but everything else remains largely the same.
Every iPhone has a secret indicator of battery health. So why did our columnist’s iPhone 14 Pro battery deplete so much in a year?
Every iPhone has a hidden “Maximum Capacity" setting to figure out the health of your battery. WSJ’s Joanna Stern investigates why her iPhone’s battery degraded so much in one year. Hint: Battery cycle counts. Photo illustration: Annie Zhao/The Wall Street Journal
In an interview, OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman discusses job disruption, data and the ‘person-ness’ of bots.
Phones have enabled people to bear witness to unimaginable images of human suffering—in real time.
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