Update: D: Dive Into Mobile is SOLD OUT
Due to overwhelming demand, the conference has sold out. To add yourself to the waitlist, please click here. You will be asked to complete the registration form, including a credit card, but you will NOT be charged unless you are cleared from the waitlist.

Alternately, if you’d like to ONLY be added to the D: All Things Digital list and be notified of future events – please click here.


Join D: All Things Digital in New York City on April 15-16, 2013 at the Museum of Jewish Heritage and The Ritz-Carlton, Battery Park to hear more about how the “mobile first” revolution is reshaping the media, technology, communication and entertainment industries across the globe. Speakers include: Facebook, Google, MLB Advanced Media, Verizon Wireless, WhatsApp and many other mobile innovators.

The standard registration fee is $3,495 and includes access to all conference sessions, conference materials, scheduled meal functions and social events.


Registration Transfer Policy:

Transfers and substitutions are accepted until Friday, April 12, 2013. To transfer your registration, please complete the following transfer request form. The transfer entails a name change – no payment will be exchanged. Should you have any questions, please contact the Conference Registrar at registration@allthingsd.com.

Registration Cancellation Policy:

Conference registration fees are refundable, less a $500 service charge, until Friday, March 8, 2013. After March 9, refunds will not be issued. To receive a refund, please provide your request in writing and email it to the Conference Registrar at registration@allthingsd.com.

Members of the working press can request a media invitation by completing the online application.

D: Dive Into Mobile

Explore the impact of the “mobile first” revolution.
April 15-16, 2013
New York, New York

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The largest intelligence system at Google is in AdSense and the Gmail spam system, but I’ve always really wanted to see our work applied to medicine and biology, which is sort of hard to do at a company.

Georges Harik, one of Google’s first 10 engineers, now investor and founder of a nonprofit artificial intelligence lab