Megan Rose Dickey
Megan Rose Dickey is a reporter covering business and technology in San Francisco.
Prior to joining Gazetteer SF, she authored the daily newsletter at Axios SF, where she co-authored a daily newsletter on all-things San Francisco. She’s also spent several years covering technology at publications including TechCrunch, Protocol, and Business Insider.
Tech company Artisan is really leaning in to the whole ‘AI will take our jobs’ thing
The sales startup wants companies to 'stop hiring humans,' per its new ad campaign
NBA All-Star Game is the perfect opportunity for San Francisco to ditch the ‘doom loop’ narrative, once and for all
The game is expected to bring 135,000 visitors and $350 million to the Bay Area — plus a highly-publicized chance to shed SF’s ‘unfair reputation’
SF office workers follow ‘Gremlins’ rules when it rains
‘The rain is messing with people’s careers in San Francisco right now’
If climate tech companies want to survive the next four years, they’ll need ‘a new set of skills’
Faced with slashed incentives and undermined protections, the industry will have to make big changes to keep the energy transition alive
A tech worker influx is shifting the vibe at the 150-year-old Dolphin Club
Oldtimers are less than thrilled about newcomers treating the famed open water swimming group as a networking hotspot
Labor and lattes: SF’s third Starbucks headed for unionization vote
Baristas and shift supervisors at a Lower Nob Hill location would become the third store in San Francisco to unionize
Zoox plans to deploy its robotaxis without a steering wheel, despite regulatory uncertainty
We’ll see how this works out for them…
‘A tale of two cities’: SF looks to expand free high-speed internet to underserved neighborhoods
The goal is to bridge the digital divide between San Francisco’s underserved neighborhoods and the rest of the city
SF is battling to take over the electric grid from everyone’s arch-nemesis, PG&E
The private utility company isn’t going down without a fight
Wild billboards around the Bay call attention to tech companies free-loading off open source projects
An advocacy group called Open Source Pledge wants tech companies to pay up