Marziah Karch
School
University Of Kansas, Emporia State University, Michigan State University
Expertise
Technology, Popular Entertainment, Internet History
- Marziah is the author of five books, including "Build and Program Your Own LEGO Mindstorms EV3 Robots."
- Her work has appeared in LifeWire, Parents, Rodale's Organic, and WIRED.
- She earned a Ph.D. by studying the information behavior of indie game designers.
Experience
Dr. Marziah Karch enjoys the challenge of explaining new gadgets and complex concepts to beginner audiences. She is the author of several books, including "Android Tablets Made Simple." Her writing has appeared in Wired magazine, Wired UK, Prevention, Parents, and Lifewire. When she's not writing about technology or geek culture, Marziah enjoys life in Portland with her family and backyard chickens. Thanks to pandemic hobbies, she can pickle anything.
Education
Marziah holds a master's degree in Instructional Design and Technology, an advanced certificate in Serious Game Design, and a Ph.D. in Library and Information Management. Her dissertation focused on the information behavior of indie game designers.
SlashGear's content hails from a group of experienced technology and automotive editors and a wide-ranging team of writers, engineers, enthusiasts, and experts across consumer tech and transportation. Our goal is to provide up-to-the-minute breaking news coverage as well as original and engaging opinion and editorial content that serves as the ultimate resource for those who want to stay up to date on the latest and greatest the industry has to offer.
Our editors, advisors, and fact-checkers conduct regular reviews to ensure the accuracy, timeliness, and completeness of our articles. Complete information on our editorial process available here.
Stories By Marziah Karch
-
If weak Wi-Fi is making working from home or streaming movies a nightmare, it might be time for a network upgrade. We talk you through two of the best fixes.
-
Six months after the launch of a service that its founders had hoped would transform phone-based entertainment, it was already closed. What went wrong at Quibi?