TechCrunch Master Template TechCrunch Newsletter
|
| Image Credits: Olly Curtis/Future / Getty Images |
|
|
The TechCrunch Top 3 An Apple a dayâ¦: Get ready to take a big bite out of Apple. Kyle and Brian peel off the cover to unveil the consumer tech giantâs M2 Pro and M2 Max chips that pack some power. The chips will be available in the 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pros, and if you are looking around for a new computer, the M2 Mac Mini arrives January 24, starting at $599. Cloudy with a chance of embedded analytics: Nothing but blue skies so far for Cumul.io, a low-code embedded analytics platform for SaaS companies. The company raised $10.8 million to continue developing its business intelligence platform that quickly âconnects just about any data source, drag-and-drop specific features to customize their dashboards, and then copy-paste a snippet of code into their application to serve thousands of end-users,â Paul writes. The headline says it all: We couldnât help but steal from the TC+ section because Timâs headline is just so good: âNest co-founder Matt Rogersâ new startup is trash.â We wonât ruin it any more for you. |
|
|
|
Startups and VC ChatGPT, the AI that can write poems, emails, spreadsheet formulas and more, has attracted a lot of negative publicity lately, Kyle writes. Thatâs perhaps why AI21 Labs, an Israeli startup developing text-generating AI systems along the lines of ChatGPT, tried a different tack with its newly released assistive writing tool, Wordtune Spices. A part of AI21âs expanding suite of generative AI, Wordtune Spices doesnât compose emails and essays like ChatGPT. Instead, it suggests options that change the voice and style of already written sentences, also offering up statistics from web-based sources to âstrengthen arguments.â Apropos robots that writeâ¦On the heels of raising at a $1 billion valuation last week, DeepL is taking the wraps off a new language product, the first extension for a startup that made its name from its popular AI-based translation tools, Ingrid, er, writes. Write is a new tool that fixes your writing â catching grammar and punctuation mistakes, offering suggestions for clarity and more creative phrasing and (soon) giving you the option to change your tone. There was a lot of fun startup news on the site over the past few days, so it was hard to choose just five to load up in our little recommendation engine, but hereâs what we came up with: QR isnât deadâ¦: Itâs the tech that wonât die, as Beaconstac lands a $25 million investment for its QR code management platform, Kyle reports. The DM says nah: Amanda reports that D&D publisher says âWe rolled a 1â as it addresses backlash over controversial license. That price is un-Hinge-d: Dating app Hinge tests a pricier $60 per month subscription, similar to Tinder Platinum, Sarah writes. Want to buy that again?: CloseFactor raises $15.2 million to automate repetitive sales processes, Kyle reports. Time for 100 push-ups, stat: Darrell takes a closer look at Vitruvianâs Trainer+, writing that it is an all-in-one home gym that actually lives up to its promises. |
|
|
|
At the time of this writing, Wikipedia notes that there have been eight successful spaceflight launches so far this year. New spaceports are entering operation, cell phone users will soon have connectivity from space, and the Artemis program backed by NASA is one of several ventures that will bring robots (and eventually human crews) to the moon. “Despite the economic uncertainty, we believe new records will be established in spacetech as giant commercial projects get funded,” says Mark Boggett, CEO and co-founder of Seraphim Space Manager LLP. Three more from the TC+ team: A feature does not a company make: Build a company, not a feature, by Haje. Mo IP, mo money: Cost-effective IP strategies can lead to massive exit valuations, by Kyle Graves. Hereâs a flying crystal ball: Mark Boggett has 7 space tech predictions for you for the upcoming year. TechCrunch+ is our membership program that helps founders and startup teams get ahead of the pack. You can sign up here. Use code âDCâ for a 15% discount on an annual subscription! Read More |
| Image Credits: Orlando Sentinel / Getty Images |
|
|
|
|
Newest Jobs from Crunchboard | Principal software engineer (SQL API) at Cube Dev (San Francisco, CA, USA) Lead Software Engineer at Cube Dev (San Francisco, CA, USA) Developer, Mobile Center of Excellence at IEEE (Piscataway, NJ, USA) Cloud Production Engineer at IEEE (Piscataway, NJ, USA) Senior Cloud Systems Engineer at IEEE (Piscataway, NJ, USA) See more jobs on CrunchBoard Post your tech jobs and reach millions of TechCrunch readers for only $200 per month. |
|
|
|
|
|