TechCrunch Master Template TechCrunch Newsletter
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The TechCrunch Top 3 Brian may have found the perfect MacBook: Brian gives us the ins and outs of the new Apple MacBook Pro 14-inch M2 Max, in which he writes, âItâs a reaffirmation of the âProâ in MacBook Pro: chunky, heavy, blazingly fast, full of ports and packed with the best the company has to offer.â This might be the 2023 version of âMikey likes it!â Meanwhile, Matt reviews the 2023 Mac Mini, what he calls âa serious contender with the M2 Pro. Sounds like more layoffs: Another tech company reveals that its eyes were bigger than its stomach when it comes to hiring. This time, Spotify is the one cutting jobs, Romain reports. The music streaming company will lay off about 600 people, or 6% of its workforce. Give âem something to ChatGPT about: After much speculation, Microsoft confirmed that it will invest an undisclosed number of billions in OpenAI, thus extending the companiesâ partnership. Kyle has more. |
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Startups and VC TechCrunch Live is entering its third season, and Matt is, frankly, ludicrously psyched to be leading the events again this year. The first event is on February 1, 2023, and will feature a timely discussion on what to do if your company canât raise a Series A. Camblyâs Sameer Shariff and Benchmarkâs Sarah Tavel are speaking at the first one â stay tuned for whatâs coming down the pike! And we have five more for you: Thatâs a big deel, yâall: Remote work revolution is rolling along, and helping Deel reach $295 million in ARR, Mary Ann writes. That’s reinsuring: Christine reports that Bling Capitalâbacked Coverdash unveils its embedded, digital insurance for small businesses. Om nom nom: Anna reports how, with a focus on patients with chronic illness, Nourish hopes to help Americans eat better. I wonder what the due diligence was on that deal: Thoma Bravo agrees to acquire digital forensics firm Magnet Forensics for over $1 billion, reports Kyle. Selecting the cream of the crop: GoodOnes raises money to help make sense of your mess of a camera roll, Haje reports. |
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Patent applications and GitHub codespaces are obvious pieces of intellectual property, but so are the embarrassing mistakes and dead ends that every company encounters. Rivals can learn a lot from competitors’ failed A/B tests, unsuccessful email campaigns and wasted engineering cycles, writes Eugene Y. Mar and Thomas J. Pardini, attorneys with Farella Braun + Martel LLP in San Francisco. In this post, they offer advice for safeguarding your “negative know-how,” along with general tips for defining and managing trade secrets. Three more from the TC+ team: Raindrops keep falling on my SaaS: Tech forgot its umbrella, writes Natasha M. Itâs not quite that simple: Dominic-Madori is debunking the myths of why venture investors donât fund diverse startups. Quite a catch: Christine spoke with four investors about the next big wave for alternative seafood startups. 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 |
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