TechCrunch Master Template TechCrunch Newsletter
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The TechCrunch Top 3 Donât you just love a new feature?: We have a team over in Barcelona for the Mobile World Congress, and one of the top stories coming out of there is the slew of new features Google has announced for Android, Chromebook and Wear OS. Weâll let Aisha give you the scoop, but it involves productivity, connectivity and accessibility. You know, the equivalent of the three educational âRs,â but instead for mobile. A reason to wear sunglasses at night: Speaking of Mobile World Congress, Xiaomi unveiled its lightweight AR glasses with a âretina-levelâ display, Ivan writes. Also, check out Ivanâs other Xiaomi story on its 13 Pro flagship. This phone is cool, literally: OnePlus has been on a roll this month with new products, and now today, Brian reports on its gaming concept phone with a glowing liquid cooling feature. |
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Startups and VC Card collectors often dispute how much their cards are worth. New Jerseyâbased CollX raises $5.5 million to provide a free iOS and Android app to card enthusiasts that enables them to scan their trading cards and get value in return, Ivan reports. Anthropic, a buzzy AI startup co-founded by ex-OpenAI employees, has begun offering partners access to its AI text-generating models, Kyle reports. The first commercial venture to announce that itâs integrating Anthropic models is Robin AI, a legal tech startup thatâs raised over $13 million. Quoraâs experimental chatbot app for iOS and Android, Poe, uses Anthropic models, but itâs not currently monetized. And we have five more for you: Gotta keep âem separated: Devin explores how SepPureâs nanofilters massively reduce energy cost of industrial separation processes. Evernote layoffs: Bending Spoons recently acquired Evernote, and now it lays off 129 Evernote staffers, Kyle reports. Pahk the Cah, etc.: Ron takes a look at how Boston offers a world of advantages for startup founders. Valuable clouds: Kyle reports how cloud security startup Wiz, now valued at $10 billion, raises $300 million. What are we even paying for?: Spade turns credit card transaction gibberish into clear, actionable data, Christine reports. |
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| Image Credits: ChrisBaynham / Getty Images |
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Big Tech Inc. The hubbub over the weekend was that a new round of Twitter layoffs included Esther Crawford, the chief executive of Twitter payments who oversaw the companyâs Twitter Blue verification subscription. She had been one of Elon Muskâs most public cheerleaders following his acquisition of the social media giant. Rebecca reports that some 50 people were part of the layoffs. And, just when you thought we might get a break from AI chatbots, Aisha writes that Snapchat now has one that is powered by OpenAIâs GPT technology. Thatâs right, folks, itâs called âMy AIâ and for $3.99 per month, you too can give it a whirl. Go ahead, ask it for birthday gift ideas for your BFF. And we have five more for you: Thank you for your patience: Dish subscribers are not having a good day. The U.S. satellite television provider was hit by a multiday outage after a reported cyberattack, Carly writes. Losing all self-driving control: Following a recall, Tesla pauses its rollout of Full Self-Driving beta software. Kirsten has more. Donât go breakinâ my heart: Lauren reports that Spotify is doing away with the heart button and will instead implement a âplusâ sign. Two Pokémon walk into a bar: Amanda writes on a few new Pokémon features, including Pokémon Goâs integration with Scarlet and Violet, an update on Pokémon Sleep, and Pokémon’s partnership with Netflix to launch the stop-motion series âPokémon Concierge.â Paired up: Mobile carriers, including AT&T and Verizon Wireless, teamed up with AWS and Microsoft to launch Open Gateway, which Ingrid writes is a set of Twilio-like APIs that will enable these carriers to tap into network services for more development. |
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