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Itâs Fridaa⦠wait, Thursday? Come on, will this week ever end? Donât worry, we are all right, just looking forward to our impending vacation mode. â Haje and Christine |
| Image Credits: Darrell Etherington |
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The TechCrunch Top 3 SpaceX employees seeing stars, and not in a good way: Thanks to a group of SpaceX employees, we now know that the company has a so-called no-asshole policy for employee behavior. This group, via an open letter, expressed their concern that leadership, in this case their fearless leader Elon Musk, should be held accountable for his Twitter behavior, Darrell reports. Everyone loves a good map: Not sure if youâve caught on yet, but we enjoy reporting on map technology. Ivan reports that Google Maps will now show you live traffic around you in a new Android widget. Going to have to give that a try this weekend. The goat world tour begins: Goat Brand Labs has raised a whopping $50 million in fresh funding as the Indian direct-to-consumer brand aggregator looks to acquire more premium brands and help it scale globally, Manish reports. |
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Startups and VC Weâre pretty excited about the news that Google for Startups is deploying $4 million worth of grant funding to a collection of 40 black-led startups across Europe, as Mike reported today. More of that sort of thing, please. On TechCrunch+, our subscription product, Dominic-Madori writes a fantastic piece on why a downturn is business as usual for minority founders. Well worth a read. On the topic of downturniness, Connie wrote a great piece that includes an interview with Brad Feld and serves as a field guide for startup board members in an up-and-down market. Itâs a must-read for startup founders and board members whoâve not seen the inside of a market wobble before. More, always more: Blockchain? More like blockpain: Jacquelyn reports that falling valuations, pulled deals and market volatility are the norm for crypto founders at the moment. Buzz and beep: Wheeled robots canât reach the high shelves easily, but Brian reports Corvus is using drones to track warehouse inventory. Neat! Iâve got a bridge to sell ya: Real estate tech may have seen a bunch of layoffs, but HomeLight raises $60 million and announces an acquisition, Mary Ann reports. Sorry, youâre on mute: Tl;dv built an extension for videoconferencing platforms. It bolts on a suite of capabilities that attendees can use to record, transcribe and timestamp key moments to quickly and easily (re)surface important info after the meeting has ended, Natasha L reports. Get a whiff of this. Or donât: If you like an exasperated rant with your afternoon read, Haje has you covered, with his verbal shrug about Pzazâs âeau de caffeine.â |
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This week at TC Sessions: Climate 2022, Tim De Chant spoke to three active climate tech investors to learn more about how they identify new opportunities and what theyâre looking for at the moment. Kiersten Stead, managing partner, DCVC Bio Christian Garcia, partner, Breakthrough Energy Ventures Pae Wu, general partner at SOSV, CTO of IndieBio âOur job is to take risk, to a degree, and to risk it on teams that we think are truly talented,â Stead said. âSo thatâs one piece of the equation,â she added. âBut the other side of the equation is that the world doesnât receive the benefit of anything unless it can scale, unless itâs fundable, unless thereâs a great market with it, and itâs profitable.â (TechCrunch+ is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.) Read More |
| Image Credits: TechCrunch |
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Big Tech Inc. Normally, we get into the Big Tech news and find it typically fits into a handful of buckets, but to our delight, there were a lot of great stories today that run across a number of industries. Letâs dig into some, shall we? Starting over in TechCrunch+, Alex has been closely monitoring the ugly public markets climate for a while now and waiting, perhaps with bated breath, for it to get better and for a long list of companies poised for IPO action to pull the trigger. We are happy to report that it happened, and the company that opened âthe IPO windowâ was not one that he expected. Mastercard is now in the clear in India, Manish reported. The country lifted a ban on the credit card giant after it deemed the company had sufficiently complied with its data storage requirements. Meanwhile: Browsing an app is soooo yesterday: Sarah writes that our smartphoneâs home screen will be the next big social platform thanks to widgets and push notifications. Tesla plays âThe Price Is Rightâ: Werenât electric vehicles supposed to get cheaper so everyone would be enticed to buy them? Tesla didnât seem to get that message, and instead is increasing the prices across its lineup, Rebecca reported. I guess if you are already spending $99,990 for a Model S, spending $104,990 isnât a stretch, but sheesh. Samsung gets on the mobile wallet train: Aisha reported that the tech is combining Samsung Pay and Samsung Pass together under the Samsung Wallet umbrella so you can find your cards and certain car makersâ keys all in one place. Going once, going twice: Youâve enjoyed the energy rush you get when you are the final bidder on eBay, and now you can do it live, Aisha also writes. The e-commerce marketplace is launching an interactive live shopping platform and will start with rare trading cards. Speaking of live shopping, Amazon is doing it, too, starting June 21, Ivan reported. Donât forget to set a calendar reminder for Amazon Prime Day on July 12 and 13. To infinity jobs and beyond: Microsoft has a new mission for its employee portal, Viva. The company is adding job support, starting with sales, so that users can find all of their tools in one centralized location, Ron writes. |
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Newest Jobs from Crunchboard | Altarum is Hiring Software Engineers and Software Developers, Fulltime (100% Remote) at Altarum Institute (Ann Arbor, MI, USA) Sr. Cloud Data Operations Engineer - FedRamp, GovCloud at xScion Solutions (United States) L2 Support Technician at The New School (New York, NY, USA) Software Engineer, HumanBase at Simons Foundation (New York, NY, USA) Senior Analyst, IT Systems (Hybrid) at Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Philanthropies (New York, NY, USA) See more jobs on CrunchBoard Post your tech jobs and reach millions of TechCrunch readers for only $200 per month. |
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