Dec
17

Bootstrapping a Virtual Company to $25 Million: Percona CEO Peter Zaitsev (Part 2) - Sramana Mitra

If your Google Maps app isn't giving you the most accurate results, you may want to calibrate it to ensure you get the right directions.There are several methods you can use to calibrate Google Maps, including calibrating the compass and restarting your phone. But keep in mind that your options may be slightly limited if you have an iPhone.Here's what you need to know to calibrate in Google Maps and thereby improve its accuracy.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

When it comes to getting directions, accuracy is everything. So when your GPS is having a hard time identifying your location, things can get frustrating — fast. 

If you use Google Maps, there are ways to improve the accuracy: calibrating the compass so it points in the correct direction, for instance, or turning on high-accuracy mode on your Android phone. 

There are several ways to get better directions and results while using the Google Maps app on your Android phone, as we detail below.  

If you have an iPhone, however, the below methods won't work, so you should try restarting your phone or enabling Wi-Fi to improve the accuracy of your Google Maps app.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Best Buy)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $749.99 at Best Buy)

How to calibrate Google Maps with settings on an Android phone

Compass calibration

If you open your Google Maps app and see that the blue dot is pointing in the wrong direction, or is in the wrong location, calibration can help you get a more accurate reading. Here's how to do it on an Android phone:

1. Go into your Google Maps app, if it's not already open.

2. While holding your phone, move your hand in a figure eight motion — you should see the beam narrow as you go. Keep in mind it may take a few times for this to work.

Turning on high-accuracy mode

High-accuracy mode is a helpful tool in getting your Google Maps app up to speed. But keep in mind that this method only works if you have an Android:

3. Open your device's Settings app.

4. Tap "Location." Depending on your device, it may also be labeled as "Security and Location"

Open your device's "Location" menu. Devon Delfino/Business Insider

5. Switch on the location setting, if necessary.

Make sure that location services are turned on. Devon Delfino/Business Insider

6. Tap "Mode."

7. Select "High Accuracy."

Activate the highest accuracy location mode. Devon Delfino/Business Insider

How to calibrate Google Maps on an iPhone or Android with other basic fixes

There aren't as many fancy tricks to fix Google Maps on an iPhone.

First, you should turn on Wi-Fi on your phone. You don't need to connect to a network, you just need to turn on the setting. On both iPhone and Android, turning on Wi-Fi will make Google Maps more accurate, as it scans nearby Wi-Fi signals to locate you.

If that doesn't work, try restarting your iPhone or Android. Your phone's GPS sensors may simply need to be rebooted. For more information on how to restart an iPhone, see our article, "How to restart and force-restart any iPhone model."

Finally, on an iPhone specifically, make sure that location services are turned on. To do this:

1. Open your Settings app and go to the "Privacy" tab.

2. At the top of the Privacy screen, tap "Location Services."

3. Make sure that the switch at the top of the next screen is flipped to the right, and is colored green. If it's not, tap it.

4. Scroll down to your list of apps until you find Google Maps, and tap on it.

5. On the next screen, select either "While Using the App" or "Always." This will allow the Google Maps app to access your precise location faster.

Original author: Devon Delfino

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Jul
23

Hear Startup Alley companies pitch expert VC judges on the next episode of Extra Crunch Live

Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave a speech at the UN General Assembly about technology on Tuesday, with a number of bizarre quotes referencing sci-fi novels, films, and even niche British comedy shows.
The speech ricocheted between a huge range of recognizable dystopian tropes such as the "Terminator" franchise and conspiracy theories about the internet of things.
It came just after Johnson had suffered a huge defeat in the UK as the Supreme Court ruled his suspension of Parliament unlawful.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson gave a bizarre speech about technology at the United Nations General Assembly in New York on Tuesday, during which he haphazardly drew on big tech news stories, literature, and pop-culture to present dystopian and utopian views of technology.

The speech came after Johnson suffered a major blow back in the UK, as the supreme court ruled his suspension of parliament to be unlawful.

Read more: Boris Johnson told to resign following Supreme Court defeat and become the "shortest-serving prime minister ever"

"You may keep secrets from your friends, from your parents, your children, your doctor – even your personal trainer – but it takes real effort to conceal your thoughts from Google.""A future Alexa will pretend to take orders. But this Alexa will be watching you, clucking her tongue and stamping her foot.""In the future, voice connectivity will be in every room and almost every object: your mattress will monitor your nightmares; your fridge will beep for more cheese, your front door will sweep wide the moment you approach, like some silent butler.""Are we doomed to a cold and heartless future in which computer says yes — or computer says no with the grim finality of an emperor in the arena?"

To evoke a future where algorithmic inscrutability and bias could persecute people, Johnson turns to the British sketch programme "Little Britain." The programme had a character whose catchphrase was "computer says no" whenever she apathetically failed to help customers.

"AI, what will it mean? Helpful robots washing and caring for an ageing population, or pink-eyed terminators sent back from the future to cull the human race?"

This is a reference to the "Terminator" films, but exactly why Johnson descibes the Terminators as "pink-eyed" is not clear.

"What will synthetic biology stand for - restoring our livers and our eyes with miracle regeneration of the tissues, like some fantastic hangover cure? Or will it bring terrifying limbless chickens to our tables."

The "limbless chickens" could be a reference to the growing number of lab-grown meat companies, or it could have taken inspiration from Margaret Atwood's dystopian novel "Oryx and Crake," in which chicken breasts are cultivated genetically engineered organisms called chickienobs, which have no heads or limbs.

Here is the Guardian's cut of some of Johnson's moments from the speech:

Johnson countered his more Orwellian imagery with utopian examples of how technology can help humankind, and concluded by announcing a summit in London next year — although he gave no details about it.

Boris Johnson's relationship with the London tech scene is currently under some scrutiny.

His links to tech entrepreneur Jennifer Arcuri has come under scrutiny after the Sunday Times revealed that Johnson overruled officials while the Mayor of London to send Arcuri on foreign trade missions.

Original author: Isobel Asher Hamilton

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Jul
19

Meet the startups competing in the Extreme Tech Challenge Global Finals on July 22

The Galaxy Fold comes included with Samsung's "Galaxy Fold Premier Service" concierge support for the lifetime of the device. The Galaxy Fold Premier Service will let Galaxy Fold users get support and find answers to questions about their device 24 hours a day, seven days a week. A support concierge can even come to you wherever you are at any time of day, any day, to walk you through something or help fix an issue. But the Galaxy Fold still has a one-year warranty, which means repairs will cost Galaxy Fold users if their device breaks after a year of ownership. For extra coverage, Galaxy Fold owners would still need to buy Samsung's $12-per-month Premium Care extended coverage service. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

If Samsung's $2,000 Galaxy Fold wasn't already a luxury smartphone because of its price tag, the new service you get with the Galaxy Fold 2.0 should solidify its status as a high-end item. 

Samsung is now offering a 24/7 concierge customer support service exclusively for Galaxy Fold users called "Galaxy Fold Premier Service." It lasts for the lifetime of the phone at no extra cost.

The Galaxy Fold Premier Service gives you "direct access to Samsung experts who can provide you tailored guidance and support over the phone any time, any day," Samsung said about the service in a blog post. You also get the option of a "one-on-one onboarding session to walk you through every innovation packed into the Galaxy Fold and demonstrate how best to navigate this revolutionary device."

A card explaining Galaxy Fold Premier Service comes inside the Galaxy Fold box. Ben Gilbert/Business Insider

Samsung says a Galaxy Fold support agent will come to you anywhere, whether it's at home, your office office, or a coffee shop, to show you how do something on the Galaxy Fold or work through an issue you might be having. 

Read more: Xiaomi's new smartphone concept has a screen that wraps almost all the way around the phone's body, and it makes even brand-new smartphones look old-fashioned.

Still, that doesn't mean that all repairs for the Galaxy Fold are covered. 

You still have a one-year warranty with the Galaxy Fold. Within that year, you get one free screen repair. It's not exactly clear what other items are included in the warranty. 

Once the warranty expires, Samsung is also offering a one-time $150 screen replacement when the usual cost of an out-of-warranty screen repair costs $600. After you use up that one-time screen repair offer, screen repairs will cost $600. Other repairs, whether they were included in the warranty or not, will also cost you. 

If you want extended coverage beyond the one-year-warrant for the Galaxy Fold, you'll have to sign up for Samsung's $12-per-month Premium Care service.

Original author: Antonio Villas-Boas

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Sep
25

Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund is making its first cybersecurity investment in a $37 million deal with two former Air Force pilots

Peter Thiel's Founders Fund prides itself on being a venture-capital firm that operates as nimbly as the startups that it backs. Anyone at the firm can scout out interesting companies to invest in, and — as long as there's consensus — make a commitment to fund the startup.

That lets the Founders Fund move quickly when it sees the right opportunity. And on Tuesday, the Fund announced its first-ever investment in cybersecurity, in a deal that it says came together in the span of one week. 

The Founders Fund is coleading with Lightspeed Venture Partners a $37 million funding round in Arceo.ai, a San Francisco startup that analyzes the cybersecurity risks that businesses face. The startup, founded by two cybersecurity-industry veterans, recently came out of stealth mode.

"One of the things that makes Founders Fund unique is that we don't have a thesis," Founders Fund partner Trae Stephens, who led the Arceo.ai deal for Founders Fund, told Business Insider. "Once it becomes a thesis or a category, it's too late. We'd rather invest in an exceptional founder with a hard business rather than an average founder with a great business."

Read more: Founders Fund made its first alcohol investment. Here's how the 28-year old woman who founded the company is trying to change drinking culture for the better.

According to Stephens, Arceo.ai cofounders and co-CEOs Raj Shah and Vishaal Hariprasad fit the bill. The former US Air Force pilots had started two prior companies together and were tackling the murky territory of enterprise cybersecurity-risk analysis.

"They have lived and breathed the security mission in every aspect of their lives, having spent time at the defense innovation unit," Stephens said. "If you are a business, you know you should be spending to defend yourself, but it's not clear how. Insurance ends up being a really important piece of the puzzle, and in cyber, that was never figured out. Raj and [Vishaal] both have a great sense of how that works and are the types of people you would expect to build a good company in this space."

The pair developed a risk model using public and private data from attacks on different businesses in various industries and shared their findings with insurance companies. They told Business Insider that Arceo.ai worked with a variety of insurance carriers to provide better enterprise cyber coverage based on their models.

Hariprasad told Business Insider that theft of usernames and passwords was a threat many businesses were just starting to wake up to. Multifactor authentication is a preventative measure that is fairly easy to implement but hasn't seen the broad adoption Hariprasad expected. He says Arceo.ai educates chief information security officers (CISO) about the benefits of multifactor authentication and the insurance provider could offer discounts to businesses that take action based on Arceo.ai's recommendations.

"The insurance industry helped mitigate fires as a business risk in the 1800s," Shah told Business Insider. "It was an existential threat to the business then, but now no one really worries about it. We aspire to enable that in the cyber world so businesses can sleep more soundly."

The $37 million in venture capital is the second round of funding for Arceo.ai, whose existing investors include Lightspeed and CRV. Both firms ultimately joined this funding round as well.

As an early employee at Thiel's secretive data-mining company Palantir and a former public sector cybersecurity employee, Stephens said he's seen insurance become a larger portion of the cybersecurity equation over the past 10 years. He said it was "irresponsible" for a business to forgo cyber insurance that could protect them from losses stemming from ransomware or spear-phishing attacks. Since those policies are still in development, Arceo.ai could have a major role in shaping the entire industry, he added.

"Ten years ago if you asked an enterprise CISO what their defensive posture was, there was a general idea that we could spend money and developer time to ensure networks are protected against threats and that was it," Stephens said. "What you hear now is there is no amount of money or time we could spend because it is nearly impossible to defend against all these threats, so we need a multifaceted approach that didn't exist a decade ago."

According to Stephens, Founders Fund is the only major venture firm that hasn't made a significant bet in cybersecurity, and he attributed that to an oversaturated market without a clear direction before Shah and Hariprasad entered the scene.

"Most of the cybersecurity industry is doing more of the same, so you get an idea pretty quickly that nobody actually knows what they're doing," Stephens said. "If they did, there would be like five companies, not 2,000 that all are selling the same thing. The glut of companies out there demonstrates that everyone disagrees about the right way to do it."

Original author: Megan Hernbroth

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Sep
25

How to change your Wi-Fi network in the Control Center on an iPhone with iOS 13

Apple's latest, and highly anticipated, operating system for iPhone 6S and higher, iOS 13, has many new features that have proved useful, and disappointing.

One of its more convenient features is the ability to change your Wi-Fi network from an iPhone's Control Center — without having to go through Settings, the main previous method. 

Control Center can be accessed by swiping down on the top right-hand corner of the screen on your iPhone X or later (or from the bottom of the screen on older models), whether it is locked or not. 

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Best Buy)

How to change your Wi-Fi network in the Control Center on an iPhone with iOS 13

1. Tap the screen of your iPhone to wake it up.  

2. Swipe down on the top right-hand corner of the screen on an iPhone X or later, or up from the bottom of your screen on an earlier iPhone running iOS 13. It doesn't matter if your iPhone is locked or unlocked. 

3. Find the Wi-Fi icon. 

Tap and hold the Wi-Fi icon. Meira Gebel/Business Insider

4. Tap and hold firmly until a new screen pops up. 

5. Find the Wi-Fi icon once again, and press and hold firmly. 

To turn Wi-Fi on, tap the icon. Then, press and hold. Meira Gebel/Business Insider

6. A list of Wi-Fi networks will appear in a list. Scroll to find the network you wish to connect to, and select. 

Select the network you wish to connect to. Meira Gebel/Business Insider

7. A checkmark will appear next to the network's name once you are connected. 

A check mark will appear next to the network once you're connected. Meira Gebel/Business Insider

If you're connecting to a new Wi-Fi network for your iPhone and is not public, you will be required to enter a password. 

After selecting the private Wi-Fi network, a new screen will prompt you to enter the password. Once you've done that, tap Join in the upper right-hand corner. 

Enter the network password and tap Join. Meira Gebel/Business Insider
Original author: Meira Gebel

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Sep
25

San Francisco real estate agents reveal most requested features tech workers ask for in buying their multi-million dollar homes

San Francisco is home to tech millionaires and billionaires, and they want high-end homes to go with their high-paying jobs.Real estate agents who work with these luxury clients say that San Francisco neighborhoods like Pacific Heights and Russian Hill are in demand.Most buyers looking in these areas want move-in ready homes with modern amenities and private space.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

With a high-paying job and stock options, odds are you're looking to buy a house.

The San Francisco housing market is one of the most expensive in the country, and most high-end buyers share certain demands for the money they're shelling out.

According to Deniz Kahramaner, founder of a newly founded data-focused real estate brokerage called Atlasa, tech millionaires tend to favor the Noe Valley/Mission Dolores area, or the Presidio Heights/Russian Hill area.

So far in 2019, senior executives from Google, JUUL Labs, Postmates, and other firms have purchased homes in the Pacific Heights and Russian Hill areas. Executives at DoorDash, Lyft, Instagram, and more have bought homes in Mission Dolores, Noe Valley, and Eureka Valley, according to Kahramaner.

Kahramaner explained that tech millionaires are drawn to properties with historic charm, like Edwardian and Victorian-style homes, but with modern upgrades. They often buy homes with access to prestigious private schools as well.

Here are the main things San Francisco tech millionaires look for in a home. 

Original author: Mary Meisenzahl

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Sep
25

Disney CEO Bob Iger confirmed that he left Apple's board because of conflicting interests

Disney's CEO Bob Iger explained why he stepped down from Apple's board in an interview on Tuesday.Iger told CNBC's Jim Cramer that he gave up his duties on Apple's board this month as it became clear that "our paths were conflicting rather than converging."Iger's role had become increasingly complicated as Apple branched into new streaming services, putting it in direct competition with Disney. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Disney's CEO Bob Iger said he stepped down from Apple's board because the two companies were increasingly coming into conflict.

In a conversation with CNBC's Jim Cramer on Tuesday, Iger, who gave up his duties on Apple's board on September 10, said that as Apple got into creating TV shows and movies, it became clear that "our paths were conflicting rather than converging."

"I just thought it [leaving the board] was the right thing to do. The business is still relatively small for Apple, but it's meaningful for Disney, and it wasn't right," he added.

Iger's role had become increasingly complicated as Apple branched away from its core hardware business and moved into media and streaming.

The news of his resignation came days after Apple announced the release date of Apple TV Plus, its new subscription streaming service. This new service will come in direct competition with Disney's own streaming service, Disney Plus, which is slated to launch in November.

Read more: Disney CEO Bob Iger steps down from Apple's board ahead of the launch of the tech company's new streaming service

Earlier in this year, Iger told Bloomberg that he would step out of the room when the topic of Apple's streaming service came up. "So far it's been OK. I'm in constant discussion about it," he said.

Iger joined Apple's board in 2011, a month after the death of Apple's famed co-founder Steve Jobs. Jobs had previously sat on the board of Disney and when he died, Iger stepped in to replace his board position.

"I just loved my eight years on the Apple board, I learned so much," he told Cramer, adding that he hopes Disney with be associated with Apple in the future.

Original author: Mary Hanbury

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Sep
25

How to send a voice message on your iPhone to anyone with an iPhone, iPad, or Mac

It's possible to send voice messages on your iPhone, if you prefer to speak instead of writing out text messages. By default, voice messages sent via iPhone expire two minutes after they've been played, but this can be changed in your Settings. There's no limit to how long a voice message can be. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

While texting is the most popular form of communication these days, sometimes you have so much to say that you can't fit it into a quick text message. 

Thankfully, when that's the case, your iPhone offers the ability to send voice messages to your contacts, so that they can actually hear what you have to say rather than just reading the words on the screen. 

While the feature only works when the person you're sending the voice message to is using another Apple device like an iPhone, iPad, or even a MacBook with iMessage installed, it's a quick and easy way to chat. 

Here's what you need to know about how to send a voice message. 

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Best Buy)

iPad (From $329.99 at Best Buy)

MacBook Pro (From $1,299.99 at Best Buy)

How to send a voice message on your iPhone

1. On your iPhone's home screen, tap the Messages app icon to open it. 

2. Either begin a new iMessage conversation by tapping the pen and paper icon in the upper right-hand corner of the Messages screen or open an existing iMessage conversation. 

3. To the right of the iMessage text box, press and hold the small microphone icon and begin recording your voice message. 

4. When finished, release the microphone button. You will then see two icons next to the message; one will be a play button shaped like a right-facing triangle, while the other will be an upward-facing arrow. 

Once you've recorded a message, two icons will appear. Jennifer Still/Business Insider

5. Press the play button to listen to what you've just recorded, or tap the upward-facing arrow to send your voice message. 

It should be noted that, by default, voice messages are deleted two minutes after the recipient listens to them. However, you can choose to keep the message you've sent by tapping the "Keep" option beneath the media file. 

You can choose to keep voice messages you send or receive, so they never expire. Jennifer Still/Business Insider

You can also change your iPhone's automatic settings to ensure your messages are kept longer on your device.

How to change the expiration length of voice messages on your iPhone

To do this, simply go to the Settings app, tap Messages, scroll down to the "Audio Messages" heading and select "Never" rather than "After 2 Minutes" within the Expire tab. 

This makes it so any voice message you send or receive won't expire on your device. Messages you send to others, however, will still expire on their devices, unless they've also changed their settings.

Original author: Jennifer Still

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Sep
25

'Black Panther' initially faced pushback from inside Marvel, according to Disney CEO Bob Iger

Disney CEO Bob Iger revealed in his new book, "The Ride of a Lifetime," that a Marvel executive was against making "Black Panther" because they thought movies led by black actors didn't perform well internationally."We had a chance to make a great movie and to showcase an underrepresented segment of America, and those goals were not mutually exclusive," Iger wrote."Black Panther" grossed over $1 billion worldwide and won three Oscars.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

"Black Panther" is one of the biggest movies of all time, but it overcame obstacles to get made.

Disney CEO Bob Iger revealed in his new book, "The Ride of a Lifetime: Lessons Learned From 15 Years as CEO of the Walt Disney Company," that a Marvel executive in New York was opposed to making "Black Panther" because they thought movies led by black actors didn't perform well at the international box office. (Iger noted that Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige was on board from the start.)

READ MORE: Marvel's big movie and TV reveal this weekend was only a taste of its plan to dominate for years to come

"I've been in the business long enough to have heard every old argument in the book, and I've learned that old arguments are just that: old, and out of step with where the world is and where it should be," Iger wrote. "We had a chance to make a great movie and to showcase an underrepresented segment of America, and those goals were not mutually exclusive. I called [Marvel chairman] Ike [Perlmutter] and told him to tell his team to stop putting up roadblocks and ordered that we put both 'Black Panther' and 'Captain Marvel' into production."

"Black Panther," set almost entirely in Africa, was the first superhero movie to feature a predominantly black cast. "Captain Marvel" was the first Marvel Cinematic Universe movie to be headlined by a female character.

Both movies grossed over $1 billion worldwide. "Black Panther" was the highest-grossing movie domestically of 2018 with $700 million and is the 11th highest-grossing movie of all time. It won three Oscars and was nominated for best picture earlier this year.

Marvel Studios stressed that diversity will be a focus moving forward. The MCU's first movie starring an Asian superhero, "Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings," comes to theaters in 2021 and a "Black Panther" sequel is in the works.

"When you have diverse voices, you get better stories and you get more exciting stories, you get more surprising stories," Feige told Variety last year. "And that is something that is very clear."

Original author: Travis Clark

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  28 Hits
Sep
25

Ursus Maritimus

Just foreshadowing.

We are going to the edge of the United States to see them.

Experiencing this puts a lot of things in perspective for me.

And, happy birthday mom.

Original author: Brad Feld

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  36 Hits
Feb
08

Facebook has acquired Scape Technologies, the London-based computer vision startup

The embattled coworking company WeWork is reportedly unlikely to go public this year, after a disastrous month that came to a head on Tuesday when the company replaced its CEO.

Sources familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday that the company probably wouldn't publicly list its shares this year as planned.

WeWork filed paperwork in August for an initial public offering, kicking off a swift fall from grace in which the company once privately valued at $47 billion was said to be seeking a public valuation as low as $10 billion.

Since its IPO paperwork was released, the company's massive losses and CEO Adam Neumann's questionable business dealings, drug and alcohol use, and conflicts of interest have been scrutinized. WeWork made some changes, then announced earlier this month that it was delaying its IPO but still expected to list its shares by the end of the year.

Then on Tuesday, Neumann said the scrutiny had become a "significant distraction" amid WeWork's IPO plans and announced he was stepping down as CEO in the company's "best interest."

Read more: WeWork's had a terrible month, and now CEO Adam Neumann is stepping down — here's everything that has happened since the embattled company filed to go public

The Journal report details Neumann's final days as the head of WeWork. While some on the company's board of directors pushed to oust Neumann, the WeWork cofounder had the support of many "as of Friday and into the weekend," according to The Journal. But by Sunday, some of Neumann's biggest allies on the board had reportedly told him they were pushing for his departure, echoing concerns from SoftBank, the Japanese firm that has injected billions into WeWork.

Replacing Neumann are two WeWork executives who will serve as co-CEOs, Sebastian Gunningham and Artie Minson. The Journal reported that they were considering "a few thousand" layoffs at WeWork to help cut costs ahead of an IPO. WeWork declined to comment.

According to The Journal, in an email to staff on Tuesday, the co-CEOs said they would "closely review all aspects" of the company and told employees to expect "difficult decisions ahead."

Original author: Paige Leskin

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  30 Hits
Sep
15

1Mby1M Virtual Accelerator Investor Forum: With Rahul Chandra of Unitary Helion Ventures (Part 4) - Sramana Mitra

Rodrigo Baer, Partner at Redpoint eventures, Brazil, provides a very interesting overview of his firm and what’s happening in the Brazilian ecosystem.

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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  49 Hits
Aug
17

Colors: Le Village sur la Falaise - Sramana Mitra

Entrepreneurs are invited to the 458th FREE online 1Mby1M mentoring roundtable on Thursday, September 26, 2019, at 8 a.m. PDT/11 a.m. EDT/5 p.m. CEST/8:30 p.m. India IST. If you are a serious...

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Original author: Maureen Kelly

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  48 Hits
Dec
27

How to turn off Low Power Mode on an iPhone in 2 different ways

I heard this phrase at a board meeting today from another board member.

Fierce prioritization

What are the 30% of your activities that you should spend 100% of your time on?

You’ve got 30 people in your company. You have nine months of cash in the bank. You are making progress. But it’s not clear if you are making enough progress fast enough to raise money from new investors before you run out of money.

Of course, the word “progress” is completely open for interpretation, subjective, and varies dramatically by company.

What do you do? A natural reaction is to cut costs to extend your runway to give you more time to make progress, whatever progress means.

At 30 people, that’s probably the wrong answer. It might not be, but I like the answer of “fierce prioritization” a lot better.

Focus your 30 people on the 30% of things that will really matter. Stop doing the 70% that don’t matter. Right now. Don’t wait.

Fierce prioritization applies to many things in life, not just business. Fiercely prioritize fierce prioritization.

I love the phrase.

Original author: Brad Feld

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  12 Hits
Jan
10

Layoffs at Lime and Getaround herald rise of profit-hungry unicorns

Sramana Mitra: In terms of functionality trends, what’s changing? Don Mal: As artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies have become more available to software companies, you can have...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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  29 Hits
Sep
20

At TechCrunch Disrupt, insights into key trends in venture capital

Ryan Chan, CEO and Founder at UpKeep Maintenance Management, bootstrapped with a paycheck and subsequently, went through YCombinator, followed by raising $13 Million.

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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  17 Hits
Dec
21

Bounce raises $1.2M to tap local retailers for short-term storage

According to a recent report published by Allied Market Research, the global cloud storage market is estimated to grow 25% annually over the next few years to reach $97.4 billion by 2022. Box (NYSE:...

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Original author: MitraSramana

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  22 Hits
Sep
24

Thought Leaders in Healthcare IT: Eric Rosow, CEO of Diameter Health (Part 1) - Sramana Mitra

The healthcare industry has a massive data problem. Read more about what’s going on and how to address the issue, as well as opportunities in the field to use the data to build applications. Sramana...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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  20 Hits
Dec
21

This $200 portable fire pit is fan-controlled, nearly smokeless, and my new favorite outdoor fireplace and grill

Accounting is one of the cornerstones to building a business, but for most companies, getting it right is more of a necessity than it is one of their core competencies. That has created a vacuum, and now, a company called Tipalti — which has developed a popular solution to automate accounting for businesses that are not accounting companies by nature — has raised a significant round of funding to underscore that demand.

Today, the Israeli-Californian startup is announcing that it has picked up $76 million, money it plans to use to continue expanding the functionality of its platform and growing its business.

The funding, a Series D that brings the total raised by Tipalti to $146 million, is interesting in part because of who is providing it. Led by Zeev Ventures, it also includes backing from previous investor Group 11, along with new backers 01 Advisors, Greenspring Associates, and TrueBridge Capital Partners.

In case the name doesn’t ring a bell, 01 Advisors is the new investment firm co-founded Twitter’s former CEO and COO, Dick Costolo and Adam Bain, which started raising money only last month and appears to have disclosed one other investment before this, in the e-sports startup PlayVS.

01 Advisors’ interest in backing Tipalti comes from the fact that Twitter is a longtime customer of Tipalti’s, dating back to when Costolo and Bain were running things. Chen Amit, CEO and Co-founder of Tipalti, told me in an interview that the social media company signed up around the time that it was going public, ramping up its revenue generating functions (mainly advertising), and needed a strong accounts payable solution to pay suppliers and others in its ecosystem that wouldn’t break the bank and would help it track all the taxes and other areas that would now be getting thoroughly audited.

That experience, along with Tipalti’s wider track record among other fast-growing tech businesses whose business models are built on working with large networks of partners — other customers include Uber, Roku, Zumba, GoDaddy, Zola, GoPro, Foursquare, and Vimeo — is what compelled Costolo and co. to invest.

“While at Twitter, we chose Tipalti and they played a pivotal role in enabling us to scale and grow,” he said in a statement. “Tipalti’s platform was crucial In helping us manage payments to thousands of our publishers and partners around the world with ease, while delivering a flawless experience. Investing in Tipalti allows us to help bring the same benefits we experienced as operators to the thousands of companies that need this support.

Tipalti’s emergence and growth comes out of an interesting climate shift in the world of startups. The accounting department is not the first thing people usually think about when they consider an exciting tech startup. Indeed, there’s a longstanding belief among some founders and their investors that certain ideas are too good to adulterate early on with thoughts of generating revenue, especially when the startup is in high-growth mode. However, when the scale does tip over into making money (way earlier for some than others), it becomes a crucial area to get right.

Tipalti sits among a number of other startups that have emerged in recent years to help handle less-sexy, but very essential back office functions, the kind that can cripple or even kill off a business of not handled well. Others in the group include the likes of AppZen, which has built AI-based expense auditing tools that it now wants to expand into other finance team functions; and Gusto, which helps manage payroll and benefits.

There are also a number of companies also looking to build better tools for accounts payable automation, including the likes of AccessPay (which also covers accounts receivable functions), OneSource Virtual, abd MineralTree. All of the big accounting software providers will provide a degree of automation in their products, too, although Tipalti’s Amit believes that these target much larger enterprises. RPA companies that are aiming to automate all back-office functions are also potential (if not existing) competitors, too.

Tipalti’s pitch is primarily to the midmarket, which is partly why it has been a big hit with startups that are growing fast but might not yet be at the point of considering solutions built for much larger companies. The tools are able to read, process, pay, and account for invoices using its automation technology, and the startup measures its effectiveness in terms of how much human work it can take on.

In fact, it describes a slightly frighteningly precise efficiency equivalent: citing research from the Levvel Research Accounts Payable Survey, the average midmarket organization has “an average of 9.8 full-time accounts payable employees.” Tipalti says that its platform can provide 80% of that workload function. (The idea being that the remaining 1.96 of humans (!) left over after Tiptali has done its magic can work on other tasks and longer need to dedicate all of their time to accounts payable procedures.)

It’s not just about reducing human overhead, though.

Amit said that some 30%-40% of its customers are gig economy businesses, with a fair number working across different international markets. That makes for a very messy accounting operation. “When you have payees all over the world, that affects you every month,” he said, adding that regulations are becoming ever more stringent on how businesses account for revenues and pay out to people, with the rise in money laundering and using assets in nefarious ways. “Regulators want more information communicated around payments, or the can be a new embargo on an entity, and so you need to change that, your banking process and who you can work with.”

The big pitch with automating companies may be that they are not aiming to take humans out of work, but to free them up to work on other things that AI cannot replace — not yet, anyway — and as an added benefit, they are helping companies reduce their operational expenses and helping them to run things better. How that will play out in the longer term could indeed be great, or it could see even more people with too much time on their hands. But in the meanwhile, Tiptali has grown by leaps and bounds. The company says it’s now processing more than $8 billion in annual transactions, with its customer and business bookings doubling in the first half of 2019.

Tipalti is not disclosing its valuation with this round, but Amit said on the back of that growth it has tripled since it last raised money.

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Jun
19

Investors say Eindhoven poised to become Netherlands’ No. 2 tech hub

Cluno, the Munich startup providing what it calls a “car subscription” service, is disclosing that it has raised €140 million in debt financing.

Two asset-backed financing deals totalling €80 million were signed recently, adding to €60 million of debt previously secured — ie it’s not all entirely new money.

Separately, the company raised €25 million in equity-financing in a Series B round in February led by Valar Ventures, the U.S.-based venture capital firm founded by Peter Thiel. Others who participated are Acton Capital Partners and Atlantic Labs, which both backed the Cluno’s Series A round. It brought total equity raised by Cluno to €32 million.

Founded in 2017 by the same team behind easyautosale (which exited to Autoscout24 in 2015), Cluno offers an alternative to car ownership or a more restrictive lease by enabling you to subscribe to a car for an all-inclusive monthly fee.

Available in Germany only, you book your car online or via the Cluno app, with the monthly fee covering all costs except fuel. After a minimum term of six months, subscribers can return or switch their car with three months notice.

Convenience and choice is also part of the pitch. This sees bookings, as well as credit checks and signatures, all carried out paperlessly via the Cluno app. The startup offers multiple models from nine different car companies, including BMW, VW, Audi and Ford. Models span small cars to SUVs, including hybrid and electric vehicles.

Cluno tells me the new debt financing is dedicated to growing the company’s car subscription fleet “and serves as the basis for structures that are fit for capital markets”.

“The structured, asset-based financing via ‘Cluno FinTech 1 GmbH’ and ‘Cluno FinTech 2 GmbH’ is a highly profitable and at the same time insolvency-proof investment for banks. Cluno’s fully digital reporting and the resilient backup service structure contribute to reliability,” says Dr. Veronika von Heise-Rotenburg, CFO of Cluno in a statement.

Meanwhile, the previously raised equity is being used to grow the two-year-old Cluno, which currently counts 80 employees.

Adds Nico Polleti, co-founder and CEO of Cluno: “Car subscription has proved to be very successful as a mobility concept and is on the verge of entering the mass market. As innovation driver in a fast-paced industry, we want to take our business model to the next level as quickly as possible. Our goals are scaling and, in the long run, internationalization. Both the financial resources as well as the trust of the financial institutions are a crucial lever.”

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