May
29

Twaice picks up backing from Cherry Ventures to help electric vehicles eke out more battery life

Twaice, a Munich-based startup developing “predictive analytics” software to help with battery management in electric vehicles and other devices, has raised €2 million in additional seed funding.

The round is led by Berlin’s Cherry Ventures, with participation by existing investors UVC Partners and Speedinvest. It brings the total raised at seed stage by the nine-month-old company — a spin out of Technical University of Munich (TUM) — to €3.2 million.

Already used in trucks, cars, e-scooters and stationary power storage, the Twaice software creates a “digital twin” of battery systems by utilising sensor data, and physical and data-driven battery models. From here it claims to be able to analyse and make accurate real-time predictions about the “health status” of an energy storage system.

Use-cases include closing the loop between product development and application, as well as new possibilities such as predictive maintenance and extending a product’s warranty.

“Batteries represent 30 to 50% of the electric vehicle costs, but they are complex blackboxes and degrade over lifetime,” Twaice co-founder Dr. Stephan Rohr tells TechCrunch.

“The complexity creates enormous risks and challenges for manufacturers of battery electric vehicles, as they have to test and model the eight to 10 years’ lifetime of a battery in only six to 12 months of testing time. And after the start of production, the users of these batteries have the challenge to understand how the battery is degrading as the impact of operating parameters on the degradation is too complex and no battery ages like another one.”

Enter Twaice’s “digital twin,” which Rohr says is fed time-continuous data from a device’s battery management system to constantly update the virtual model of the battery with regard to its current condition.

“Through an augmentation of empirical-analytical models and machine learning, we are then also able to predict, simulate and optimize each individual battery’s lifetime,” he says.

To that end, Twaice generates revenue via a software-as-a-service model. The young company charges an annual recurring fee per digital twin, which scales based on the number of batteries.

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Mar
23

Lilium raises another $240M to design, test and run an electric aircraft taxi service

AP Images

Good morning! This is the tech news you need to know this Wednesday.

An investigation by The Washington Post has found that many iOS apps use background refresh to send data, such as location and IP address, to third-party tracker companies. The investigation raises questions about Apple's promises that user activity stays on their devices. MacKenzie Bezos pledged to give away half her fortune during her lifetime, something Jeff Bezos, the richest person in the world, has avoided doing. MacKenzie Bezos has signed the Giving Pledge, a commitment to donate more than half of her almost $37 billion in assets to charity. Amazon is looking to expand its presence in New York City, despite the collapse of its HQ2 plans there. The New York Post reported that the company is considering opening an additional office in Manhattan. Analysts warned that Chinese patriotism could halve Apple's sales in China. Citi analysts said that US-China friction is denting Apple's brand in China and causing Chinese citizens to turn to domestic mobile brands. A New York Times report chronicled the conditions faced by Google temps, vendors, and contractors (known internally as TVCs), who often accept their roles with the hopes of reaching full-time status. This massive "shadow workforce" is raising questions about the way Google treats its contractors compared to its full time employees, and about whether a contracting job at Google can really serve as a stepping stone to a career at the tech giant, or is merely a clever way for Google to cut costs. Netflix is the first major US studio to speak out against the antiabortion laws that are making their ways through states such as Georgia, Alabama, and Missouri. In Georgia, a major US production hub for TV and film, Netflix said it would consider pulling its productions from the state if the "heartbeat bill," which was signed into law in May, went into effect. Tesla will be acquired within a year, according to the NYU professor who predicted Amazon's takeover of Whole Foods. Scott Galloway told journalist Kara Swisher in a podcast that Tesla's tanking share price would make it a prime takeover target. Roblox, the $2.5 billion video game platform, is forming a joint venture with Chinese tech titan Tencent. The eventual goal is bringing Roblox, which currently has over 90 million active players, to the massive Chinese market. Tesla owes roughly $1.77 million in overdue payments, a French metal supplier alleged in a new lawsuit filed on Tuesday. According to court documents, Lebronze Alloys has supplied a metal part for Tesla's electric motors since 2016 but it has been unable to collect the 1,559,420.06 euros (approximately $1,768,460.32) that it is owed. A fruit-picking robot developed by a university spinout can pick up to 25,000 raspberries a day, and it could someday replace human workers. The robot uses machine learning techniques to identify "supermarket ripe" raspberries by using its cameras and sensors.

Have an Amazon Alexa device? Now you can hear 10 Things in Tech each morning. Just search for "Business Insider" in your Alexa's flash briefing settings.

You can also subscribe to this newsletter here — just tick "10 Things in Tech You Need to Know."

Original author: Shona Ghosh

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May
29

'It will be a crash for sure': Ethiopian Airlines pilot reportedly warned senior officials that pilots needed more training on Boeing 737 Max

A pilot urged Ethiopian Airlines senior managers for more training on the Boeing 737 Max aircraft, following the doomed Lion Air Flight 610 crash that killed all 189 passengers two months earlier, according to emails and documents seen by Bloomberg News.

Bernd Kai von Hoesslin, the Ethiopian Airlines pilot and 737 instructor, reportedly warned managers in December that more training was required following the Lion Air crash in October. He also suggested greater communication between crew members. Three months after von Hoesslin delivered the warning, Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET302 crashed and killed all 157 passengers.

Von Hoesslin was concerned with how pilots would handle an issue with the 737 Max's flight-control feature in conjunction with cockpit warnings, according to the emails seen my Bloomberg.

"It will be a crash for sure," von Hoesslin said in an email in December, Bloomberg reported.

Read more: Boeing reportedly let some of its mechanics inspect their own work, and it's causing problems for the manufacturer at the worst possible time

Von Hoesslin also expressed his concerns on aircraft maintenance and pilot fatigue in 418-pages of communications. Von Hoesslin reportedly left the airline in April and included his previous advice with his resignation letter. He declined to comment for the Bloomberg story.

"Some of these concerns were safety-related and well within the duty of the airline to adequately address," von Hoesslin said in his resignation letter, according to Bloomberg.

An Ethiopian Airlines spokesman told Bloomberg they could not comment on the story.

Initial news reports suggest that a faulty reading from a sensor could have played a role in both crashes. The reports indicate that the faulty sensor may have triggered the plane's automated system, which would point the nose downward after takeoff to prevent the plane from stalling.

Von Hoesslin mentioned the aircraft's sensor from the automated safety system — a feature currently being scrutinized by investigators. However, it is unclear if the Ethiopian Airlines crash would have been prevented if the airline heeded his warning, Bloomberg noted.

Boeing has been under intense scrutiny following the crashes. Multiple news reports have revealed problems in the production process, including for the 787 Dreamliner aircraft.

Errors on the production line included debris in airspeed sensors, rags and bolts in planes, and loose cabin seats, The Post and Courier reported earlier in May. Tires with cuts in them, untested gears, and malfunctioning hydraulics systems were also spotted by workers, some of whom were allowed to self-inspect their work.

Original author: David Choi

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Jun
02

Mark Zuckerberg told enraged employees Facebook might change its policy on politicians using violent speech

Tensions between the United States and China are running high, as industry experts warn that the Trump administration's ongoing trade war, and its recent blacklisting of tech giant Huawei, could led to a full-blown tech Cold War between the two countries.

It's against that backdrop that Roblox, the video game platform most recently valued at $2.5 billion, announced on Tuesday that it will form a new, jointly-owned company with Chinese tech giant Tencent.

This new company, which does not appear to have a name just yet, will be based in Shenzhen, and have "an initial focus on education to teach coding fundamentals, game design, digital citizenship, and entrepreneurial skills," according to the press release.

The eventual goal, the companies said in the announcement, is to bring Roblox to China, where it does not currently operate.

Roblox now has 90 million active users, many of which are kids and pre-teens, putting it on a par with mega-hits like Microsoft's "Minecraft" phenomenon. Getting access to China's roughly 800 million internet users would definitely give Roblox the opportunity to take things to the next level.

Read more: A video game turned this self-taught 23-year-old programmer into a budding mogul who can support his mom and brother

It's important for Roblox to have a powerful ally like Tencent in doing so, too — China has very strict rules around allowing foreign companies like Roblox to do business in the country; having Tencent as a local partner could smooth the way.

In the interim, the two companies say that this joint venture will focus on using Roblox to teach coding. To that end, the two are sponsoring a scholarship program for 15 Chinese students to attend a week-long camp taught at Stanford University this summer, where they will learn about game design and 3D world creation.

"MeepCity" is one of the most popular games on Roblox. Screenshot/Matt Weinberger

For its part, Tencent is no stranger to working with foreign game companies: Back in 2012, Tencent bought a 40% stake in Epic Games, the creator of the smash-hit "Fortnite." Tencent also licensed the Chinese rights to "PUBG Mobile," a very popular battle royale game for smartphones, from South Korean developer Bluehole. It's even been reported that Tencent will help Nintendo bring its Switch console to China.

Still, the partnership between Roblox and Tencent is striking given the political uncertainties and heated rhetoric that currently rule the day.

It's also worth noting that China has also recently put new restrictions on the video game industry, and Tencent isn't immune: The company recently discontinued its support for "PUBG Mobile" in the country, after it failed to get approval from regulators to monetize the game. Instead, Tencent launched "Heping Jingying," a very similar title, with more patriotic overtones.

Original author: Matt Weinberger

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May
28

Chinese patriotism will halve Apple's sales in China, analysts warn (AAPL)

The US trade war with China will provoke Chinese citizens to turn away from Apple and buy domestic mobile brands instead, according to an analyst note from Citi on Monday.

The analysts predicted that Apple's brand is already being damaged in China and that this is a recent deterioration. According to their calculations, China accounts for 18% of all Apple sales, but that figure could halve thanks to the trade war.

"We are proactively slashing our iPhone unit sales as we believe the US/China trade situation will result in a slowdown of Apple iPhone demand in China as China residents shift their purchasing preference to China national brands," they wrote.

"Our independent due diligence now shows a less favorable brand image desire for iPhone and this has very recently deteriorated," they added.

They maintained a "buy" rating on Apple shares, but slashed the target price to $205 from $220 and warned that could go lower.

Citi's analysts said the confusion about whether Android would continue to work on Huawei's handsets could help Apple sell more iPhones. Anyone worried about whether Google could suddenly pull the plug on OS support on Chinese handsets could hedge their bets and switch to an iPhone, the thinking goes.

But they said it's likely other Android phone makers (think Samsung) who would more likely benefit from this confusion. Apple would gain 5% of phone unit sales at most, they estimated.

And overall, the drop in Chinese sales could trim iPhone sales by up to 10 million units for 2020.

Other analysts have separately predicted that the Trump administration's decision to blacklist Huawei could backfire and hurt Apple. They argued that China could ban US technology sales, and the trade war could affect Apple's Asian supply chain, too.

Huawei CEO Ren Zhengfei said in an interview that he would be the "first to protest" if his home country retaliated against Apple.

Original author: Shona Ghosh

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May
28

Netflix says it would rethink its 'entire investment in Georgia' if an antiabortion law were adopted (NFLX)

Netflix is the first major US studio to speak out against the antiabortion laws that are making their ways through states such as Georgia, Alabama, and Missouri.

In Georgia, a major US production hub for TV and film, Netflix said it would consider pulling its productions from the state if the "heartbeat bill," which was signed into law in May, went into effect.

Georgia's heartbeat bill would ban abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected, which can occur as early as six weeks into the pregnancy, when women may not yet know they are pregnant. The American Civil Liberties Union has vowed to challenge the law, which goes into effect in 2020. The law has raised concerns that women who seek abortions or miscarry could face criminal charges.

"We have many women working on productions in Georgia, whose rights, along with millions of others, will be severely restricted by this law," Ted Sarandos, Netflix's chief content officer, said in a statement to Variety. "It's why we will work with the ACLU and others to fight it in court. Given the legislation has not yet been implemented, we'll continue to film there, while also supporting partners and artists who choose not to. Should it ever come into effect, we'd rethink our entire investment in Georgia."

Read more: Meet the power players at Netflix leading the streaming giant's defense against Disney and other rivals

Netflix has filmed series such as "Stranger Things" in Georgia, which is a popular place to film movies and TV shows because of the tax breaks offered by the state.

Other major US studios approached by Variety would not comment on Georgia's antiabortion law, the publication wrote. Many of the studios film in Georgia, including Disney, which has shot Marvel movies such as the box-office topping "Avengers: Endgame" in the state.

In 2018, 455 TV and film projects were completed in Georgia, adding about $9.5 billion to the economy, according to state officials.

Original author: Ashley Rodriguez

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Jun
02

Bootstrapping by Piggybacking from Romania: 123FormBuilder CEO Florin Cornianu (Part 2) - Sramana Mitra

In February 2017 I met Shawn Frayne, one of the founders of Looking Glass Factory, a Brooklyn-based company with ambitions to make holographic interfaces a reality. Their team was scrappy and had sold an impressive variety of volumetric display kits to fuel their R&D efforts, and since our human-computer interface investment theme is one of my favorites, we led their Series A round.

Last summer they launched their flagship product, a dev kit called the Looking Glass. It was the first desktop holographic display to come to market for, well, extreme nerds (like yours truly) that have been hoping for holographic displays their/our whole lives.

The Looking Glass dev kits and the adjoining Unity and three.js SDKs sparked a wave of holographic app creation over the past few months, with thousands of hologram hackers creating new and wonderfully weird apps in their Looking Glasses every day. Looking Glass clubs are even springing up, like this one that meets in Tokyo with a few hundred members and growing.

But these systems are strictly dev kits, meaning they require the user to have a powerful computer to connect to and run the holographic display. I have several Looking Glasses of my own and I love them, but most of the time they sit idle because they can’t run standalone. The multitude of holographic apps being created by developers around the world, like holographic CT scan viewers and interactive software robots and volumetric video players for the Looking Glass, haven’t really been deployable outside of a highly technical crowd that already owns powerful computers.

That changes today with the launch of the Looking Glass Pro, an all-in-one holographic workstation. The Looking Glass Pro is a turnkey holographic solution for any enterprise that needs to display genuine 3D content to groups of people without subjecting them to the indignity of donning a fleet of VR headsets.

Some first use cases are showing up in fields like orthodontics, where holographic renderings of dental CT-scans for surgeons (and soon for patients) are fast becoming a reality.

Courtesy of Orthoscience

In situations where agencies are generating things like volumetric music videos and holographic ads (like in the case of Intel Studio’s production Runnin’, generated by Reggie Watts and written and directed By Kiira Benzing), being shown at the Augmented World Expo this week in a Looking Glass Pro).

And in scenarios where groups of engineers need to review three-dimensional simulations of phenomenon like the mechanical stresses in to-be-printed parts and complex biological systems in the Looking Glass Pro as if they were viewing the real thing.

The Looking Glass Pro comes with a lot of built-in functionality, including a powerful embedded computer, a direct touchscreen on the holographic display for interacting with the 3D content, and even a flip-out 2D touchscreen for things like text entry and extended UI. Most importantly, the Pro comes with a commercial license to the Holographic Software Suite, a collection of the Looking Glass SDKs for Unity, three.js, and the newly announced Looking Glass Unreal Engine SDK, meaning developers in the enterprise can make apps for the Pro and deploy them fully-standalone for commercial applications for the first time.

This story has been told before, where a new computing platform makes the phase change from a dev kit for a group of technology enthusiasts into something that businesses can use. Think back to the Apple I’s transformation into the Apple ][ series, the evolution (several times over) of 3D printers, or even AR headsets if what Hololens 2 and just-announced Google Glass 2 are doing is any indication.

The launch of the Looking Glass Pro is a sign that that time has come for holographic interfaces.

If you’re an enterprise looking to get into the hologram game, get one of the first batch of Looking Glass Pros today before they sell out.

Original author: Brad Feld

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Mar
20

California is letting you order cocktails and beer for pickup or have it delivered to your home during the coronavirus pandemic

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos may be the richest person, but he isn't well-known for his billion-dollar donations and philanthropic efforts like Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg.

Additional light was recently shed on Bezos' charitable donations after news that his ex-wife, MacKenzie Bezos, had signed the Giving Pledge, in which participants promise to give away more than half of their wealth during their lifetimes or in their wills.

Among the five richest people in America, Jeff Bezos, who has a net worth of $114 billion, is the only one who hasn't signed on to the philanthropic commitment.

It's not clear why Bezos has avoided joining the Giving Pledge, an initiative started by Bill Gates and Warren Buffett almost a decade ago. His charitable history has "remained largely a mystery," The New York Times wrote in 2017 after Bezos posted a "request for ideas" for philanthropy on Twitter.

A nonprofit bearing Bezos' last name, the Bezos Family Foundation, has given millions of dollars to the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. However, the fund is run entirely by the Amazon CEO's parents and hasn't received contributions from Bezos himself, according to Inside Philanthropy.

Additionally, Bezos had never appeared on the annual list of America's 50 largest donors until 2018, when he took the top spot with the launch of a $2 billion fund for education programs for the homeless. Still, that donation represented only about 1.3% of his net worth at the time, according to Quartz.

Here are all the major donations Bezos is known to have given to charity since becoming a billionaire in 1997:

Original author: Paige Leskin

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May
28

How to play YouTube videos in the background on your iPhone without having to keep the app open

Say you're riding shotgun in your friend's car. It's Friday night, and you're playing music from your favorite YouTube playlist. Then, someone asks you to look up directions. Since your iPhone is already connected to the car's stereo, once you leave YouTube, the music stops and everyone in the car collectively sighs.

YouTube lovers have long expressed dismay over this inconvenience. There used to be a way to get around this by navigating to YouTube using Safari instead of the YouTube app and playing music from there, but that trick has since been patched out.

That means that, unfortunately, the only way to play music from YouTube in the background is to sign up for YouTube's paid subscription service, YouTube Premium.

YouTube Premium costs $11.99 a month for a single account ($6.99 a month if you're a student), or $17.99 a month for six accounts in a "Family Plan." Signing up will get rid of all ads on YouTube videos, allow you to download videos to watch offline, and give you access to both "YouTube Original" videos and YouTube Music, the site's music streaming service. And, of course, you'll receive the ability to listen to audio from YouTube videos in the background, even while using other apps.

Here's how to sign up for YouTube Premium, and start listening to YouTube whenever you want in the background.

How to play YouTube in the background using YouTube Premium

First, you need to sign up for YouTube Premium.

1. Navigate to the YouTube Premium homepage, which can be found here.

2. Click the blue button that says "TRY IT FREE," which will open a window for you to enter your payment information.

Go to the YouTube Premium homepage to start the signup process. William Antonelli/Business Insider

3. Enter your payment information and zip code. YouTube Premium offers a one-month free trial, so if this is your first time signing up, you won't be charged the $11.99 fee until a month has passed. YouTube may, however, charge you a $1 fee at first to make sure that the payment information you've given them is valid — this dollar should be refunded within a few days.

Enter the payment information that you want to be used to pay for Premium. William Antonelli/Business Insider

4. The YouTube account you used to sign up for Premium will be immediately granted access to all the new features of Premium.

Now, here's how to play songs in the background.

5. Open the YouTube app.

6. Navigate to the video that you want to listen to in the background.

7. Once it starts playing, feel free to return to your phone's Home screen, and open other apps. You can pause and play the video's audio from the iPhone's Control Center, by opening it and holding your finger down on the music tab for a moment.

You can control volume and playback from the iPhone's Control Center. William Antonelli/Business Insider

As long as you're subscribed to YouTube Premium, you'll be able to listen to YouTube videos without having the app open.

Original author: Meira Gebel

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Mar
20

Zoom warns investors that the app's huge boom in popularity is making it more expensive for the company to do business (ZM)

There are plenty of travel apps for researching flights and hotels or generally organizing your trips, but indie German developer Hans Knöechel struggled to find one that could gather all his travel-related information in one place, in addition to allowing a group of friends to collaborate on the trip-planning process. So he built one for himself: Lambus, an app that lets you organize your travel documents, manage expenses, plus collaborate and chat with fellow co-travelers about the trip being planned.

Previously a senior software engineer at Appcelerator in San Jose, Knöechel came up with the idea for Lambus after being on the road a lot himself, and finding existing travel apps lacking.

“When traveling, you either use a manual folder with dozens of pages for all your information — or countless apps to display travel expenses, booking confirmations and waypoint planning. Alternatives like Google Trips, Sygic and Roadtrippers were always limited to one person and never offered all the features I needed during the trip,” he explains. “This gave me the idea for Lambus: A collaborative platform on which travel groups — in real-time — can display all the properties of the trip in an easy-to-use platform: Waypoints, travel expenses, booking documents, notes, photos and chat,” he says.

The resulting app he refers to as a “Swiss Army Knife” for travel planning.

Like TripIt and others, travel documents can be shared with Lambus by forwarding emails to a unique personal email address. The imported documents — like plane tickets or Airbnb stays — will then be made available to all group attendees automatically. This is handy for group trips where often multiple people take turns making the various reservations, but don’t have any easy way to share the information with others beyond forwarding emails or writing down information in a shared online document.

Documents can also be uploaded through an “Import PDF” feature, as an alternative to email sharing. And photos can be added by snapping a picture or importing from the phone’s Camera Roll, as well.

The photo feature is handy for saving those miscellaneous pieces of travel information — like how to access an Airbnb upon arrival, travel directions posted on an event or venue’s website, a helpful online review you saved and more. It’s also a fast way to import any other information, without having to rely on email or uploads.

In the expenses section, you can keep track of either private or group expenses by entering the amount and what it was for, and, optionally, if it’s been paid.

While largely aimed at group travel because of the collaboration and built-in chat features, the app can be used for solo trips, too.


In testing the app, we found there were a few kinks that still needed to be corrected.

The calendar, for example, didn’t include the days of the week, only the dates — which was unusual. The app also had trouble finding some points of interest — like a convention center, for example, when it was entered directly in the search box. (It came up when we searched for a “nearby place” to an existing waypoint, oddly.) This appears to be a bug.

Some parts of the German app hadn’t been localized to English, either. For instance, when viewing the detail page for a waypoint, the “On My List” section read: “Noch keine Orte in der Nähe geplant.” (Meaning: “No places planned nearby.”) 

More importantly, Lambus didn’t turn imported documents into an easy-to-read itinerary, as TripIt does. The travel plan, instead, included a list of waypoints but not the dates and times, with all the details like flight numbers or hotel reservation numbers. That’s perhaps a deal-breaker in terms of dumping all other travel apps in favor of Lambus alone.

Despite its quirks, the concept here is solid and the app is nicely designed with a bright and clean look-and-feel. The app is only a couple of months old, so given a little more time, attention and a few more releases, it has the potential to become a seriously useful travel tool for group trip planning.

The name, “Lambus,” is an odd choice, we have to also note.

Knöechel says he was searching for a word that was easy to pronounce in many different languages, and settled on this — a domain name he already owned.

While Knöechel is the sole founder, Lambus is a team of seven, including mainly university friends, he says. The startup is seed-funded by the Ministry of Economics in Germany (~€120,000), and eventually has plans to generate affiliate revenue by offering hotel, flight, Airbnb and activity bookings in-app.

Lambus is live on iOS and Google Play.

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Jun
02

Tictrac secures $7.5M to expand employee wellbeing platform as WFH balloons

Warranties for purchased products is a $40 billion annual market. But in their current form, they are considered by some to be one of the bigger scams in the world of retail because they cost so much and often return too little.

Now there is an alternative emerging. A startup out of Minneapolis, Minn. called Upsie has decided to wage war on the old warranty, with more reasonable pricing (typically 70% lower than what the retailer offers) and a much more modern approach to selling and managing the warranty.

Its bet is that lower prices, and more flexible options for ordering, tracking and claiming against warranties, will drive more users to its service and take some business away from the retailers that largely dominate the market today. Today it’s announcing that it has raised $5 million led by True Ventures to build out that business in the U.S. Techstars Ventures, Matchstick Ventures, Syndicate Fund, M25 and angel investor Marc Belton also participated.

If you’ve ever purchased an expensive consumer electronics product, you know the problem that Upsie is tackling: warranties can cost a lot, and in many cases you’re not sure what you might even be getting out of it. And if you do find yourself in the unfortunate predicament of needing to file a claim, you may find the process a little less than efficient, but hopefully not as bad as this:

“If you buy a product worth $900, a warranty might cost an extra $130, but that warranty might cost only $10 from the insurance company,” said Clarence Bethea, the CEO and founder of Upsie.

When an expensive purchase like a consumer electronics product breaks down, the buyer needs to pay out big money for repairs or replacements, and that worry drives many of those customers to pay a big sum for the guarantee that someone else will cover those liabilities.

The operative words in that last paragraph are “big sum”: a warranty can represent peace of mind, and sometimes actually help in those cases where something relatively new does break down, but one of the big issues is the mark-up that providers put on a service that preys on the fear of needing it — in some cases a warranty can cost as much as 900% more than the policy would cost if it were purchased directly from an insurance provider.

Bethea used to be a consultant to big-box retailers and in the work he did, he realised quickly that the retailers were taking advantage of consumers when they were selling warranties on top of products. “Consumers don’t know what the warranties actually cost,” he said. “That’s what pushed me into this.”

Upsie gives consumers the option to purchase warranties up to 60 days after the sale (or 45 for smartphones). The product itself needs a minimum 90-day warranty from the manufacturers themselves, and the Upsie warranty does not kick in until 30 days after it’s purchased — the idea being that it picks up right after the manufacturer warranty ends.

The warranties can be purchased online or through an app and they apply currently to around 15 categories and hundreds of electric goods covering areas like computers, wearables, phones, TVs, small and large appliances and outdoor tools. The Upsie app in itself is like your warranty file in your filing cabinet, except much simpler and lighter and less cluttered: it stores receipts, lets you scan SKUs to register the goods and more to make it easier. Then after a user purchases the warranty, it can be managed and claims can be filed by way of Upsie’s app.

The basic idea behind Upsie is reminiscent of the direct-to-consumer brands that have grown in popularity over the last several years.

Just as these have leveraged the web, mobile apps and more recently social media to build direct relationships with consumers, Upsie is also bypassing retailers and hoping that consumers will consider their cheaper alternatives, which in actuality have been negotiated with the same warranty service providers that the retailers use. It currently works with Centricity, and the plan is to expand it to a wider range over time.

Other companies have built businesses in the area of providing warranty services outside of what retailers offer, such as SquareTrade, which was acquired by AllState, and Asurion. Puneet Agarwal, a partner at True Ventures, believes that it stands out.

“Upsie is the only consumer-facing brand in the space, whereas everyone else is more of a back-end provider,” he said. “Their subscriber growth and engagement are tremendous and the end consumer identifies with them. Because of their direct consumer focus, they also offer a level of pricing, convenience and customer service the industry has not seen.” He added that the “big ambition” is “to make the idea of ‘upsie-ing’ a product as part of the the everyday lexicon of the consumer.”

Bethea said that one of the big early challenges was convincing insurance companies that D2C was a viable idea — which dissipated as insurance companies, like all brands and B2B2C businesses, began to consider the plethora of ways that people are buying goods today, which increasingly extend well outside the realm of just retailers.

The other challenge that is still one that Upsie will continue to work to surmount as it continues growing is convincing consumers to change their behavior. “Initially it was about convincing the industry that this is a market,” he said. “Today it’s awareness and giving consumers another option. ‘I didn’t know I could leave the register and purchase a plan afterwards’ is what we want people to be thinking.”

So far, the results have been pretty positive. Since exiting beta in 2016, Bethea said the company has grown 300% each year. Services are live only in the U.S., and while it works toward expanding to international markets, it will also be adding auto warranties to its plans next.

Living outside of Silicon Valley as I do, companies that are outliers from the normal pattern that often list the same litany of credentials (including but not limited to grads from Stanford or MIT, possible stint at YC, office in San Francisco, past history at other tech companies), but are still thriving, do tend to catch my eye. Upsie, with its roots in the Midwest and an African American founder (also not very common at the typical SV startup), and tackling something that is fundamentally broken but not flashy, ticks some of those boxes.

Turns out that True sees and wants to seek out more of this, too.

“Great companies are being built everywhere,” said Agarwal. “More and more of the companies we invest in are outside of the Valley or are building teams outside of the Valley and we encourage it. It can be a tremendous competitive advantage both from a talent and cost perspective. We have had great success investing in places like Michigan, Montana, Oregon, Wisconsin, Washington, even recently in Africa, and now in Minnesota with Upsie. I still do see a lot of bias from investors not wanting to invest outside of the Valley. There is no question they will miss out not because of high prices in the Valley but because of the opportunity.”

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May
28

VCs give failed AR startup Meta a do-over with new CEO, corporate entity

AR startup Meta’s original investors might have been screwed by the company’s collapse and fire sale, but a pair of VC firms are giving the brand another shot with a new corporate entity and CEO that the new backers hope will lead to a less abysmal outcome.

Meta Company is now Meta View, “a wholly new and unaffiliated entity.”

Meta v1’s not-so-differentiated approach to the AR market led it into trouble competing with teams from Magic Leap and Microsoft that were more focused on new technologies, though Meta was also well-financed with some $73 million in funding raised, according to Crunchbase. The issue came as the company burned through that cash with the expectation that more was on the way. The unexpected dissolution of a $20 million funding round sunk the company and left it scrambling.

Ultimately, the company’s assets were sold months ago — for “less than the bank was owed” — to a mystery buyer that we now know was Olive Tree Ventures .

This isn’t the most conventional investment for Israel-based Olive Tree Ventures. One would imagine a deal like this comes from a specialized investor who finds dead startups, puts a new coat of paint on their IP and attempts to revive old relationships, but Olive Tree is just an early-stage VC firm. The fund generally focuses its investments on Israeli startups, though Meta View will be based in San Mateo, and has traditionally invested in healthtech, something the AR startup was not particularly focused on in its former life.

“We remain extremely bullish on the potential for spatial computing. Our belief was so strong that we did a somewhat non-traditional VC deal to acquire the assets, start a new company and find a new CEO with a vision and focus we believed in,” said Olive Tree Ventures GP Mayer Gniwisch in a statement.

The new company is also launching with an undisclosed amount of funding from Montreal-based BNSG Capital .

It’s not entirely clear what the worth is in so fully reviving the Meta brand, other than scrounging up some faith in the Meta 2 headsets, on which the company staked its reputation. The company will not be selling the Meta 2, but will be supporting previously sold headsets as it works on new hardware.

While this whole situation feels a tad dodgy, the new company’s CEO Jay Wright lends the new venture some credibility. Wright was a co-founder of Vuforia, which really helped blaze a lot of trails in the AR space, and he has led the product at PTC since it was acquired in 2015. Not mentioned in any communications from the new company is the name of Meta’s founding CEO Meron Gribetz, whose role, if any, with Meta View is unclear.

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May
28

Taking a Capital Efficient Company Public and Beyond: Medidata CEO Tarek Sherif (Part 2) - Sramana Mitra

Tarek Sherif: Working for a large corporation was a good experience in the sense that I figured out what I didn’t want to do. I came out of there determined to never be in a role where I...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Mar
20

Healthcare startups Nurx and Carbon Health ship at-home COVID-19 test sample kits

According to an IBISWorld research report, the online survey software market in the US is estimated to grow 5% this year to $1.1 billion. The growth appears to have slowed down from the 12% annual...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Aug
22

ThredUp, whose second-hand goods will start appearing at Macy’s and JCPenney, just raised a bundle

Imagine that when you were a kid, someone told you that your dreams are important for the world and that what you do matters right now.

Dream Tank Kids Exploring the Techstars Boulder Accelerator

Now, match that with an epic adventure of creating future realities, throw in rockstar mentors, entrepreneurship skills training, tech, the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals, and you have Dream Tank.

Big things happen when someone imagines an awesome new reality. While adults can do this, we are often stuck in a system that is limited in its thinking and driven by incrementalism. We are oppressed by the now, rather than inspired by what could be.

Kids see things in a different way. Take a look at the student climate strike that a 16-year-old girl in Sweden started. Greta Thunberg, who is currently on the cover of TIME magazine, started striking from school on Fridays last fall. She started a movement where 1263 strikes happened in 107 countries last Friday, May 24. The message is clear: why should I be studying for a future I won’t even have, so let’s take collective action now!

Dream Tank is a summer program designed for kids and teens who want to launch and implement their ideas to address real-world challenges. Like many other entrepreneurial things I’ve been involved in, it has its roots in Boulder. It is currently expanding to offer year-round accelerator-for-kids-and-teens programming through summer camps, after-school programs, and a homeschool program for teens.

This summer, Dream Tank has partnered up with different Boulder institutions such as the Museum of Boulder, The Riverside, Niche Workspaces, and Peregrine Crypto Cafe to create specific activities for different interests. Each program is designed for kids to choose a social or environmental issue they want to address. All of the summer programs end in a demo day event where the community is invited to listen, support, and partner with the kids.

Amy and I support Dream Tank because we want to support radically innovative new ideas for the future. If you want your kid or teen to have a voice, have fun, and learn some tools that can make their dreams a reality, sign them up for a summer camp at Dream Tank.

Brad hanging with some Dream Tank kids (and the co-founder, Heidi Cuppari) at the Techstars Sustainability Accelerator Demo Day
Original author: Brad Feld

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May
28

Capital Efficient Entrepreneurship: Bongo Learning CEO Josh Kamrath (Part 5) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: Who is the biggest of your partners? Josh Kamrath: D2L and Cengage are tied right now. Sramana Mitra: They have course material and you complement that with the video assessment. ...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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May
27

Taking a Capital Efficient Company Public and Beyond: Medidata CEO Tarek Sherif (Part 1) - Sramana Mitra

We’ve covered Medidata in TLHIT before. This time, we look at the entrepreneurial journey of this wonderful company. Sramana Mitra: Let’s start at the very beginning of the journey. Where are...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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May
27

Capital Efficient Entrepreneurship: Bongo Learning CEO Josh Kamrath (Part 4) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: How did you sell? Selling faculty-by-faculty and direct door-to-door is not a viable scalable model. How did you actually get to market? Josh Kamrath: To answer your question directly,...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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May
27

Grofers Revives With Focus on Unit Economics and Private Labels - Sramana Mitra

The Indian food and grocery market accounts for about 70% of the retail market, which is why every major player from Amazon to Ola is eyeing it. Online food grocer Grofers has recently raised $220...

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Original author: Sramana_Mitra

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Jun
02

Former Pollen employees were asked to sign an ‘NDA masked as a severance agreement’

Insider Pickswrites about products and services to help you navigate when shopping online. Insider Inc. receives a commission from our affiliate partners when you buy through our links, but our reporting and recommendations are always independent and objective.

Voracious readers, get ready to become voracious listeners, too. For all the times that you couldn't put your book down but had to because — despite your best efforts — you cannot, in fact, drive and read at the same time, there is now a solution. Audible, the company behind the largest selection of audiobooks and original audio shows (nearly 500,000, to be exact), is here to save you from cliffhangers.

While I've always purported to prefer reading to listening, I'll admit that listening to Meryl Streep read Nora Ephron titles is something that I cannot do in my own head. Similarly, while I have yet to score tickets to "Hamilton," I like to think that listening to Lin-Manuel Miranda and Karen Olivo narrate "The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao" by Junot Diaz comes as a close second.

There are also some pretty solid Audible originals. For the political junkies in the room, there's "Conversations with Joe," which offers the highlights from Vice President and presidential candidate Joe Biden's tour across the US, in which he spoke of his son's Beau's life and battle with brain cancer. Or, there's the extremely popular "Heads Will Roll," featuring Kate McKinnon and Emily Lynne, which listeners have called "TV for your ears" and "unbelievably funny."

In short, regardless of what content you like to read or hear, you can probably find it on this Amazon-owned service. Here's how to get Audible and use it on your devices.

Audible

Sign up for an Amazon membership

In order to use Audible, you'll have to be an Amazon member, but not necessarily an Amazon Prime member. Unlike many of Amazon's other offerings, this isn't an add-on service that is contingent on your having a Prime membership. Rather, all you need is a standard Amazon account.

In order to get set up, you'll want to navigate your way over to the top righthand corner of the Amazon home screen, where you'll see an option that reads Hello, Sign In. If you roll over that, you'll see text that says, New Customer? Start here. From there, you'll just need to enter your name, email, and password, and you're all set.

Note that while you don't have to be a Prime member, a Prime membership would grant you free access to Audible content, so if you're on the fence about it, this may sweeten the deal in one direction or another.

Sign up for Audible

If you're not interested in going the Prime route, then you'll simply need to sign up for an Audible account by heading over to this new member page. You'll be granted a 30-day free trial, after which you'll begin paying the monthly $14.95 fee.

Start searching for titles

Every month that you're an Audible member, you'll receive one credit, which is good for any title, regardless of price. But of course, you'll want to listen to more than just one book a month. In that case, you'll have to buy these additional titles. The good news, though, is that they stay in your permanent collection, so you can go back to them time and time again and build the library of your dreams.

Amazon

You can listen to Audible on all these devices

As it stands, you can use Audible on any iPhone or Android device, thanks to the Audible app. The service is also compatible with a wide range of other devices, including:

Fire phone Fire tablet The Kindle app Kindle Oasis 9th Generation Kindle Oasis 8th Generation Kindle 8th Generation Kindle Touch Kindle Keyboard Kindle DX Kindle 2nd Generation Kindle 1st Generation The Audible apps for iOS, Android, and Windows Audible software for PC and Mac MP3 players and other devices compatible with Audible's file format

How to use the Audible app

Malarie Gokey/Business Insider

To start listening, simply find the title on your My Library page or the Cloud tab on your mobile application. You can then either download the audiobook onto your computer to listen or transfer to another device; stream and listen via the Audible Cloud Player, which can be found on the My Library page; find the title in the cloud on your mobile device for downloading; or, if you're going old school, burn the audiobook onto a disc. Note, though, that you can only use the last option with iTunes software.

Sign up for a 30-day free trial of Audible here and pay $14.95/month after the trial ends.

Sign up for an Amazon Prime membership here.

Original author: Lulu Chang

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