Sep
27

'It's just another choice': An Amazon exec explains why its new store looks just like the website (AMZN)

Amazon's new store concept has landed.

Called Amazon 4-star, the new concept will only stock items that customers have rated four stars or above, on average. That means it will include only the best of the best; Amazon says the current product assortment averages 4.4 stars.

It opened in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood on Thursday and has already made quite the splash.

The store essentially uses the same format as the brand's Amazon Books store, which has expanded to 17 locations. This time, though, Amazon is selling items from all categories, including toys and games, home and kitchen, and yes, books. Amazon 4-star uses the same customer reviews as Amazon Books and the same cashless checkout process.

The hook to bring customers in, according to Amazon's director of stores, Mariana Garavaglia, is the fact that everything the store carries has already been vetted by shoppers' reviews on Amazon.com. In that way, it is "built by customers."

Amazon 4-star is "all about discovering great products from our most popular categories in a different way versus what you might do online," Garavaglia said. "It's just another choice."

In reality, that means the store is a reflection of Amazon.com in the physical world.

"The store is a perfect brick-and-mortar manifestation of the Amazon online-shopping experience ... there is a collection of bestsellers, but the shopping experience still feels somewhat overwhelming," Simeon A. Siegel, an analyst at Nomura Instinet, wrote in a note to investors.

That means it's targeting the same Amazon shopper — just in a new space — with a curated but varied assortment.

That contrasts with Amazon's other physical stores, which are targeted at specific audiences: grocery shoppers (Whole Foods), convenience-store shoppers (Amazon Go), and book shoppers (Amazon Books).

The offering of somewhat chaotic curation may still be appealing, though, according to Sucharita Kodali, a VP and principal analyst at Forrester.

"People like curated selections, especially male shoppers, and this concept helps them expand beyond books," Kodali said in an email to Business Insider. "My only question is that there are a lot of crappy Chinese products with fake 5-star reviews on Amazon. Hopefully the store doesn't have any of those."

Original author: Dennis Green

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Jun
29

How to change your Epic Games account password or reset it if you've forgotten it

Amazon just opened a new store concept called Amazon 4-star.

The store, located in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood, will feature products that Amazon customers have rated four stars and above, as well as products that the website's data shows are trending and are on wish lists.

The store is divided into similar sections as on Amazon's website, carrying a wide range of products from devices and electronics to toys, games, books, home decor, and gifts. It also has displays of locally trending products, product bundles, and the highest-rated products.

This isn't Amazon's first physical store — it has been expanding its Amazon Books and Amazon Go stores. 4-star, however, is the first of its kind.

Prices at the store are displayed on digital price tags, with lower prices listed for Prime members. Some products were only $3-4 cheaper for Prime members, while others were half the price for Prime members. Reviews from Amazon customers were also displayed by products.

Here's what it's like to shop there:

Original author: Jessica Tyler

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Sep
27

Elon Musk responds to SEC's lawsuit, says he's 'deeply saddened and disappointed' (TSLA)

Tesla CEO Elon Musk said he is "deeply saddened and disappointed" by the Securities and Exchange Commission's lawsuit against him in a company statement to Business Insider.

"This unjustified action by the SEC leaves me deeply saddened and disappointed. I have always taken action in the best interests of truth, transparency and investors. Integrity is the most important value in my life and the facts will show I never compromised this in any way," Musk said.

The SEC filed a lawsuit against Musk on Thursday, alleging that Musk made "false and misleading statements" in August about taking the automaker private. The agency said in the lawsuit that it seeks to bar Musk from being an officer or director of a public company.

On August 7, Musk said that he had "funding secured" to convert Tesla into a private company at $420 per share and only needed a shareholder vote to confirm a go-private deal. In its lawsuit, the SEC alleges that Musk had not acquired the necessary funding or even discussed the terms he mentioned with any potential funding sources.

Have a Tesla news tip? Contact this reporter at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Original author: Mark Matousek

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Jun
29

Tesla celebrates its 10th year as a public company today. Here are the most important moments in its history. (TSLA)

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has been named as the sole defendant in a lawsuit filed by the United States Securities and Exchange Commision on Thursday.

The suit, filed with the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, is centered around a "series of false and misleading statements" made by Elon Musk.

Tesla was not named as a party in the complaint.

The SEC alleges that Musk "falsely indicated" on Twitter that "funding was secured" for a deal to take the company private at $420, which was more than 20% higher than the company's trading price at the time.

"In truth and in fact, Musk had not even discussed, much less confirmed, key deal terms, including price, with any potential funding source," the SEC said in the complaint.

According to the SEC, these statements and omissions "caused significant confusion and disruption in the market for Tesla's stock and resulting harm to investors."

Tesla's stock price and trading volume skyrocketed in the wake of Musk's tweets.

The SEC's complaint points to four specific tweets by Musk.

The first tweet in question was posted by Musk at 12:48 p.m. on August 7, stating: "Am considering taking Tesla private at $420. Funding secured."

Over the next few hours, Musk followed up by posting three more tweets containing what the SEC calls "additional materially false and misleading statements."

At 2:00 p.m., the Tesla CEO tweeted "My hope is *all* current investors remain with Tesla even if we're private. Would create special purpose fund enabling anyone to stay with Tesla. Already do this with Fidelity's SpaceX investment."

At 2:13 p.m., Musk followed with: "Shareholders could either to sell at 420 or hold shares & go private."

At 3:36 p.m., Musk tweeted, "Investor support is confirmed. Only reason why this is not certain is that it's contingent on a shareholder vote."

"This unjustified action by the SEC leaves me deeply saddened and disappointed," Elon Musk said in a statement to Business Insider on Thursday. "I have always taken action in the best interests of truth, transparency and investors. Integrity is the most important value in my life and the facts will show I never compromised this in any way."

Have a Tesla news tip? Contact this reporter at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Original author: Benjamin Zhang

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Sep
27

The SEC alleges that Elon Musk's $420 price point was a weed reference to amuse his girlfriend (TSLA)

The Securities and Exchange Commission is suing Tesla founder and CEO Elon Musk.

The suit accuses Musk of false or misleading statements about taking Tesla private at $420 per share. As part of the filing, the SEC reveals what Musk says his reasoning was for the exact price point.

The filing says that Musk claims he calculated the $420 price point based on a 20% premium on the day's closing share price, which resulted in a price of $419.

"Musk stated that he rounded the price up to $420 because he had recently learned about the number's significance in marijuana culture and thought his girlfriend 'would find it funny, which admittedly is not a great reason to pick a price,'" the filing reads.

Azealia Banks shared this message between herself and what appears to be Grimes on Instagram in August. Kate Taylor

Musk's claims are in line with a series of text messages shared by rapper Azealia Banks on Instagram and in communication with Business Insider in August.

Banks had stayed in one of Musk's properties the weekend after he tweeted his plans to take Tesla private. While the pair only briefly interacted (Banks had been planning to collaborate with Musk's girlfriend, indie pop musician Grimes), she told Business Insider she saw the CEO "scrounging for investors."

In the texts with Grimes, which Banks posted on her Instagram story in August, Musk's girlfriend appears to state: "he got into weed cuz of me and he's super entertained by 420 so when he decided to take the stock private he calculated it was worth 419$ so he rounded up to 420 for a laugh and now the sec is investigating him for fraud."

Banks did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for a follow-up comment, but tweeted that she is "really scared" for Musk following the news of the investigation. Grimes' representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The SEC investigation aims to bar Musk from leading a public company, due in part to false and misleading claims made on Twitter.

"Musk knew or was reckless in not knowing that each of these statements was false and/or misleading because he did not have an adequate basis in fact for his assertions," the complaint states.

Musk said in a statement that the SEC's actions have left him "deeply saddened and disappointed."

"I have always taken action in the best interests of truth, transparency and investors," Musk said. "Integrity is the most important value in my life and the facts will show I never compromised this in any way."

If you have a story to share about Tesla or Elon Musk, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Original author: Kate Taylor

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Sep
27

2 of Amazon's businesses are going to boost its stock by another 25%, analyst says (AMZN)

Devitt added that store closures in the US are continuing at a rapid pace, but consumer sentiment and employment rates are near an 18-year peak, which should benefit its e-commerce business. Meanwhile, Amazon is investing in a number of initiatives, including Prime and further capturing offline retail opportunities, such as acquiring Whole Foods and updating its Amazon Go features. All show that Amazon will grab more market share in the retail space, according to Devitt.

"We support where Amazon's investment dollars are focused as we believe this better positions the company for continued market share gains and opportunity for greater margin expansion once the company emerges from the current investment cycle," Devitt said.

Amazon posted $11.6 billion of revenue from cloud business for the six month ended in June, up 49% from last year. By Devitt's calculation, global public cloud spending is expected to grow 18% in the next three years, and Amazon's cloud business will grow 42% in the same period — more than two times faster than the overall market. 

"We expect continued market share gains from Amazon’s cloud business driven by increased adoption among larger enterprises and the public sector, wallet share gains from existing customers, and ongoing product innovation,"  Devitt said. 

On Thursday, Amazon opened a new concept store called Amazon 4-Star, in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood. The store only sells items that customers have rated four stars and above, as well as products that the website's data shows are trending and on customers' wish lists.

Amazon shares gained almost 2% on Thursday. They're up 70% this year.

Now read:

Markets Insider

Original author: Ethel Jiang

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Sep
27

Federal prosecutors investigating shady media-buying practices in the ad industry have reportedly begun issuing subpoenas

Federal prosecutors investigating media-buying practices in the ad industry have begun issuing subpoenas as part of the probe, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday, citing people familiar with the matter.

The investigation, which was first reported by trade magazine Campaign in June, involves the FBI examining the ad industry's media-buying practices including agencies receiving rebates from media outlets.

One ad agency under scrutiny in the investigation is media conglomerate Vivendi-owned Havas, according to the Journal. A spokeswoman for Omnicom told the Journal that the firm hasn't received a subpoena from federal prosecutors.

The issue of non-transparent media buying has been thrust into the spotlight since 2016, when a bombshell report by the Association of National Advertisers (ANA) revealed that rebates and other non-transparent practices were "pervasive" in the US.

The report didn't name any specific media agencies, and most of them shrugged and broadly denied wrongdoing when it was released.

Rebates, bonuses and discounts are a common business practice in some parts of the world, including Europe, China and Brazil, but haven't historically been a part of US deals.

Business Insider reached out to a Havas representative for comment but had not heard back at the time of publication.

Meanwhile, media agencies continue to face tremendous pressure as their business models come under threat with many clients including consumer packaged goods giant P&G pushing for greater transparency and cutting back on ad fees. Several brands have even started to take ad processes in-house.

Original author: Tanya Dua

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Sep
27

Tesla plunges after the SEC sues Elon Musk over tweets (TSLA)

James Glover / Reuters

Telsa shares sank by as much as 11% in after-hours trading on news that the Securities and Exchange Commission sued Elon Musk. The suit alleged Musk falsely claimed on Twitter that he had secured funding to take the electric-car maker private. In a company statement after the tweet, Musk said Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund, which recently invested in the company, had brought up taking Tesla private multiple times for almost two years.Watch Tesla trade in real time here.

Tesla shares fell by as much as 11% in after-hours trading Thursday following news that the Securities and Exchange Commission had sued Elon Musk.

Bloomberg earlier reported that Musk, the electric-car maker's CEO, was facing a criminal probe over his tweet in August that he was considering taking the company private and had secured funding. 

The suit alleged that Musk falsely claimed he could take the company private, Bloomberg reported. It alleged that Musk made false and "reckless" statements, and sought undetermined civil penalties against Musk, the report said.  

In a company statement after the tweet, Musk said Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund had brought up taking Tesla private multiple times for almost two years. The fund recently bought a 5% stake in Tesla. Musk said he met with the fund's managing director on July 31 and left that meeting confident that a deal to take Tesla private would close.

Markets Insider

Original author: Akin Oyedele

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Sep
27

Another Tesla exec has left the company. Here are all the key names who have departed this year. (TSLA)

Tesla has seen a lot of executives leave this year.

As the company has faced production issues, concerns about its financial health, a reported investigation from the SEC, and questions about the decision-making of CEO Elon Musk, departures from senior employees have only added to the impression of instability.

Five senior employees appear to have left the company this month alone: senior director of production and quality Antoin Abou-Haydar, head of human resources Gabrielle Toledano, chief accountant Dave Morton, head of communications Sarah O'Brien (her departure was announced in August, but her final day at the company was September 7, according to Bloomberg), and vice president of global supply management Liam O'Connor.

These are the key names who have left Tesla in 2018, when they left, and where they went next (according to their LinkedIn pages or company announcements):

Have a Tesla news tip? Contact this reporter at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Original author: Mark Matousek

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Sep
27

May Mobility puts autonomous shuttles on the streets of Columbus, Ohio

This December a set of autonomous vehicles will start roaming the streets of Columbus, Ohio, in an effort to turn this bustling Midwestern community into the first smart city. The project, which is part of the Smart Columbus and DriveOhio initiatives, is the first step in launching a fully autonomous shuttle route in the city.

“We’re proud to have the first self-driving shuttle in Ohio being tested on the streets of Columbus,” said Mayor Andrew J. Ginther. “This pilot will shape future uses of this emerging technology in Columbus and the nation. Residents win when we add more mobility options to our transportation ecosystem – making it easier to get to work, school or local attractions.”

Michigan-based May Mobility provided the shuttles and the team is training the autonomous vehicles to navigate Columbus streets. May Mobility already launched their vehicles in Detroit and this is the second full implementation of the tech.

The six-seater electric shuttles will follow a 3 mile route through downtown Columbus and the vehicles will start picking up passengers on December 1. Rides are free. May Mobility has already performed over 10,000 successful trips in Detroit. In Columbus the shuttles will drive the Scioto Mile loop, a scenic route through the city and by the Ohio River. A large digital display will show system information and there will be a single operator to oversee the trip and take control in case of emergency.

Founder Edwin Olson is a robotics professor at the University of Michigan and his team won the MAGIC competition in 2010.

“Cities are seeking cost-effective transportation services that will improve congestion in urban cores, and self-driving shuttles can offer a huge relief,” he said. “As we work toward a future where people can drive less and live more, we’re thrilled to be working with partners from Columbus to provide a new transportation experience that will make traveling through Columbus safe, reliable and personal.”

Columbus won the $40 million Smart City Challenge in June 2016 to test and implement smart city tech.

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Sep
27

Compound launches easy way to short cryptocurrencies

Think Ethereum and other crypto coins are overvalued? Now you can make money when their prices fall via Compound, which is launching its money market protocol for shorting cryptocurrencies today. The Coinbase and Andreessen Horowitz-funded startup today opens its simple web interface allowing users to borrow and short Ethereum, 0x’s ZRX, Brave’s BAT, and Augur’s REP token, or lend them through Compound to earn interest.

Compound’s protocol isn’t just useful for crypto haters, or HODLers who want to generate interest instead of just having their coins gathering dust in a wallet.  “If/when Compound scales, this will lead to some really interesting improvements in market structure, namely, fairer prices” Compound CEO Robert Leshner tells me.

The startup spent the summer completing a security audit by Trail Of Bits and adding 26 hedge fund partners who will trade with Compound, offering liquidity to independent investors looking to be matched with borrowers or lenders. Next, the startup wants to offer a stablecoin on its protocol, bring in big financial institutions to add even more liquidity, and partner with a wallet provider to make signup faster.

Compound users visit its site through a Web3 browser such as MetaMask or Coinbase Wallet and enter their Ethereum price. They can then view the interest rates for borrowing and shorting or lending and earning interest for each of the supported tokens. Compound’s secret sauce is that those interest rates are set algorithmically based on demand, though eventually it wants a community governance body to oversee this process. “It ranges from 5 percent to 45 percent APR depending on how scarce liquidity is . . . in general, we expect supply to outnumber borrowing about 5-1, and borrowing rates to be about 10 percent”.

To make sure no one thinks they’re getting scammed, Compound is also releasing a transparency dashboard users can view to check up on all the assets moving through the protocol and see what Compound is earning. It charges 10 percent of what borrowers pay in interest, with the rest going to the lender. That margin is what attracted the $8.2 seed round for Compound that also included Polychain Capital and Bain Capital Ventures.

It could also make crypto exchanges like Coinbase or Robinhood less attractive to users because leaving their coins there comes with the opportunity cost of not lending them for profit. Meanwhile, shorts could pop the volatile crypto bubble and push prices to more sensible and stable levels. That’s market health is a critical precursor to big banks and traditional investors diving into crypto.

[Disclosure: The author owns small positions in Bitcoin and Ethereum, but has no financial motive for writing this article, did not make trades in the week prior to this article, and doesn not plan to make trades in the 72 hours following publication.]

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Jun
27

Bootstrapping to $13 Million from the UK: David Lloyd, CEO of The Intern Group (Part 2) - Sramana Mitra

WndrCo, the consumer tech investment and holding company founded by longtime Hollywood executive Jeffrey Katzenberg, has invested $30 million in The Infatuation, a restaurant discovery platform.

The Infatuation made waves earlier this year when it purchased Zagat from Google, which had paid $151 million for the 40-year-old company in 2011. Despite efforts to makeover the Zagat app, the search giant ultimately decided to unload the perennial restaurant review and recommendation service and focus on expanding its database of restaurant recommendations organically.

New York-based The Infatuation was founded by music industry vets Chris Stang and Andrew Steinthal in 2009. It has previously raised $3.5 million for its mobile app, events, newsletter and personalized SMS-based recommendation tool.

Stang told TechCrunch this morning that they plan to use a good chunk of the funds to develop the new Zagat platform, which will be kept separate from The Infatuation.

“The first thing we want to do before we build anything is spend a lot of time researching how people have used Zagat in the past, how they want to use it in the future, what a community-driven platform could look like and how to apply community reviews and ratings to the brand,” said Stang, The Infatuation’s chief executive officer. “Zagat’s roots are in user-generated content. … What we are doing now is thinking through what that looks like with new tech applied to it. What it looks like in the digital age. How [we can] take our domain expertise and that legendary brand and make something new with it.”

The Infatuation will also expand to new cities beginning this fall with launches in Boston and Philadelphia. It’s already active in a dozen or so U.S. cities including Los Angeles, Seattle and San Francisco. The startup’s first and only international location is London.

Katzenberg, who began his Hollywood career at Paramount Pictures, began raising up to $2 billion for WndrCo about a year ago. Since then, he’s unveiled WndrCo’s new mobile video startup NewTV, which has raised $1 billion and hired Meg Whitman, the former president and CEO of Hewlett Packard, as CEO.

On top of that, WndrCo has invested in MixcloudAxiosNodeFlowspace, Whistle Sports, TYT Network and others.

Given The Infatuation founders’ experience in the entertainment industry, a partnership with Katzenberg was natural.

“We really felt like between content and technology they had … expertise on both sides,” Stang said. “The Infatuation is at its best when great content intersects with great technology, to find a fund that was perfectly suited to that was exciting.”

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Jun
29

The virtual state of corporate venture capital today

This year’s rush of IPOs from Chinese tech companies has dominated headlines, but what’s more interesting is how quickly they got there.

Traditionally, “going public” represented the gratifying culmination of sleepless nights and missed birthdays that went into building a company. The peak of a lengthy climb, where founders and VCs would finally see the fruits of their labor. 

However, Chinese companies appear to be reaching that peak much quicker than their American peers, heading to the public markets only a few years after initial venture investments, and often with little operating history. 

Analyzing twenty of the most high profile Chinese tech IPOs this year, the average time from first venture investment to IPO was only around three to five years. Take e-commerce platform Pinduoduo, which pulled in $1.6 billion less than three years after its Series A.  Or the recent IPO of EV-manufacturer NIO, which raised a billion dollars just three-and-a-half years after its Series A and having just delivered its first car in June.

China IPO data for 2018 compiled from NASDAQ, Pitchbook, and Crunchbase

That’s less than half the average 10-year timeline for venture-backed US tech companies that went public in 2018, including Dropbox, Eventbrite, and DocuSign, which all IPO’d more than a decade after their initial investments.

Differences in market maturity, government involvement, and support from large tech incumbents all undoubtedly play a factor, but the speed to liquidity for the Chinese companies is still astounding.

Faster liquidity can push cycle of returns, fundraising, reinvestment

Speed to liquidity is a critical metric for the health of a startup ecosystem. It creates a positive cycle where faster liquidity can drive faster fundraising, faster reinvestment, faster startup building, and faster public liquidity again.  An accelerated cycle could be especially appealing for funds with LPs that require faster returns due to cash commitments or otherwise.

It’s important to note that venture returns are a function of capital and time, so quicker exits will also drive higher returns for the same amount invested.  For example, a $1 million investment with a $5 million exit after ten years would generate an Internal Rate of Return (a commonly used metric to evaluate VC performance) of 20%.  If the same exit occurred after five years, the IRR would be 50%. 

Liquidity is a key consideration as China’s influence on the flow of global venture capital intensifies. As China’s tech ecosystem sees more of its darlings mature and more consistently deliver smashing exits, investments in China will have to be a more serious consideration for VCs, even if only to minimize the sheer amount of time, resources, and painstaking energy needed to build a company in the U.S.

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Sep
27

1Mby1M Virtual Accelerator Investor Forum: With Steve Beck of Serra Ventures (Part 1) - Sramana Mitra

Responding to a popular request, we are now sharing transcripts of our investor podcast interviews in this new series. The following interview with Steve Beck was recorded in May 2018. Steve Beck,...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Sep
27

1Mby1M Virtual Accelerator Investor Forum: With Vivek Ladsariya of SineWave Ventures (Part 4) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: Can you talk to me a bit about how you view TAM? I’ll give you the context of where I’m coming from in asking this question. We are in April 2018. Lots of stuff have already been...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Jan
24

Fiverr acquires And Co, maker of software for freelancers

Entrepreneur First (EF), the company builder and “talent first” investor, held its tenth London Demo Day this afternoon. This time around the even had a decidedly more international bent as it combined pitches from the London and recently launched Berlin programs.

Once again, the pitches took place in front of a nearly overcapacity crowd at King’s Place in London’s King Cross area, and saw a 24 startups pitch their wares to investors, press and other actors in the European tech scene.

EF stands out from the many other demo days that the U.K. capital city hosts because of the way the investor backs individuals “pre-team, pre-idea” — meaning that the companies pitching only came into existence over the last 6 months and perhaps may never have done so without the founders bashing heads during the program.

Unusually, aside from the upstarts presenting on stage, there were no other EF announcements today, which is in stark contrast to most previous demo days. However, I’m hearing there could be some big EF news coming quite shortly and this is likely a case of EF lining up its PR ducks in a row and choosing to shoot them down one news opportunity at a time. Besides, the company builder has had more than its fair share of announcements over the last twelve months.

In addition to existing programs in London and Singapore, this year saw EF expand to Hong Kong and Paris, as well as Berlin. And almost exactly a year ago, EF announced a $12.4 million funding round led by Silicon Valley’s Greylock Partners, and that Greylock’s Reid Hoffman had joined the company builder’s board. The capital — to be used for operational purposes and separate from EF’s multiple investment funds — was raised to enable EF to scale its program in multiple tech startup/academic hubs around the world, and where it deemed the EF “secret sauce” can bring the most value.

Meanwhile, the themes for EF’s tenth London Demo Day continued to reflect the company builder’s focus on recruiting the best technical and domain expert talent — both recent graduates and also people already working at tech companies. They spanned AR headsets, “massive simulations,” genome sequencing, machine intelligence, and cryptocurrencies.

After tuning in to the live stream and enduring 24 rounds of ‘pitchlash’, my cursory 3 picks this time around are as follows:

MyLevels

With a mission to “empower people to build a new relationship with food, myLevels uses data from Continuous Glucose Monitors combined with its own Bayesian-based machine learning models to measure the impact that food has on an individual’s body and metabolism. This is because the effect different food has on a person’s blood sugar levels — and the sometimes horrible spike followed by craving — varies person by person, and until now it has been difficult to build a personalised understanding of this. Once you have that understanding it becomes easier to lose weight and increase higher energy levels and even concentration.

Juno Bio

There’s gold in those microbiome, apparently. Juno Bio is “unlocking the potential of the microbiome” (bacteria that lives in our guts and other places, such as animals and soil), which the startup says has unprecedented potential to disrupt various industries such as the $195 billion fertiliser industry. More broadly, Juno Bio says there is an arms race for understanding and harnessing the information that microbiome hold. To that end, Juno Bio uses machine learning and state of the art bioinformatics to analyse and predict how best to manipulate microbiomes, significantly reducing the time and resources needed to improve their functionality.

Circuit Mind

Circuit Mind wants to use AI to automate the design of electronic circuits. The startup reckons that every year £40bn and 1.5bn hours are spent globally in “tedious and repetitive circuit board design” work, making building hardware even harder than it needs to be. To fix this, the company is building artificial intelligence that takes in the requirements for a circuit board and outputs the circuit board final design, ready for manufacture. “This means better circuits, designed orders of magnitude faster, at a fraction of the cost,” says Circuit Mind. Chalk this one up as another industry 4.0 play, of which EF already has a promising track record.

The full list of presenting teams (in their own words)

Nodes & Links is taming the complexity of modern projects.
CodeREG makes regulatory change in finance as simple as a software update.
QFlow enables construction teams to track, analyse and respond to environmental
risks.
Moonsift is the first platform for shoppers to create their own digital twin for product
discovery.
Homewards is the next generation of home ownership.
Popsure gives personalised insurance advice.
Metomic is data privacy made simple.
Teamflow unlocks the power of human intelligence in organisations to improve
productivity
myLevels empowers people to build a new relationship with food.
Phantasma Labs is helping self-driving cars understand humans better.
Juno Bio is unlocking the potential of the microbiome.
Magic Sandbox produces world class software engineers at scale.
Faultless AI eliminates human error in manufacturing.
Janus Genomics builds AI tools to enable biomedical data sharing while preserving
data privacy.
Lumenora is the world’s first compact, high field-of-view Augmented Reality
headset.
Donut enables increased crypto adoption through personalised portfolios. Fully
regulated.
Juniper uses hybrid deep learning to empower oncologists.
WILD AI empowers humans to reach their personal best through datalogy.
Holotron unleashes the true potential of VR & humanoid robots.
Data Hygge helps companies spot, prioritise and solve experience issues.
Yo-Da is the personal data management platform making consumer data protection
quick, easy, and profitable.
Insurami is removing friction in office space onboarding.
Atlas ML is a development platform for machine learning.
Circuit Mind is using AI to completely automate the design of electronic circuits.

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Sep
27

416th Roundtable For Entrepreneurs Starting NOW: Live Tweeting By @1Mby1M - Sramana Mitra

Today’s 416th FREE online 1Mby1M roundtable for entrepreneurs is starting NOW, on Thursday, September 27, at 8:00 a.m. PDT/11:00 a.m. EDT/8:30 p.m. India IST. Click here to join. All are...

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Original author: Maureen Kelly

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Jun
30

Berlin’s DeepSpin raises seed funding for its ‘portable, ultra-low-cost’ MRI system

Cargo, the startup that helps ridesharing drivers earn money by bringing the convenience store into their vehicles, has raised $22 million in a Series A round led by Founders Fund.

Additional investment came from Coatue Management, Aquiline Technology Growth and a number of  high-profile entertainment, gaming and technology executives that include Zynga founder Mark Pincus, Twitch’s former CSO Colin Carrier, media investor Vivi Nevo, former NBA commissioner David Stern, Def Jam Records CEO Paul Rosenberg, Steve Aoki, Maria Shriver and Patrick and Christina Schwarzenegger.

To date, Cargo has raised $30 million in venture funding. As part of this latest round, Founders Fund partner Cyan Banister is joining the board.

Cargo provides qualified ridesharing drivers with free boxes filled with the kinds of goods you might find in a convenience store, including snacks and phone chargers. Riders can use Cargo’s mobile web menu on their smartphones (without downloading an app) to buy what they need. Cargo has previously partnered with Kellogg’s, Starbucks and Mars Wrigley Confectionery — companies looking for ways to market their goods to consumers.

“In just a few years, ridesharing has evolved from a niche service to an indispensable element of our global transportation system,” Banister said in a statement. “Founders Fund is excited to support Cargo in driving the next evolution: a better on-trip experience for riders and new revenue generating opportunities for drivers.” 

The round follows Cargo’s partnership with Uber and an international licensing deal with Grab. The company, which was founded in 2017, has activated more than 12,000 drivers across 10 cities.

Cargo says it will use the capital to scale its business in the U.S. and internationally. It’s also working on new digital services — a development Banister eludes to — that will improve users on-trip experience. The strategic investments from gaming and entertainment executives is designed to help Cargo develop those digital services for riders.

“Our default behavior in an Uber is to shop, play games and listen to music on our phone. Riders have ordered more than two million products and today transact with us every five seconds,” Cargo founder and CEO Jeff Cripe said in a statement. “We brought riders instant commerce, now we’ll help them discover and enjoy games, music, and entertainment on one in-car platform.”

Existing Cargo investors participating in the round include CRCM Ventures, Rosecliff Ventures, Kellogg’s eighteen94 capital, RiverPark Ventures, and former Uber executives including Chief Business Officer Emil Michael, New York City General Manager Josh Mohrer and former West Coast General Manager William Barnes.

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Sep
27

Berkanan is a Bluetooth-powered group messaging app

A new messaging app is looking to give folks a way to communicate in situations with poor or no cellular connectivity.

Berkanan, founded by Zsombor Szabó, is a group messaging app that uses Bluetooth to send and receive messages. This means that Berkanan works in a plane, at a festival, camping, or anywhere else where cellular coverage is disappointing.

Imagine people on a plane asking each other for top movie recommendations from the in-flight entertainment system, or folks at a festival figuring out a rally point to meet up between sets. Public messages auto-delete after 24 hours.

Alongside group messaging, Berkanan also allows private one-to-one messaging, as well as audio calls placed over Bluetooth. The range for these calls and messages is about 50 meters, but if there are people between you and your intended recipient with the app installed, Berkanan can send messages further by going through other users devices.

Berkanan will also show users if they are getting closer or further away from the user they’re messaging with, without ever showing either person’s exact location.

Group chatting with strangers in your location might seem a bit icky at first glance, but group chatting with strangers is essentially the basis of Twitter. With Berkanan, however, a common location replaces the #topic.

Berkanan is entirely bootstrapped, but Szabo has implemented a somewhat unconventional method of generating revenue.

Inspired by games like Fortnite, which make money off of custom skins, dances, and other virtual items, Berkanan will charge users to edit their profile. When a user logs on, their profile will consist of the name they assigned to their iPhone and their profile picture will be their initials, similar to the iOS Contacts interface.

Users can pay to add their own profile picture and add a short bio to their profile.

To be clear, it’s already possible to send SMS via Bluetooth. But Berkanan offers a way to broadcast that message to everyone (with the app) in your location. Of course, user acquisition is critical for the app, which is why Szabó is considering ways for the enterprise to take advantage of the app.

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Sep
27

Rally Rd., the app that lets you invest in classic cars, raises $7M Series A

What happens when you bring together an entrepreneur, a product designer and an investment banker who all really love collector vehicles? You get Rally Rd., an app for buying and selling equity shares in classic cars.

Launched in 2016, the company’s SEC-compliant platform lets users purchase shares in Ferraris, Porsches, Lamborghinis and other classic models for as little as $50 per share. The company says it has 50,000 members that have invested millions. Currently, there are just 10 cars available to purchase stakes in, though Rally Rd. expects to have 100 available on the app by the end of 2019.

The New York-based startup has just closed its second round of funding, a $7 million Series A led by Upfront Ventures, with participation from Anthemis Group, Social Leverage, WndrCo, Nas, Betterment co-founder Eli Broverman and Acorns co-founder Jeff Cruttenden. Earlier this year, it announced a $3 million seed round led by Columbus Nova.

Rally Rd.’s co-founders Chris Bruno and Rob Petrozzo told TechCrunch the crypto boom and bust really put digital asset investing in the mainstream, helping to bolster business that would have seemed pretty odd just a few years ago.

The pair plan to use the investment to open what they call a “live investing ecosystem,” a vehicle showroom where users can go to participate in initial car offerings in-person. The first will be in New York’s SoHo neighborhood, with other locations to follow in Los Angeles, South Florida and possibly Texas, where they have a strong user base.

“We want to create that Apple Store atmosphere where anyone can come in and learn about equity investing on the spot,” said Petrozzo, Rally Rd.’s chief product officer.

Through a subsidiary company, Rally Rd. purchases collector vehicles and holds the cars’ titles. The startup then hosts SEC-registered offerings, essentially an IPO for a car, where investors can buy one or more of 2,000 equity shares. The vehicles are registered for sale through a registered broker-dealer available in 32 states; the company is still working on obtaining licenses for the remaining 18 states.

Just like the regular stock market, after the initial offering, Rally Rd. holds regular trading windows for each vehicle where users can buy or sell their shares in an app-based secondary marketplace.

They’ve literally recreated the NASDAQ or NYSE experience for these assets on the Rally Rd. platform,” Upfront partner Greg Bettinelli, who has joined Rally Rd.’s board of directors, told TechCrunch.

Bettinelli added that the reaction he has seen from Rally Rd. customers is similar to what he saw in the early days of the Amazon-acquired smart doorbell company Ring, mobile sneaker marketplace GOAT and ThredUp, an online consignment store that’s raised more than $125 million to date.

For now, Rally Rd. isn’t making money. They don’t take any management fees or share of the offering. Bruno says their plan to generate revenue is to adopt the Robinhood model and are building out a subscription service for those interested in premium access.

In early 2019, Rally Rd. expects to announce expansions into other verticals, including art and sports memorabilia. At some point, they plan to make the app available around the globe, beginning with Australia, Europe and Canada.

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