Oct
05

EU resolution calls for investment in video games and esports

You can hide a show on Quibi that appears on the "For You" feed, the app's list of recommended content. If you aren't interested in a Quibi show, you can hide it from the feed by tapping the three dots underneath the show's image and select "Not Interested."If you hide a Quibi show from your "For You" feed, you can still find it on the "Browse" screen.  Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

Quibi's subscription-based video streaming service already has a significant amount of content – over 100 shows. That's a lot of content vying for your attention as a new subscriber. 

To help you parse out what to watch, Quibi uses its "For You" feed to promote certain shows on its home screen, which is the default view when you start the app. 

If you have no interest in a particular show, you can hide it from your feed so you won't need to see it over and over when you load or navigate the app.

Keep in mind the show is not permanently removed from your app. If you later decide you want to see the show, you can find it by tapping "Browse" at the bottom of the screen and browsing or searching for it. 

Here's how to hide shows on the mobile streaming platform. 

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $699.99 at Walmart)

How to hide a show on Quibi from your "For You" screen

1. Launch the Quibi app. 

2. On the For You screen tap "For You" at the bottom of the screen.

3. When you see a show you want to hide, tap the three dots in the show's window. 

These three dots can be found in the lower-right corner of a title's window. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

4. In the pop-up menu, tap "Not Interested."

This menu also lets you view more show details, follow or download the show, and more. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

5. A message will appear confirming that the show is hidden from your Quibi feed. 

6. If you selected it by mistake, you can temporarily tap "Undo." 

After the screen refreshes, the undo option will be gone. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

 

Original author: Dave Johnson

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Nov
26

Here's how many people watched the original shows that Facebook is renewing for second seasons (FB)

You can download OneNote in the correct version for your system or device through available links at OneNote.com. You can get OneNote as a part of a Microsoft 365 subscription, or use the free version. To download OneNote for mobile devices, you'll need to go to your app store.OneNote is similar to Evernote; it's Microsoft's note-taking app that is available for Windows, Mac, iOS, and Android.Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

OneNote, Microsoft's note-taking app that's a part of the Microsoft Office suite, is available for Windows and the Mac, as well as for iOS and Android devices. 

OneNote is similar to note-taking apps like Evernote and uses a notebook-like structure to help you keep your information organized. You can establish multiple notebooks, and each one can have various sections with unlimited pages. You can type free-form notes, insert photos and video clips, add links, embed audio clips, and more. 

OneNote is a general-purpose note-taking app for Windows, Mac, and mobile devices. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

While you can purchase OneNote as part of a subscription to Microsoft 360, OneNote is also available for free. The free version is called OneNote 2016 and is the version that initially appeared with Office 2016. It includes most, but not all, of the features found in the latest version of OneNote that comes in Microsoft 365. 

Here is how to get the free version.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Microsoft Office (From $149.99 at Microsoft)

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $699.99 at Walmart)

Apple Macbook Pro (From $1,299.00 at Apple)

Acer Chromebook 15 (From $179.99 at Walmart)

How to download OneNote 

Downloading OneNote is straightforward, though the version you download depends in part on what device you are trying to install it on. 

Here are all the download locations for the free version of OneNote:

You can download OneNote on various devices. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

Once on the page for your OneNote version, click the Download button to get OneNote for Windows or Mac. If you're using a mobile device, you can download the program from your device's app store. 

After downloading OneNote for Windows or the Mac, find the downloaded file in your web browser's file manager and run the file to start the installer and set up OneNote.

If you prefer, you can purchase OneNote for Windows or the Mac by subscribing to Microsoft 365.

Original author: Dave Johnson

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Nov
26

What makes gluten-free diets unique from every other diet

You can change the language in PowerPoint in three different ways to help with editing or translating, or to set your display settings in another language. To change the language settings in PowerPoint for editing purposes, you'll need to access the "Language..." option in the "Tools" tab. To translate text, you can launch the Translator tool instead.If you're looking to change the display language, you'll have to change your operating system settings. Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

If you want to change the language in PowerPoint, the presentation program offers you three different options depending on what you need. 

You can change the editing language, which tells PowerPoint how to edit text as you type in your preferred language. This may prove particularly helpful if you've been sent a slideshow to edit that's written in another language. 

You can also select "Translate…" to use the Translator tool on text in real-time, though Microsoft Office notes that this feature is only available for users with an Office 365 subscription, Office 2019 for Mac or Windows. This feature allows you to highlight entire text boxes or individual words and transform your presentation text any of the languages PowerPoint offers. 

Lastly, you change the display language on PowerPoint by altering your operating system's language setting. On a Mac, depending on the language, you may be asked to add input sources.  

None of these options affects the others, so you can have different languages for edits, slide text, and display. Here's how to change all three language settings in PowerPoint.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Microsoft Office (From $149.99 at Best Buy)

Apple Macbook Pro (From $1,299.00 at Apple)

Acer Chromebook 15 (From $179.99 at Walmart)

How to change the PowerPoint editing language

1. Open PowerPoint on your Mac or PC. 

2. Click the "Tools" tab on the top menu.

3. Select "Language…" from the dropdown menu.

Click "Language..." Melanie Weir/Business Insider

4. In the pop-up window that appears, scroll and select a language from the list. 

5. Check the box for "Do not check spelling or grammar" if you don't want PowerPoint to use the language for proofreading. 

6. Click the "Set As Default" button if applicable.

7. Click the "Yes" button to proceed.

This window will pop up to confirm the change. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

How to use the PowerPoint Translator Tool for text

1. Open PowerPoint and click "Tools."  

2. Choose "Translate..." from the dropdown menu. 

3. The "Translator" window on the right side of your presentation screen will open. 

You can close this window at any time by clicking the "X." Melanie Weir/Business Insider

4. Click a text box that you'd like to translate. The text will appear in the white box in the Translator window. 

5. Select a language from the "To:" dropdown menu. The translated text will appear in the blue box below.

6. Click "Insert" to insert that translated text in a new text box on the slide. You can then move the text box and resize it as needed.

You can translate a text box. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

7. You can also highlight individual words or sentences with different translations appearing below the blue box, depending on the context. Click the three dots to view a sample sentence. 

8. Choose "Insert" when you're ready to substitute.

You can also click the copy icon to copy the word and paste it later. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

How to change the PowerPoint display language on Mac

1. Click the Apple icon on your Mac. 

2. Select "System Preferences…" from the dropdown menu. 

You can also choose to open System Preferences directly from your Launchpad, Dock, or desktop shortcut. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

3. Click the "Language & Region" option in the first row. 

The "Language & Region" option appears as a blue flag icon. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

4. Toggle to the individual "Apps" menu. 

5. Click the (+) icon in the lower right of the window.

This will edit the display language of PowerPoint only. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

6. Select "Microsoft PowerPoint" from the "Application:" dropdown menu.

7. Select your preferred language from the "Language:" dropdown menu below.

8. Click the "Add" button.

Add the Microsoft PowerPoint language setting. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

9. Restart the app when prompted. 

The new language may not be applied until after you relaunch. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

How to change the PowerPoint display language on PC

1. Sign on to an Administrator account.

2. Select the Start button.

3. Choose Settings.

4. In the window, click Time & Language.

5. Select the Language option. 

6. Choose a language from the Windows display language dropdown. 

Original author: Marissa Perino

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Oct
02

Robotics process automation startup Kryon pulls in $12M Series B investment

You can set an age limit on your Instagram account so that only users above a certain age will be able to follow you.To set an age limit, you'll need to have an Instagram Business or Creator account.You can set individual age limits for every country that users might visit you from, or one single age limit for everyone.Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

You have to be 13 or older to join Instagram. However, there are some things posted on Instagram that might not be appropriate for even teenagers.

This is where age limits come in. If you have an Instagram Business or Creator account, there's a feature in your settings menu that allows you to set the minimum age for people to see your account.

This feature is perfect for businesses like nightclubs, or artists who want to make sure nobody under 21 can see their content. You can even age restrict by country — for example, you could set the limit to 21 in the US, but 18 in places like Canada or the UK.

Here's how to set an age limit on your account using the Instagram app for iPhone and Android devices.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $699.99 at Walmart)

How to set an age limit on your Instagram account

If you have a Business account, here's how to set an age limit for it.

1. In the Instagram app, go to your profile.

2. Tap the three lines in the top-right corner to open the menu, and select "Settings."

Open your settings. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

3. In the settings menu, tap "Business" or "Creator."

If you don't see these options, it means you don't have a Business or Creator account. You can change this in your Account menu.

Tap the "Business" or "Creator" option. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

4. From the Business or Creator menu, select the option labeled "Minimum Age."

Select the "Minimum Age" option. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

5. From here, you have two options: Simply add one overarching default minimum age, or set restrictions selectively by country. 

To add a single default age, simply tap the "Add" button to the right of the "Default" option and enter the desired minimum age.

To specify the age limit by country, tap the "Add" button next to "By Country" instead, and follow the on-screen instructions to select a country.

Set the minimum age, then tap "Done" in the top-right corner to finish. Melanie Weir/Business Insider

When you're finished, tap "Done" in the top-right corner of the screen.

Original author: Melanie Weir

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May
12

Hidden Leaf Games raises $3.2 million on a MOBA gambit called Fangs

You should charge your MacBook Pro using the official charging cable that came with the computer.Depending upon the age of your MacBook Pro, you'll charge it with either a magnetic charging cable or newer USB-C cable.To make sure your Macbook Pro is charging, check for a charging indicator at the top-right of the screen.Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

There's nothing worse than the realization that your MacBook Pro hasn't charged overnight and you're now starting the work day with a dead battery. 

Here's everything you need to know about charging your MacBook Pro, no matter how old it is.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Apple Macbook Pro (From $1,299.00 at Apple)

How to optimally charge your MacBook Pro

Depending upon the age of your MacBook Pro, there are two ways to charge it:

Modern MacBooks (made in 2016 or later) use a standard USB-C cable for charging. You can plug the cable into any of the USB-C ports on your MacBook and then connect it to your power outlet.If you have a MacBook Pro sold before 2016, it'll feature Apple's proprietary magnetic charging cable. The cable should automatically snap into place when you align it near the charging port on your MacBook.

For best results, you should try to use the official Apple-made charging cable that comes packaged with your laptop.

Your MacBook will charge more slowly if it's turned on, or you're actively using it while it charges. For the fastest charge, turn the laptop off or put it to sleep.

And once your MacBook is charged, unplug it. Keeping a device plugged in while it's already at maximum charge can wear out the battery.

How to tell if your MacBook Pro is charging

If you have an older MacBook Pro with a magnetic charging cable, the square piece that plugs into your computer will have a light on it. While the computer is charging, this light will be orange. When the battery is completely charged, this light will turn green. 

If there's no light at all, check to make sure the power adapter is plugged in.

When a magnetic cable is charging, it will have an orange light. Malyshev Alexander/Shutterstock

Modern USB-C-powered MacBooks don't have a charging indicator on the charging cable, because any USB-C cable will work. Instead, the easiest way to tell if you're charging is to check your laptop screen and look for the battery status indicator at the top-right of the screen. 

If all you see is a battery level indicator, the laptop isn't charging. If the battery icon has a lightning bolt in it, it's charging.

You can find the charging status in the top-right. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

If your charging cable is properly connected but your MacBook won't charge, it's possible the power adapter or the cable itself has failed and needs to be replaced. There could also be an issue with your MacBook's battery.

Original author: Dave Johnson

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Nov
15

5 reasons zero trust is the future of endpoint security

There are several reasons why your phone might be taking longer than usual to charge.For a faster charge, plug your phone directly into a wall outlet — don't use a wireless charging pad or a computer's USB port.You can also charge your phone faster by turning it off, or simply not using it while it charges.A damaged charging cable or a dirty connection port can also slow down the charging process. Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

If your phone seems to be charging slowly, it might not be your imagination — topping off the battery might really be taking longer than it used to. 

Original author: Dave Johnson

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Nov
13

Pay your DAOs! How DAOs work and what they represent

There's no official Twitch app for Roku devices anymore, although there used to be one.If you still have the old Twitch app installed, there's a chance it'll still work, but it's unlikely.If you'd like to watch Twitch on your TV, you're better off using another device like an Amazon Fire TV Stick or Chromecast.Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

Twitch's acquisition by Amazon opened the door to some cool features, like Twitch Prime.

However, the acquisition also means that now there's no way to watch Twitch on a Roku device — after all, Roku is one of Amazon's competitors.

Twitch used to offer a fully featured app for Roku devices. If you try to download that app now, however, you'll be shown a message saying that the app has been shut down. 

If you already had the app downloaded when it was shut down, it's likely that you can't use it anymore. And even if you can, there's going to be a lot of bugs and broken features.

If you want to watch Twitch on your TV, you're better off using another device. Here's what you should know.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Amazon Fire Stick 4K (From $49.99 at Amazon)

Roku Streaming Stick (From $49.99 at Best Buy)

Google Chromecast (From $29.99 at Best Buy)

How to watch Twitch on your TV, without a Roku device

First of all, even though the Twitch app can't be downloaded anymore, it hasn't been removed from Roku devices that already had it. This means that if you already have the app, there's a chance it'll still work, albeit with glitches and missing features.

However, this is unlikely. Our own testing seems to show that even if you have the channel downloaded, opening it will just give you a message saying that the channel doesn't work anymore.

The Twitch app on Roku has been shut down. William Antonelli/Business Insider

As such, if you really want to watch Twitch on your TV, you'll need another streaming device.

With a Chromecast, you can watch Twitch on your phone or computer and "cast" the video to your TV. This will put all of your favorite streams up on the big screen.

Various streaming devices offer their own native Twitch apps. These include:

All Amazon Fire TV devicesPlayStation 4Xbox OneApple TV

Twitch's Apple TV app launched in late 2019. Twitch

Some smart TVs also have their own Twitch apps. If you have a Samsung-brand smart TV and a Samsung mobile device, you can use the Samsung Smart View app to mirror Twitch from your mobile device to the TV.

If you're willing to get more technical, you can also hook your computer up to your TV. This will let you use the TV as a second monitor, and put any content you want onto it.

There's also various methods for hooking up your iPhone, iPad, or Android device to a television.

Original author: William Antonelli and Emma Witman

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Aug
23

Brad Smith, the CEO of $54 billion Intuit, is stepping down after an impressive 11 year run at the company (INTU)

Twitter said it would include an edit button once everyone starts wearing masks. Users have repeatedly asked for an edit feature to be added. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey told Wired that he hasn't added an edit button to preserve the platform's text message like vibe. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

In a series of tweets, Twitter joked that the platform would implement an edit button once everyone started wearing masks. 

—Twitter Comms (@TwitterComms) July 2, 2020

"Everyone means EVERYONE," @TwitterComms posted. 

Twitter users have repeatedly asked for an edit feature to be added. 

"The reason there's no edit button [and] there hasn't been an edit button traditionally is we started as an SMS text messaging service," Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey told Wired in January. "So as you all know, when you send a text, you can't really take it back. We wanted to preserve that vibe and that feeling in the early days."

Public health experts have strongly encouraged people to wear masks while out in public to reduce the spread of the coronavirus especially as cases across the US continue to surge. According to a Washington Post tally, the US recorded more than 50,000 cases on Wednesday. In total the country has over 2.7 million and more than 128,000 deaths. 

Many users replied feeling pessimistic that the platform's conditions could ever be met. 

"So never?" one user replied. 

Another user asked if the request included President Donald Trump.

—Pol Turrents (@polispol) July 2, 2020

 

Trump has repeatedly refused to wear a mask, and some experts have said it sends the wrong message to the public on the necessity of masks to help reduce the spread of the coronavirus. 

On Wednesday, the president said he supported wearing masks during an interview with Fox Business.

"I'm all for masks, I think masks are good," Trump said. 

Business Insider's Eliza Relman reported that Trump added that he thinks mandatory mask-wearing orders are unnecessary. 

In May, Trump visited an indoor Ford plant in Michigan and did not wear a face-covering because he "didn't want to give the press the pleasure of seeing it."

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Original author: Sarah Al-Arshani

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Aug
23

Volkswagen blasted unproven ‘hail cannons’ at the sky to prevent storms, and farmers are accusing them of causing drought

A Facebook recruiter and two rejected job applicants filed a complaint Thursday with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission accusing the company of discriminating against Black workers, as first reported by The Washington Post.The three workers, all of whom are Black, alleged that Facebook has a pattern of "racial discrimination in hiring, evaluations, promotions, and pay" for Black employees and job applicants."There may be Black Lives Matter posters on Facebook's walls, but Black workers don't see that phrase reflecting how they are treated in Facebook's own workplace," the complaint says.Facebook has faced accusations about racism within its walls previously, including from a Black former executive, anonymous Black employees, and other Black recruiters.The company is also facing growing pressure from employees, civil rights groups, and more than 500 advertisers to take a stronger stance on moderating hate speech on its platform. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

A Facebook hiring manager and two job applicants he tried to recruit filed a complaint against the company on Thursday accusing it of discriminating against Black workers, as first reported by The Washington Post.

The complaint, which was filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, alleges that Facebook "has had and continues to have a general policy of discrimination against Black applicants and workers, including in hiring, evaluations, promotions, and pay."

"Facebook's deeds have not matched its rhetoric," the complaint says, adding that people of color at the company, especially Black workers, are underrepresented, don't feel respected or heard, and don't have an equal opportunity to advance.

"There may be Black Lives Matter posters on Facebook's walls, but Black workers don't see that phrase reflecting how they are treated in Facebook's own workplace," it says.

Oscar Veneszee Jr., a recruiter for Facebook's infrastructure team and Black US Navy veteran who focuses on helping the company recruit other people of color and veterans, and who brought the complaint, said that he has struggled to get fair performance evaluations or raises, and frequently experiences racism on the job.

Howard Winns Jr. and Jazsmin Smith, two applicants recruited by Veneszee, also joined the complaint, alleging that they were rejected for positions despite being "well-qualified" and having recommendations from a current Facebook employee.

"Facebook can and must do a far better job recruiting, hiring, promoting, and retaining Black workers. It's time to close the gap between Facebook's words and deeds on the issue of diversity," Peter Romer-Friedman, an attorney at Gupta Wessler who represents the workers, said in a statement.

"We believe it is essential to provide all employees with a respectful and safe working environment. We take any allegations of discrimination seriously and investigate every case," Facebook spokesperson Pamela Austin told Business Insider in a statement. 

The complaint takes aim at a wide range of Facebook policies, cultural issues, and lack of diversity, and comes at a time when the company is under intense pressure from outside critics as well as within its walls to take stronger actions to combat systemic racism.

The lack of diversity among Silicon Valley tech companies is widespread and not limited to Facebook. At Apple, just 3% of the company's top leaders were African-American in 2018, the year of its most recent public demographics report. Latinos represented 7% of Apple's leadership. At Google-parent Alphabet, Blacks and Latinos accounted for 2.6% and 3.7%, respectively, of its leadership ranks in the company's most recent report.

The Facebook complaint criticizes a number of Facebook's hiring practices — many of which are common throughout the tech industry — such as "culture fit" and a preference for referrals. It alleges that these practices, given Facebook's "overwhelmingly white and Asian-American workforce," adversely affect Black applicants.

The complaint also calls out the company for forcing employees to raise racial discrimination and harassment claims via a "secret forum where all rulings are 'confidential and not available to the public.'"

Similar arbitration requirements around sexual harassment claims faced pushback during the #MeToo movement and have since been abandoned by many tech companies.

This is hardly the first time Facebook has been accused by employees of discrimination within the workplace. In late 2018,  former Facebook employee Mark Luckie wrote that the company had failed to build an inclusive work environment and deal with racism, saying that: "Facebook has a black people problem."

A year later, anonymous Black employees circulated a memo saying those problems had only gotten worse, writing: "Facebook still has a black people problem."

Earlier this year, another diversity-focused recruiter at Facebook sued the company for $100 million, also alleging racial discrimination.

The social media giant is also facing a growing chorus of critics who say it needs to do more to combat racism and hate speech on its platform as well. After CEO Mark Zuckerberg defended his decision not to take action on controversial posts by President Donald Trump, employees at Facebook as well as Zuckerberg's philanthropic initiative revolted.

Last month, civil rights groups including the NAACP, the Anti-Defamation League, and Color of Change called for advertisers to boycott Facebook, and more than 500 companies, including major brands such as Coca-Cola, Ford, Starbucks, Verizon, Adidas, and Unilever, have signed on.

Original author: Tyler Sonnemaker

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Jul
02

Elon Musk thinks the surge in coronavirus cases is due to testing errors, but a virologist is debunking that 'dangerous misinformation'

Elon Musk said on Twitter that testing errors, rather than new infections, are causing the new surge of coronavirus cases.Virologist Angela Rasmussen rushed to debunk the claim, which she called "dangerous misinformation."COVID-19 diagnostic tests have relatively low rates of false positives, and spikes in hospitalizations show that transmission really has increased.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Elon Musk took to Twitter on Thursday to claim that testing errors, rather than increasing transmission, are driving the recent surge in coronavirus cases across the US.

"There are a ridiculous number of false positive [COVID-19] tests," Musk wrote. "This is a big part of why C19 positive tests are going up while hospitalizations & mortality are declining."

But Columbia University virologist Angela Rasmussen called that "false and dangerous misinformation," and the two got into an online spat as she debunked Musk's claims.

Diagnostic COVID-19 tests don't give false positives often enough to account for the recent spike of cases, she said. Since June 15, the seven-day rolling average for daily new cases has more than doubled, and the country's total case count has jumped from 2.1 million to more than 2.7 million.

 

Contrary to Musk's claim, hospitalizations are rising in places with new outbreaks. In Texas, for example, daily COVID-19 hospitalizations have more than doubled in the last two weeks.

After Musk suggested that all people who test positive should get tested again, Rasmussen said, "no one benefits if people with platforms allowing them to reach millions are spreading demonstrably false information and public health guidance."

Elon Musk (left) and NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine wear face masks to greet NASA astronauts Robert Behnken (left) and Douglas Hurley at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, May 27, 2020. NASA/Kim Shiflett

That's when she got a response.

"Yes, Angela, please show us the graphs/data that prove your point," Musk said, seconding a follower who urged Rasmussen to "challenge the facts and not the credentials."

To bolster his argument, Musk shared New York Times graphics showing the spike in cases alongside a fall in daily death counts. The implication — that the rising case counts must be in error if death counts are falling — is misleading, since it usually takes several weeks for the coronavirus to kill people, and this uptick in cases only began in mid-June.

—Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 2, 2020

 

Death counts lag behind case counts by about three or four weeks, according to Rasmussen and other infectious-disease experts.

"Deaths will likely increase in the next few weeks as time passes and the cases diagnosed earlier in the surge get sicker," Rasmussen said. "The worst is yet to come."

There are reasons, however, why this new surge may not produce as many deaths as the US saw in April and May. But they have nothing to do with testing errors, as Musk suggested. Instead, experts say that because more young people are getting infected this time around, and they are less likely to die. About 80% of US coronavirus deaths through mid-June were people over 65.

Still, deaths are rising in some states. Arizona's seven-day rolling average of new COVID-19 deaths has more than doubled since the beginning of June, from an average of 15 deaths per day to 37.

In the same time period, Texas's average daily death count has increased by 53%.

 

Musk has a track record of sharing misleading theories about the pandemic. He previously suggested that deaths were being overcounted and that lockdowns were unnecessary.

In March, Musk also predicted that the US would be seeing "close to zero" new cases by the end of April. That ended up being the virus' first peak.

A hearse car backs into a refrigerated truck to pick up deceased bodies outside of the Brooklyn Hospital on April 1, 2020 in New York City. ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images

Responding to Rasmussen's debunk of his statements, Musk lashed out at the field of medicine itself.

"Something's messed up about medicine that's anti-science," he wrote. "In science, you question everyone, no matter who they are. Facts and reasoning are everything, but in medicine too much emphasis is on credentials, often by people who've accomplished nothing but a PhD thesis used by no one."

But Musk's own argument did not seem to take the facts into account. For one, he insisted that hospitalizations are declining.

As a rebuttal, Rasmussen pointed to the rising intensive care hospitalization rates in Arizona, which has one of the country's steepest surges in new cases.

—Dr. Angela Rasmussen (@angie_rasmussen) July 2, 2020

 

Musk accused her of cherry-picking one state and called her argument "bs." He again shared the same New York Times graphics, even though those do not show hospitalizations.

In fact, hospitalizations have been increasing nationwide since June 17, according to data from the COVID Tracking Project. The project, run by reporters at The Atlantic, also notes that hospitalizations are likely undercounted, especially since Florida does not report those numbers and currently has one of the nation's biggest surges.

Shayanne Gal/Business Insider

It can take weeks for a COVID-19 case to get severe enough to warrant a stay at the hospital, so hospitalizations usually lag behind case counts the same way deaths do. The CDC even notes this on the site where it publishes preliminary hospitalization data. That site shows a decline in the number of people hospitalized with positive COVID-19 test results from April 18 to June 20. But the CDC has no more data after that.

As for diagnostic COVID-19 tests, the likelihood of false positives is low. According to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the PCR tests used across the country "almost never" give false positive results.

Rasmussen said that the "bigger issue" is false negatives, which can lead to underreporting of new cases.

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Original author: Morgan McFall-Johnsen

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Jul
02

Roundtable Recap: July 2 – Spotlight on Post-Seed Investing - Sramana Mitra

During this week’s roundtable, we had as our guest Raoul Maier, Founder and Managing Partner at Eudemian Ventures, a fund focused on post-seed investment in North America. Lighthouse As for...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Jan
09

Senate Democrats have made a brilliant move to try and save an open internet

The Covid crisis has generated, or amplified, a number of separate crises. One of them is a mental health (or mental wellness) crisis. As humans, our entire way of living has been dramatically impacted by Covid. We are isolated from each other, many of us are afraid of being in public, and we are feeling enormous weight from economic, social, familial, and organization pressure.

One of our goals with Energize Colorado is to create a non-profit for the extended business community of “Coloradans helping Coloradans”. We decided to make providing Mental Health Resources one of the primary initiatives.

The Energize Colorado website has a comprehensive list of mental health resources that are available, but here are two new ones.

Free or low-cost therapy or mental health support with a licensed therapist: As of the other day, we currently have therapists in Colorado who have donated a total of up to 1,000 free hours. If you are a therapist and you are open to donating up to five hours of free therapy, please sign up on the Therapist Volunteer page.

3 Free months of Simple Habit: Sign up to access meditations, sleep content, and movement exercises, designed to help you care for your mind — all free for 3 months.

Also, Energize Colorado now has a mailing list so you can stay informed on upcoming webinars as well as information from Energize Colorado.

Original author: Brad Feld

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Dec
31

17 business books everyone will be reading in 2018

Rachel Sheppard Contributor
Rachel Sheppard is the director of global marketing at global pre-seed accelerator Founder Institute and co-founder of the Female Founder Initiative.

Any disaster will have its harshest repercussions on people who were already marginalized. It’s unsurprising, then, that when it comes to jobs and businesses, the COVID-19 lockdown is impacting women and ethnic minorities more than anyone else.

In April, unemployment shot up to 15.5% among women, 2.5% higher than for men. The rate was also higher among African Americans and Latinx people than for white people, with Latinx reaching a record 18.9% unemployment.

Women, especially from more disadvantaged backgrounds, are going to be taking the lion’s share of caregiving responsibilities at home during the pandemic, making them more vulnerable to job cuts. At the same time, underrepresented employees in general may feel more marginalized than ever as job security is put on the line.

It’s been hard to get to where we are on diversity and inclusion. Slowly but surely, diversity and inclusion have become a highly visible element of any company. But as COVID-19 turned up the pressure for businesses around the world, that progress came under threat as D&I initiatives took a back seat. The killing of George Floyd and the subsequent protests reignited D&I efforts in magnitude, but how can we ensure that, as time passes, those efforts are maintained with energy and determination?

This may be the shock to the system that will make business leaders realize that diversity is not an accessory or PR stunt — it is an integral part of the daily lives of each and every member of your team. Today’s consumers and your co-workers demand socially conscious companies, which is why D&I is vital to making any startup a well-rounded business. It’s also imperative for supporting economic recovery on a larger scale. Forgetting to preserve and improve D&I as we battle through COVID-19 will not only set us back years in terms of equality, it will worsen our collective chances of getting through this turbulence unscathed.

D&I matters to your business’ survival

It’s understandable that most startups today will be in survival mode. But D&I cannot be cast aside as a nonessential part of your business. It’s quite the opposite. More diversity is a known indicator for better economic performance and improves a business’ chances of thriving through a recession.

We often hear about how diversity means more innovation in a company. Consider just how important this is today. Facing a crisis with no precedent, weighing up a variety of insights and solutions is vital to finding an intelligent lockdown strategy. As business leaders, we need to know what the world around us looks like right now, and that means knowing what people of all backgrounds are experiencing.

We also can’t afford to not take into consideration the long-term effects of today’s actions. Survival can’t mean usurping what your company stands for. If you sacrifice diversity now, you might retain employees for the time being, because they’re scared of being jobless. But you will have undermined the trust that your workers place in you and you will be sure to lose them far more easily once the situation eases. This is very true for customers too — the crisis is driving the public to support purpose-driven and diverse businesses more than ever, and you will be left out if you don’t meet those values.

Even if you’re not hiring, work on diversity and inclusion

So how can a startup keep diversity a priority in this strange new world? Sure, you may not be hiring, but that’s not the only way to improve diversity. Take this time to revisit your internal culture. The virus is forcing us to see our business from different angles — we’re looking into the homes of our co-workers, hearing about the personal issues affecting their work lives and about the work issues affecting their personal lives. Let’s make sure your company culture is not part of the problem.

You need to be accessible. Are some of your employees scared to speak up about their issues? Is there a big morale problem that you haven’t been able to alleviate? If so, then you need to work on making your workspace more inclusive, open and friendly. This is more than building up team spirit with morning coffee Zoom get-togethers and after-work networking. It’s about weeding out any systems that bring repercussions to people who voice their concerns; it’s about encouraging them to do so; it’s about recognizing every member of a team and every person in a meeting, not just the executives present.

The lockdown has shown that many people can work remotely, effectively. Can you use this in future to give employees a greater chance of success — perhaps those who live far from the office, or who have children or elderly relatives to care for? Many HR departments are probably focusing efforts away from hiring at the moment and could instead be put in charge of employee success, which means identifying and addressing the unique concerns of each of your staff (you might even consider assigning a full-time staff member to this role).

This is key to making your company a welcoming place for underrepresented employees who are often more wary of their circumstances than their co-workers, both now and in the future. It will help them grow and want to stay in the company, as well as attract a more diverse employee pool in the future.

In case you are hiring, there are innovative solutions to help you attract more diverse applicants to your company. Joonko’s technology integrates to your applicant tracking system to boost the visibility of underrepresented potential hires. Pitch.Me aims to tackle bias by presenting candidate profiles anonymously, including only relevant information about experience and skills but with no information regarding gender, age or ethnic background. Services like DiTal help tech businesses connect with potential employees from diverse backgrounds.

Reassess what internal success looks like

Before COVID-19, the key performance indicators for your business might have been the number of sales per rep, or the number of leads generated in a week. Those quotas are now unrealistic, and more importantly, they’ll be tougher to reach for employees with less time on their hands. That means people with more caregiving responsibilities — often women — or with less disposable income, and statistics show that people from ethnic minorities are more likely to be affected by the virus.

You have to create a work environment in which people with less time and resources can still achieve their professional goals. We typically hear that 80% of the most valuable work takes up 20% of a team’s time; well, let’s make sure your staff is focusing most of their efforts on that 20% of valuable energy. Build a new business plan that reassesses what the company needs to achieve in the near future, and set new metrics that hyperfocus on that bottom line. Think about how important it is to each of your co-workers’ morale to be able to meet their goals day in day out, despite today’s challenges. Furthermore, being adaptable for the benefit of your staff is an admirable quality that will not easily be forgotten.

An important note — helping everyone reach success means giving everyone the resources to do so. No one in your company should be unequipped to this “new normal,” which means good laptops or devices and speedy internet. Don’t hesitate to invest in people who need it.

Prioritize career development

Career development is vital for underrepresented employees, for whom upward mobility is always harder. People from minority backgrounds tend to have less robust business networks, exactly because they are the minority in the business world. We can never stop fighting this vicious cycle.

So take a look at your team and think about who you can help ascend in their career. Prioritize underrepresented people now because they are more likely to get hit harder by the lockdown and have a tougher recovery. Even if you don’t see it from an altruistic perspective, including underrepresented employees in your leadership now will lead to better economic local recovery and improved outcomes for your company.

One option is sponsorship programs in which you or other senior leaders advocate on behalf of selected employees (as well as acting as their mentors). Think of it as equally distributing the networks and influence accumulated by business leaders among a more diverse pool of people.

Bring diversity into your brand

We’ve looked inward, now let’s look outward. How can you change how your industry looks, even in times of crisis. To reach the huge visible changes we’ve seen in, for example, branding in the fashion industry, took influential people making decisions at powerful tables. But it would be ironically easy to see things regress to a more heterogeneous state.

Stopping this from happening means making those big decisions yourself, and uniting others in joining you. Leverage your brand and bring your internal diversity to the forefront of everything you do — the mentors who give their time to startup organizations, the speakers you put forward for online events. Make a conscious push for your external marketing to display as much diversity as possible, especially amid fears that the advertising space will compromise its diversity standards in response to COVID-19.

Support other underrepresented founders

If you have the resources, help struggling founders get through the lockdown. There may be small or mid-sized women or minority-led companies within your community that need your support. If you’re sending employees care packages and gifts, make the extra effort to source them from underrepresented local businesses. It’s not hard to do — there are organizations that can help you connect to such companies around the United States, such as Women Owned’s business directory and Help Main Street.

Large companies can work with Hello Alice to directly fund smaller companies founded by every underrepresented group in the United States, from veterans to LGBTQ+. IFundWomen is a large network of women-founded businesses you can choose to fund — or join — and it has a wing specifically for businesses owned by women of color. As a business leader you can always be seeking out diverse founders to collaborate with; For example, check out this amazing list of Latinx founders catering to the United States’ enormous Latinx markets, as well as finding solutions to improve diversity in business.

The NAACP has fought for equal rights for people of color for over a century. You can support them and their ongoing work, which ranges from campaigning for crucial reforms to spotlighting emerging Black-owned businesses.

Now’s not the time to slack on diversity. As tempting as it might be to think of it as an accessory, it’s just as vital now for your business to get through the pandemic and to stop your entire industry from losing decades of hard-earned progress in building a more equal society.

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Dec
31

John O’Donohue: For One Who Is Exhausted, a Blessing

Despite today’s bucket of plus-and-minus economic data, stocks are heading higher in regular trading. And among the shares rising the most are today’s two venture-backed IPOs: Lemonade and Accolade.

TechCrunch wrote this morning that the firms’ aggressive IPO pricing arcs boded well for the IPO market itself, that investors were willing to price growth-y shares of unprofitable companies with vigor, which could help other companies looking at the public markets get off the sidelines.

Then the two companies opened sharply higher, and at the current moment stand as follows (Data via Yahoo Finance):

Lemonade: $61.62 per share, up $32.62 or 112.48%Accolade: $34.39 per share, up $12.39 or 56.32%

Yep those are big numbers.

Expect the regular round of complaints that the firms were mispriced (maybe) and could have charged more from their equity in their public debuts (again, maybe). But for the two companies, it’s still a lovely day. Pricing above range and then seeing public investors frantically bid your equity higher is much better than the alternatives.

How the companies will fare when they report earnings (Q3 is upon us, making Q2’s earnings cycle just around the bend) will help settle their real valuations. But, for today at least, Lemonade and Accolade have done their yet-private brethren a solid by going up and not down.

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Oct
04

A Serial Bootstrapper’s Journey: Beyond Security CEO Aviram Jenik (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

Greg Law Contributor
Greg Law is the co-founder and CTO at Undo.io, a software failure replay platform provider.

It’s the summer of 1858. London. The River Thames is overflowing with the smell of human and industrial waste. The exceptionally hot summer months have exacerbated the problem. But this did not just happen overnight. Failure to upkeep an aging sewer system and a growing population that used it contributed to a powder keg of effluent, bringing about cholera outbreaks and shrouding the city in a smell that would not go away.

To this day, Londoners still speak of the Great Stink. Recurring cholera infections led to the dawn of the field of epidemiology, a subject in which we have all recently become amateur enthusiasts.

Fast forward to 2020 and you’ll see that modern software pipelines face a similar “Great Stink” due, in no small part, to the vast adoption of continuous integration (CI), the practice of merging all developers’ working copies into a shared mainline several times a day, and continuous delivery (CD), the ability to get changes of all types — including new features, configuration changes, bug fixes and experiments — into production, or into the hands of users, safely and quickly in a sustainable way.

While contemporary software failures won’t spread disease or emit the rancid smells of the past, they certainly reek of devastation, rendering billions of dollars lost and millions of developer hours wasted each year.

This kind of waste is antithetical to the intent of CI/CD. Everyone is employing CI/CD to accelerate software delivery; yet the ever-growing backlog of intermittent and sporadic test failures is doing the exact opposite. It’s become a growing sludge that is constantly being fed with failures faster than can be resolved. This backlog must be cleared to get CI/CD pipelines back to their full capabilities.

What value is there in a system that, in an effort to accelerate software delivery, knowingly leaves a backlog of bugs that does the exact opposite? We did not arrive at these practices by accident, and its practitioners are neither lazy nor incompetent so; how did we get here and what can we do to temper modern software development’s Great Stink?

Ticking time bombs

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Dec
30

A supermoon is happening on New Year's Day — here's what a supermoon actually is

Jennifer Doudna, a woman whose work has triggered the explosion in innovation in the field of synthetic biology and has given researchers around the world a way to program and reprogram the living world, will be speaking at Disrupt in September.

From her positions as the Chancellor’s Chair Professor in the University of California, Berkeley’s Chemistry and Molecular and Cell Biology Departments and a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institutes and professor at the University of California, San Francisco, Doudna has been at the forefront of research into CRISPR gene editing technology.

It was only eight years ago that Doudna and Emmanuelle Charpentier first proposed that CRISPR-Cas9 enzymes (which direct immune responses in microbes) could be used to edit genomes. That discovery would prove to be one of the most significant advancements in the history of the human understanding of biology, and it has the potential to reshape the world.

Doudna describes her own journey into the field of biochemistry beginning back in Hawaii with the discovery of James Watson’s book “The Double Helix” on her father’s bookshelf. From an early age growing up in Hawaii as the daughter of a literature professor, Doudna knew she wanted to pursue a career in science. But it was Watson’s famous book that opened her eyes to the human side of science.

Now her scientific research and startup endeavors have the potential to open humanity’s eyes to the potential benefits of this revolutionary field of science. Because in addition to her research work, Doudna is also a co-founder of a number of companies including: Mammoth Biosciences, Caribou Biosciences, Intellia Therapeutics and Editas Medicine.

These companies are tackling some of the biggest challenges that the world faces. Mammoth is working on a new type of COVID-19 test, Caribou is pursuing novel cancer therapies, and publicly traded Editas is pursuing treatments for ocular, neurodegenerative, and blood diseases as well as cancer therapies.

There’s almost no industry where gene editing hasn’t had some sort of effect. From material science to food science and agriculture to medicine, CRISPR technology is creating opportunities to remake entire industries.

Genetically modified organisms are already making Impossible Foods meat replacements taste meaty; they’re used in Solugen’s bio-based chemicals; and CRISPR edited cells have been proven safe in early trials to treat certain kinds of cancer.

Given the breadth of applications and the questions that the technology’s application raises about how and what limitations researchers should put on the technology, there will be plenty for Doudna to discuss on the Disrupt stage, including but certainly not limited to her recently announced work on making college campuses safer via a fast saliva-based COVID-19 test.

Disrupt is all virtual in 2020 and runs September 14 to September 18, and we have several Digital Pass options to be part of the action or to exhibit virtually, which you can check out here.

Doudna joins an incredible line-up of Disrupt speakers including Sequoia’s Roelof Botha and Atlassian co-founder Mike Cannon-Brookes. We’ll be announcing even more speakers over the coming weeks, so stay tuned.

(Editor’s Note: We’re watching the developing situation around the novel coronavirus very closely and will adapt as we go. You can find out the latest on our event schedule plans here.)

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May
26

Indonesian crypto exchange Pintu gets $6M Series A led by Pantera, Intudo and Coinbase Ventures

The art of the pitchdeck. Few things are more critical to the success of startups seeding capital. And make no mistake, it is an art.

At TechCrunch Early Stage, our two-day virtual event focused on giving entrepreneurs all the resources they need to build incredible, high-growth early stage companies, we have plenty of content dedicated to the pitchdeck.

From a session on how to think like a PM for VC pitch success led by Lo Toney, to a session on how to time your fundraising sprint led by Jake Saper, to seed funding tips and tricks from Jeff Clavier, there’s something for everyone. Even if you don’t have a product, Charles Hudson will teach you how to sell your idea to investors.

The cherry on top of that pitch perfect sundae? The Pitchdeck Teardown.

Accel’s Amy Saper and Bessemer’s Talia Goldberg will lead the Pitchdeck Teardown, going over the look, feel and information provided within individual pitchdecks to share what they look for, what they don’t want to see, and how to get the best outcome when you send a VC your deck.

The coolest part is that the pitchdecks aren’t theoretical. Early Stage attendees can submit their pitchdecks ahead of time for a chance to see those decks critiqued live on stage.

Interested in being a part of it? Submit your pitchdeck here. But remember, you must be registered as an attendee of Early Stage to be selected.

TC Early Stage has so much to offer. The show will bring together 50+ experts across startup core competencies, such as fundraising, operations, and marketing. Cyan Bannister is set to explain how to get an investor to say yes to your startup. Asher Abramson will be sharing how to create growth assets for paid channels, lawyers James Alonso and Adam Zagaris will share how to draw up your first contracts, and Priti Choksi is hosting a session on how to get a company acquired rather than selling.

The two-day show features more than 50 sessions, but don’t worry; attendees will get transcripts for all of them. What’s more, most of the speakers, who happen to be investors, are participating in TechCrunch’s CrunchMatch, our platform that connects founders to investors based on shared interests. 

Here’s the fine print. Each of the 50+ breakout sessions is limited to around 100 attendees. We expect a lot more attendees, of course, so signups for each session are on a first-come, first-serve basis.

Buy your ticket today, and you can sign up for the breakouts we are announcing today, as well as those already published. Pass holders will also receive 24-hour advance notice before we announce the next batch. (And yes, you can “drop” a breakout session in favor of a new one, in the event there is a schedule conflict.)

Get your TC Early Stage pass today and jump into the inside track on the sessions we announced so far, as well as the ones to be published in the coming weeks.

Possible sponsor? Hit us up right here.

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May
25

Call it a comeback: Turntable.fm raises $7.5M

Today’s 492nd FREE online 1Mby1M Roundtable For Entrepreneurs is starting NOW, on Thursday, July 2, at 8 a.m. PDT/11 a.m. EDT/5 p.m. CEST/8:30 p.m. India IST. Click here to join. PASSWORD:...

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Original author: Maureen Kelly

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Jan
03

It’s a new year in tech — here are the products, gadgets and games we’re looking forward to in 2018

David Cancel Contributor
David Cancel, a five-time entrepreneur and author of the book "Conversational Marketing," is CEO and founder of Drift.

Most people would agree that a chief revenue officer is a pretty significant hire, but I have yet to meet mine in person. Right now, our only face-to-face interaction is over video. In fact, that’s how our relationship began — like many business leaders during this pandemic, I had to hire Todd through a series of video calls.

The pandemic has caused me to question and reevaluate many of my own assumptions. This not only led me to hire our CRO remotely, but it is ultimately why I also decided to allow employees to work from home until 2021.

While it’s tempting to call this a pivot, those who have worked with me would probably describe it more accurately as a flip-flop. I used to believe that you could build an in-person culture or a remote work culture, but that a hybrid of the two was destined to fail.

The realities of COVID-19 have not just changed my outlook, but transformed the way I think about how work should get done —and how leaders need to show up for their team, even if they can’t “show up” in any physical sense.

The remote work debate changed in an instant

Before the pandemic, the debate over remote work revolved around its perceived impact on productivity, collaboration, employee engagement and culture.

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Jan
03

Spider silk startup Bolt Threads closes on $123 million in Series D funding

Today’s 492nd FREE online 1Mby1M Roundtable For Entrepreneurs is starting in 30 minutes, on Thursday, July 2 at 8 a.m. PDT/11 a.m. EDT/5 p.m. CEST/8:30 p.m. India IST. Click here to join....

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Original author: Maureen Kelly

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