Mar
09

HBO brought the world of Westeros to life at SXSW to tout the final season of 'Game of Thrones.' Take an exclusive look inside

SpinLaunch, a company that aims to turn the launch industry on its head with a wild new concept for getting to orbit, has raised a $35M round B to continue its quest. The team has yet to demonstrate their kinetic launch system, but this year will be the year that changes, they claim.

TechCrunch first reported on SpinLaunch’s ambitious plans in 2018, when the company raised its previous $35 million, which combined with $10M it raised prior to that and today’s round comes to a total of $80M. With that kind of money you might actually be able to build a space catapult.

The basic idea behind SpinLaunch’s approach is to get a craft out of the atmosphere using a “rotational acceleration method” that brings a craft to escape velocity without any rockets. While the company has been extremely tight-lipped about the details, one imagines a sort of giant rail gun curled into a spiral, from which payloads will emerge into the atmosphere at several thousand miles per hour — weather be damned.

Naturally there is no shortage of objections to this method, the most obvious of which is that going from an evacuated tube into the atmosphere at those speeds might be like firing the payload into a brick wall. It’s doubtful that SpinLaunch would have proceeded this far if it did not have a mitigation for this (such as the needle-like appearance of the concept craft) and other potential problems, but the secretive company has revealed little.

The time for broader publicity may soon be at hand, however: the funds will be used to build out its new headquarter and R&D facility in Long Beach, but also to complete its flight test facility at Spaceport America in New Mexico.

“Later this year, we aim to change the history of space launch with the completion of our first flight test mass accelerator at Spaceport America,” said founder and CEO Jonathan Yaney in a press release announcing the funding.

Lowering the cost of launch has been the focus of some of the most successful space startups out there, and SpinLaunch aims to leapfrog their cost savings by offering orbital access for under $500,000. First commercial launch is targeted for 2022, assuming the upcoming tests go well.

The funding round was led by previous investors Airbus Ventures, GV, and KPCB, as well as Catapult Ventures, Lauder Partners, John Doerr and Byers Family.

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Oct
15

Steam reportedly blocks cryptocurrency and NFT games

When Intuit acquired Mint more than a decade ago, mobile was in a different place — as were tech-enabled financial services. There hasn’t been much progress for the personal finance tracker app category in the meantime. Mint has stumbled along with integration issues and tiresome data misclassifications. For many, the best alternative has been firing up a spreadsheet.

Copilot is a new personal finance-tracking app from a former Googler that seems like it could garner a following based on its slick design and ease of use. The subscription iOS app lets you load your financial data, create custom categories for transactions and set budgets. It has been invitation-only for the past several months, but is launching publicly today.

Founder Andrés Ugarte told TechCrunch that he started the effort after eight years at Google — most recently inside its Area 120 experimental products division — because of slow progress in the personal finance space since Mint’s acquisition.

“I’ve been trying to use personal finance apps for the last eight years, and I eventually ended up giving up on them,” Ugarte says. “I was willing to make them work, and create my own categories and fix the data so that stuff was all categorized correctly. But I was always disappointed because the apps never felt smart because they would make the same mistakes again.”

I spent a few hours poking around Copilot over the past couple of days and I like what I’ve seen. The design is friendlier than other options, but its major strengths are that you can easily re-categorize a transaction that didn’t automatically fall in the bucket that you wanted it to, mark internal transfers between accounts and exclude one-off purchases from your tracked budget. Other apps have also allowed these functionalities, but Copilot lets you denote whether you want every transaction with a particular vendor to route to a certain category or bypass your budget entirely, so it actually learns from your activity.

In some ways, the killer feature of Copilot is just how great Plaid is. The app relies heavily on the Visa-acquired financial services API startup, and I can see why the startup was so successful. The integration’s intuitiveness alongside Copilot’s already smooth on-boarding process gives users early indication for the app’s thoughtful design.

Copilot has its limitations, mainly in that the team is just two people right now, so those holding out for desktop or Android support might have to wait a bit. Some may be turned off by the app’s $2.99 monthly subscription price, though there are more than a few reasons to avoid free apps that have access to all of your financial info. Copilot maintains that users’ financial info will never be sold to or shared with third parties.

Ugarte has largely been self-funding the effort by selling off his Google shares, but the team just locked down a $250,000 angel round and is searching for more funding.

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Jan
16

Visa’s Plaid acquisition shows a shifting financial services landscape

When Visa bought Plaid this week for $5.3 billion, a figure that was twice its private valuation, it was a clear signal that traditional financial services companies are looking for ways to modernize their approach to business.

With Plaid, Visa picks up a modern set of developer APIs that work behind the scenes to facilitate the movement of money. Those APIs should help Visa create more streamlined experiences (both at home and inside other companies’ offerings), build on its existing strengths and allow it to do more than it could have before, alone.

But don’t take our word for it. To get under the hood of the Visa-Plaid deal and understand it from a number of perspectives, TechCrunch got in touch with analysts focused on the space and investors who had put money into the erstwhile startup.

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Jan
16

The best budget smart speakers

Google

Google Assistant offers great smart home performance, and you can get it in a super affordable speaker — the Google Nest Mini.

If you like the idea of the Amazon Echo Dot but prefer to stick within Google's ecosystem, then the Google Nest Mini is a better fit for you. The compact smart speaker is designed to serve as a replacement for the original Google Home Mini.

The Nest Mini is about as small as the Amazon Echo Dot, but instead of Alexa you'll get Google Assistant support, which offers a lot of the same smart features.

With Google Assistant, you can play music from a variety of services through voice commands, including Google Play, Spotify, YouTube Music, and more. You can also ask the speaker general questions, receive news briefings, get weather updates, set alarms, and control other compatible smart devices.  

The Google Nest Mini is pretty well-designed too. It's a little less angular than the Echo Dot, but it still offers a very similar puck-shaped design with a fabric covering around the top and capacitive controls for things like volume. It's also available in a few colors, like Charcoal, Sky, Coral, and Chalk. A handy keyhole is integrated on the back as well, making it easy to mount on a wall.

While the Google Nest Mini is super smart and pretty stylish, it's not perfect. Like Amazon's Echo Dot, audio playback on the device is a little limited, so it's not the best speaker for those that want to enjoy loud, full-sounding music. With that said, the audio performance has been improved compared to Google's older entry-level smart speaker, the Google Home Mini. 

Unlike the Amazon Echo Dot, however, the Nest Mini lacks a 3.5mm audio out port. This means you can't use a wired connection to hook the Mini up to another speaker for better audio playback. If you want that feature, you'll have to go for the Echo Dot instead.

Pros: Google Assistant built-in, affordable, nice design, keyhole for easy wall-mounting

Cons: Audio quality isn't great, doesn't include a 3.5mm audio out port

Buy on Best Buy for $35.00
Original author: Christian de Looper

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Dec
19

468th Roundtable For Entrepreneurs Starting NOW: Live Tweeting By @1Mby1M - Sramana Mitra

You can turn off your location on an Android device so that no apps or services can track your whereabouts. Your Android phone's location services help you find places nearby, can help friends find you, and can help you find your phone if you ever lose it, but it's also easy to turn off the feature should you want to.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Feeling hungry for a burger, in the mood for a beer, or in need of the nearest location that sells diapers? There's no need to stay peckish, thirsty, or dealing with that potty-related emergency when your Android phone can quickly help you find a nearby diner, bar, or supermarket. And how can it do that? Why, thanks to its location tracking abilities, of course.

Your phone always knows where you are, and it shares your location with all sorts of apps that can help you find stores, restaurants, track your run or bike ride, help give you driving directions, and so much more.

On the other hand, for myriad reasons, you may at times wish to roam about without being monitored. In those cases, just turn location tracking off and move about in anonymity. 

Here's how to turn off location tracking on your Android device.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $899.99 at Best Buy)

How to turn off location tracking on an Android device

1. Open the Settings app on your Android and look for either the "Connections" tab or, depending on your phone, the "Privacy" tab.

2. Tap "Location" and toggle the switch to off.

Toggle off the "Location" tag to prevent location tracking entirely. Steven John/Business Insider

3. You can also tap "Emergency Location Service" and "Google Location Sharing" to switch off location-tracking features there as well.

You can go to Google settings directly from the Settings app and turn off certain location trackers there. Steven John/Business Insider

 

Original author: Steven John

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Jul
06

1Mby1M Virtual Accelerator Investor Forum: With Vikas Choudhury of Pivot Ventures (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

Amazon partner Pinnacle Logistics is laying off more than 1,600 workers based at Baltimore-Washington International airport, Business Insider has learned.Pinnacle Logistics provides ground services at some of Amazon's air-operation sites across the US.Amazon has offered jobs to Pinnacle's hourly workers, an Amazon spokesperson told Business Insider.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

A company that services Amazon's Prime Air fleet is laying off more than 1,600 workers in Maryland as Amazon shifts more jobs in-house, Business Insider has learned. 

Texas-based Pinnacle Logistics plans to lay off 1,609 workers based at Baltimore-Washington International airport, the company said in a notice filed on Wednesday with the state of Maryland. The layoffs will take effect in mid-April, according to the notice. 

Pinnacle Logistics is executing the layoffs as Amazon opens a new $36 million 200,000-square-foot hub for its Prime Air operations in Baltimore.

Amazon has offered jobs to Pinnacle's hourly workers, an Amazon spokesperson told Business Insider.

"Amazon has been an active member of the Baltimore area business community for several years, and we are excited to grow our direct employee base in the area to now include our Baltimore Regional Air Hub," the spokesperson said. "The hourly Pinnacle Logistics employees have been offered roles as an Amazon associate at their current location."

A Pinnacle Logistics representative declined to comment on the layoffs when reached by phone on Thursday.

Pinnacle Logistics provides ground services for Amazon's Prime Air fleet, such as the loading and unloading of cargo. 

Within the past several months, several other logistics providers that work with Amazon have also announced layoffs.

Letter Ride, Inpax, Urban Mobility Now, and Sheard-Loman Transport announced upward of 2,000 layoffs in October. All four companies deliver Amazon packages to customers' homes.

Original author: Hayley Peterson

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Oct
14

Whole Foods customer records among 82M exposed due to vulnerable database

Facebook will reportedly retreat from its efforts to include advertisements in WhatsApp's messaging service, the Wall Street Journal's Jeff Horowitz and Kirsten Grind reported on Thursday.The decision to disband a team dedicated to implementing ads on WhatsApp is a surprising turnaround in Facebook's efforts to monetize one of its most popular services. A Facebook spokesperson confirmed that WhatsApp was currently prioritizing building features for businesses and pushing its payment services in other countries. Ads will remain a long-term opportunity for the company, the spokesperson said.The move comes more than a year after WhatsApp co-founders Brian Acton and Jan Koum left the company, after clashing with Facebook executives over the effort to monetize the app. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Facebook is shelving plans to include advertisements in its WhatsApp messaging service, according to a new report. 

The company recently disbanded a team that explored the best ways of integrating ads onto WhatsApp, the Wall Street Journal's Jeff Horowitz and Kirsten Grind reported on Thursday.

The move is a surprising about face in Facebook's efforts to monetize its various products, particularly one of its most popular services. Facebook acquired WhatsApp for $22 billion in 2014, and has since been searching for ways to monetize the company's 1.5 billion userbase. 

Facebook had previously said that WhatsApp would begin placing ads in the Status section of the app, beginning in 2020. The advertisement giant even teased what the new WhatsApp ads would look like at a Facebook Marketing Summit. 

But now, WhatsApp will focus on building features that let businesses communicate with customers in the app, as well as providing payments services to other countries, a Facebook spokesperson confirmed to Business Insider. Ads will remain a long-term opportunity but will not be subject to a specific timeline, the spokesperson said.

The tech giant's decision to shelve its WhatsApp ads plans comes more than 18 months after WhatsApp cofounders Brian Acton and Jan Koum left the company, along with a slew of other company executives. The two cofounders had been vocal about their opposition to advertisements long before Facebook had expressed an interest in buying the app, calling ads "the disruption of aesthetics, the insults to your intelligence and the interruption of your train of thought," in a 2012 blog post.

Facebook's push to bring ads to the app had caused its co-founders to clash with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg. In a later interview with Forbes, Acton revealed that he had resigned from the company in protest of its efforts to sell ads on WhatsApp. 

Original author: Bani Sapra

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Oct
15

Sledgehammer Games invades the UK with new Call of Duty studio

Slack is showing promising growth prospects in industries like retail, media, healthcare and financial services this year, argue analysts at equity research firm William Blair and Co. These prospects suggest that the competition from Microsoft's rival Teams chat app may not be as as significant as originally thought.One big reason why is Slack's specialized security and compliance features which could help it make inroads into healthcare and financial services companies.Other analysts have argued that Microsoft's dominance in enterprise will make it hard for Slack to add customers beyond its core small business customer base. Click here for more BI Prime stories.

Slack is showing promising growth prospects this year, which may suggest the threat from Microsoft's rival Teams chat app may not be as significant as originally thought, say analysts at equity research firm William Blair and Co. 

Key to Slack's future growth is being able to gain customers in markets other than tech, and it's showing success in markets like retail and media and making progress in industries with strict regulations like financial services and healthcare, writes Bhavan Suri, an analyst at William Blair, in a research note following a visit to Slack's headquarters. 

He points out that Slack's ability to offer specialized security and compliance features is helping it appeal to potential customers in healthcare and financial services where there are strict rules around how employees communicate and deal with sensitive information. 

"Slack's advanced functionality in security and compliance (such as its Enterprise Key Management technology) is resulting in more strategic conversations with these customers. While the company is still in the land phase in these regulated industries, there is potential to go wall-to-wall here in the future," Suri said. 

Shares of Slack have fallen by roughly 40% since the company became publicly listed in June. 

Given that, Suri also said the looming threat from Microsoft Teams may be less worrisome than some think. Teams users have been migrated from an older product called Skype for Business and it is bundled into Office 365. Teams now has 20 million daily active users as of November, as opposed to Slack's 12 million daily active users. 

Suri said the fact that users typically didn't choose to start using Teams, in the same way users started using Slack, means those users could still convert to Slack. 

"This lack of purchase intent, combined with lower user engagement once implemented, leads us to believe there is relatively less stickiness with Teams and a higher chance of conversion to Slack," he said. "Instead, there is still a possibility that many of the 20 million daily active users (DAUs) on Microsoft Teams can become Slack customers at some point in the future."

Slack has responded to Teams rapid user growth by highlighting figures that show how much more engaged users are on their platform. Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield has also criticized the user growth as not organic and called Microsoft an "unsportsmanlike" competitor. 

Other analysts have argued that given Microsoft's dominance in the enterprise space, Slack will struggle to grow beyond its core small business customer baseto larger enterprise customers. 

Suri notes that Slack is investing heavily in sales and marketing as a way to move beyond its typical freemium model that worked for tech companies. 

"With investment in lead gen and increased market education, the company is aiming to accelerate the pace of customer adds as there is still plenty of opportunity to grow the customer base," he said. "As long as Slack continues to execute on its growth strategy over the next few quarters and delivers fundamentally sound results, we think the overhang will gradually lift."

Got a tip? Contact this reporter via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or Signal at 925-364-4258. (PR pitches by email only, please.) You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Paayal Zaveri

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Apr
11

Watch SpaceX launch Falcon Heavy, the world's most powerful rocket, for $150 million

The first cannabis startup to raise big money in Silicon Valley is in danger of burning out. TechCrunch has learned that pot delivery middleman Eaze has seen unannounced layoffs, and its depleted cash reserves threaten its ability to make payroll or settle its AWS bill. Eaze was forced to raise a bridge round to keep the lights on as it prepares to attempt a major pivot to “touching the plant” by selling its own marijuana brands through its own depots.

TechCrunch spoke with nine sources with knowledge of Eaze’s struggles to piece together this report. If Eaze fails, it could highlight serious growing pains amid the “green rush” of startups into the marijuana business.

Eaze, the startup backed by some $166 million in funding that once positioned itself as the “Uber of pot” — a marketplace selling pot and other cannabis products from dispensaries and delivering it to customers — has recently closed a $15 million bridge round, according to multiple sources. The funding was meant to keep the lights on as Eaze struggles to raise its next round of funding amid problems with making decent margins on its current business model, lawsuits, payment processing issues and internal disorganization.

 

An Eaze spokesperson confirmed that the company is low on cash. Sources tell us that the company, which laid off some 30 people last summer, is preparing another round of cuts in the meantime. The spokesperson refused to discuss personnel issues, but noted that there have been layoffs at many late-stage startups as investors want to see companies cut costs and become more efficient.

From what we understand, Eaze is currently trying to raise a $35 million Series D round, according to its pitch deck. The $15 million bridge round came from unnamed current investors. (Previous backers of the company include 500 Startups, DCM Ventures, Slow Ventures, Great Oaks, FJ Labs, the Winklevoss brothers and a number of others.) Originally, Eaze had tried to raise a $50 million Series D, but the investor that was looking at the deal, Athos Capital, is said to have walked away at the eleventh hour.

Eaze is going into the fundraising with an enterprise value of $388 million, according to company documents reviewed by TechCrunch. It’s not clear what valuation it’s aiming for in the next round.

An Eaze spokesperson declined to discuss fundraising efforts, but told TechCrunch, “The company is going through a very important transition right now, moving to becoming a plant-touching company through acquisitions of former retail partners that will hopefully allow us to more efficiently run the business and continue to provide good service to customers.”

Desperate to grow margins

The news comes as Eaze is hoping to pull off a “verticalization” pivot, moving beyond online storefront and delivery of third-party products (rolled joints, flower, vaping products and edibles) and into sourcing, branding and dispensing the product directly. Instead of just moving other company’s marijuana brands between third-party dispensaries and customers, it wants to sell its own in-house brands through its own delivery depots to earn a higher margin. With a number of other cannabis companies struggling, the hope is that it will be able to acquire at low prices brands in areas like marijuana flower, pre-rolled joints, vaporizer cartridges or edibles.

An Eaze spokesperson confirmed that the company plans to announce the pivot in the coming days, telling TechCrunch that it’s “a pretty significant change from provider of services to operating in that fashion but also operating a depot directly ourselves.”

The startup is already making moves in this direction, and is in the process of acquiring some of the assets of a bankrupt cannabis business out of Canada called Dionymed — which had initially been a partner of Eaze’s, then became a competitor, and then sued it over payment disputes, before finally selling part of its business. These assets are said to include Oakland dispensary Hometown Heart, which it acquired in an all-share transaction (“Eaze effectively bought the lawsuit,” is how one source described the sale). This will become Eaze’s first owned delivery depot.

In a recent presentation deck that Eaze has been using when pitching to investors — which has been obtained by TechCrunch — the company describes itself as the largest direct-to-consumer cannabis retailer in California. It has completed more than 5 million deliveries, served 600,000 customers and tallied up an average transaction value of $85. 

To date, Eaze has only expanded to one other state beyond California (Oregon). Its aim is to add five more states this year, and another three in 2021. But the company appears to have expected more states to legalize recreational marijuana sooner, which would have provided geographic expansion. Eaze seems to have overextended itself too early in hopes of capturing market share as soon as it became available.

An employee at the company tells us that on a good day Eaze can bring in between $800,000 and $1 million in net revenue, which sounds great, except that this is total merchandise value, before any cuts to suppliers and others are made. Eaze makes only a fraction of that amount, one reason why it’s now looking to verticatlize into more of a primary role in the ecosystem. And that’s before considering all of the costs associated with running the business. 

Eaze is suffering from a problem rampant in the marijuana industry: a lack of working capital. Because banks often won’t issue working capital loans to weed-related business, deliverers like Eaze can experience delays in paying back vendors. Another source says late payments have pushed some brands to stop selling through Eaze.

Another drain on its finances has been its marketing efforts. A source said out-of-home ads (billboards and the like) allegedly were a significant expense at one point. It has to compete with other pot-purchasing options like visiting retail stores in person, using dispensaries’ in-house delivery services or buying via startups like Meadow that act as aggregated online points of sale for multiple dispensaries.

Indeed, Eaze claims that its pivot into verticalization will bring it $204 million in revenues on gross transactions of $300 million. It notes in the presentation that it makes $9.04 on an average sale of $85, which will go up to $18.31 if it successfully brings in “private label” products and has more depot control.

Selling weed isn’t eazy

The poor margins are only one of the problems with Eaze’s current business model, which the company admits in its presentation have led to an inconsistent customer experience and poor customer affinity with its brand — especially in the face of competition from a number of other delivery businesses.  

Playing on the on-demand, delivery-of-everything theme, it connected with two customer bases. First, existing cannabis consumers already using some form of delivery service for their supply; and a newer, more mainstream audience with disposable income that had become more interested in cannabis-related products but might feel less comfortable walking into a dispensary, or buying from a black market dealer.

It is not the only startup that has been chasing that audience. Other competitors in the wider market for cannabis discovery, distribution and sales include Weedmaps, Puffy, Blackbird, Chill (a brand from Dionymed that it founded after ending its earlier relationship with Eaze), and Meadow, with the wider industry estimated to be worth some $11.9 billion in 2018 and projected to grow to $63 billion by 2025.

Eaze was founded on the premise that the gradual decriminalization of pot — first making it legal to buy for medicinal use, and gradually for recreational use — would spread across the U.S. and make the consumption of cannabis-related products much more ubiquitous, presenting a big opportunity for Eaze and other startups like it. 

It found a willing audience among consumers, but also tech workers in the Bay Area, a tight market for recruitment. 

“I was excited for the opportunity to join the cannabis industry,” one source said. “It has for the most part gotten a bad rap, and I saw Eaze’s mission as a noble thing, and the team seemed like good people.”

Eaze CEO Ro Choy

That impression was not to last. The company, this employee was told when joining, had plenty of funding with more on the way. The newer funding never materialized, and as Eaze sought to figure out the best way forward, the company cycled through different ideas and leadership: former Yammer executive Keith McCarty, who co-founded the company with Roie Edery (both are now founders at another cannabis startup, Wayv), left, and the CEO role was given to another ex-Yammer executive, Jim Patterson, who was then replaced by Ro Choy, who is the current CEO. 

“I personally lost trust in the ability to execute on some of the vision once I got there,” the ex-employee said. “I thought that on one hand a picture was painted that wasn’t the truth. As we got closer and as I’d been there longer and we had issues with funding, the story around why we were having issues kept changing.” Several sources familiar with its business performance and culture referred to Eaze as a “shitshow.”

No ‘Push for Kush’

The quick shifts in strategy were a recurring pattern that started well before the company got into tight financial straits. 

One employee recalled an acquisition Eaze made several years ago of a startup called Push for Pizza. Founded by five young friends in Brooklyn, Push for Pizza had gone viral over a simple concept: you set up your favorite pizza order in the app, and when you want it, you pushed a single button to order it. (Does that sound silly? Don’t forget, this was also the era of Yo, which was either a low point for innovation, or a high point for cynicism when it came to average consumer intelligence… maybe both.)

Eaze’s idea, the employee said, was to take the basics of Push for Pizza and turn it into a weed app, Push for Kush. In it, customers could craft their favorite mix and, at the touch of a button, order it, lowering the procurement barrier even more.

The company was very excited about the deal and the prospect of the new app. They planned a big campaign to spread the word, and held an internal event to excite staff about the new app and business line. 

“They had even made a movie of some kind that they showed us, featuring a caricature of Jim” — the CEO at a the time — “hanging out of the sunroof of a limo.” (We found the opening segment of this video online, and Twitter and Instagram accounts that had been created for Push for Kush, but no more than that.)

Push For Kush Title Sequence from Jessica Hutchison on Vimeo.

Then just one week later, the whole plan was scrapped, and the founders of Push for Pizza fired. “It was just brushed under the carpet,” the former employee said. “No one could get anything out of management about what had happened.”

Something had happened, though: The company had been taking payments by card when it made the acquisition, but the process was never stable and by then it had recently gone back to the cash-only model. Push for Kush by cash was less appealing. “They didn’t think it would work,” the person said, adding that this was the normal course of business at the startup. “Big initiatives would just die in favor of pushing out whatever new thing was on the product team’s radar.” 

Eaze’s spokesperson confirmed that “we did acquire Push for Pizza . . but ultimately didn’t choose to pursue [launching Push for Kush].”

Payments were a recurring issue for the startup. Eaze started out taking payments only in cash — but as the business grew, that became increasingly problematic. The company found itself kicked off the credit card networks and was stuck with a less traceable, more open to error (and theft) cash-only model at a time when one employee estimated it was bringing in between $800,000 and $1 million per day in sales. 

Eventually, it moved to cards, but not smoothly: Visa specifically did not want Eaze on its platform. Eaze found a workaround, employees say, but it was never above board, which became the subject of the lawsuit between Eaze and Dionymed. Currently the company appears to only take payments via debit cards, ACH transfer and cash, not credit card.

Another incident sheds light on how the company viewed and handled security issues. 

Can Eaze rise from the ashes?

At one point, employees allegedly discovered that Eaze was essentially storing all of its customer data — including users’ signatures and other personal information — in an Azure bucket that was not secured, meaning that if anyone was nosing around, it could be easily discovered and exploited.

The vulnerability was brought to the company’s attention. It was something that was up to product to fix, but the job was pushed down the list. It ultimately took seven months to patch this up. “I just kept seeing things with all these huge holes in them, just not ready for prime time,” one ex-employee said of the state of products. “No one was listening to engineers, and no one seemed to be looking for viable products.” Eaze’s spokesperson confirms a vulnerability was discovered but claims it was promptly resolved.

Today, the issue is a more pressing financial one: The company is running out of money. Employees have been told the company may not make its next payroll, and AWS will shut down its servers in two days if it doesn’t pay up. 

Eaze’s spokesperson tried to remain optimistic while admitting the dire situation the company faces. “Eaze is going to continue doing everything we can to support customers and the overall legal cannabis industry. We’re excited about the future and acknowledge the challenges that the entire community is facing.”

As medicinal and recreational marijuana access became legal in some states in the latter 2010s, entrepreneurs and investors flocked to the market. They saw an opportunity to capitalize on the end of a major prohibition — a once in a lifetime event. But high government taxes, enduring black markets, intense competition and a lack of financial infrastructure willing to deal with any legal haziness have caused major setbacks.

While the pot business might sound chill, operations like Eaze depend on coordinating high-stress logistics with thin margins and little room for error. Plenty of food delivery startups, from Sprig to Munchery, went under after running into similar struggles, and at least banks and payment processors would work with them. With the odds stacked against it, Eaze has a tough road ahead.

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Jun
04

Emergence’s Lotti Siniscalco and Retail Zipline’s Melissa Wong will join us on Extra Crunch Live

Amazon's investment in one-day shipping is likely going to result in higher long-term profits, despite the initial costs to build it out, Morgan Stanley wrote in a note Thursday.In the note, Morgan Stanley raised Amazon's operating profit estimates for 2021 and its price target to $2,200 per share.The note is the latest in a string of bullish analyst notes about Amazon's one-day shipping initiative. Click here to read more BI Prime stories.

Amazon is spending billions of dollars in making one-day shipping the default for its Prime members. Morgan Stanley is convinced the investment will pay off in a big way.

In a note published Thursday, Morgan Stanley analysts wrote that while investors will be disappointed by the near-term hit on profits, Amazon's investment in faster shipping is expected to deliver "materially higher than expected profitability in 2021 and beyond," as it leads to more frequent and a wider group of shoppers on its site.

The note said that it is raising Amazon's operating profit estimate by 8%, or $2 billion, for 2021, and its price target by $100 to $2,200 per share — adding that "this build phase too shall pass" for Amazon.

"We see one-day shipping deepening Amazon's moats, leading to larger share gains/profits," the note said.

The note is the latest in a string of analyst forecasts that are bullish about Amazon's investment in one-day shipping. Since Amazon announced plans to spend over $3 billion on shortening delivery time last year, a number of Wall Street analysts wrote favorable notes predicting the investment would result in higher growth and more frequent shoppers for the e-commerce site. Amazon disclosed in its most recent earnings report that people bought more products on its site after rolling out one-day shipping.

Morgan Stanley

Morgan Stanley also estimates that roughly 60% of all products on Amazon will become eligible for one-day shipping in 2020, up from the current level of 40%. That will lead to more products sold on its site, and a 15% growth rate in the number of products sold worldwide through the end of 2020, the note said.

More importantly, Morgan Stanley said it would cost less for Amazon to roll out one-day shipping to its overseas marketplaces than it did in the US. That's because international markets already have a lot of the delivery infrastructure built out to make one-day shipping available, unlike in the US where it's relatively new, it said.

"The logistics networks are more in place [in international markets] for one-day which is important as it speaks to how the incremental international one-day investment is likely to be materially smaller than in the US," the note said.

Original author: Eugene Kim

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Jan
16

Amazon is opening a mysterious store 1 mile from Jeff Bezos' $23 million DC mansion

Amazon is opening an 8,041-square-foot store in Washington, D.C., the Washington Business Journal reports.Amazon has revealed few details about the store, except that it's expected to sell produce, alcohol, and prepared meals.The size of the store is intriguing. It's expected to be about four times bigger than most Amazon Go stores, and roughly one third the size of a small Whole Foods store. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Amazon is opening a mysterious store about one mile from CEO Jeff Bezos' $23 million home in Washington, D.C.

A site plan indicates that the store will sell produce, alcohol, and prepared meals, such as breakfast wraps, waffles, burritos, and rice bowls, Mike Neibauer reports in the Washington Business Journal.

The site plan also includes an area to park shopping carts and a "speed lane" for people to enter the store with a swipe, according to the report. 

An Amazon spokesperson declined to comment on the company's plans for the store.

Jeff Bezos' home in the Kalorama neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Harrison Jacobs/Business Insider

The site could be a future Amazon Go, which is the company's chain of cashierless convenience stores.

But according to the Washington Business Journal, the store is expected to occupy 8,041 square feet.

That's at least four times the size of most Amazon Go stores and much smaller than Whole Foods stores, which are typically 25,000 to 50,000 square feet. It's also significantly smaller than the new chain of grocery stores that Amazon has been developing, which will reportedly occupy about 20,000 to 40,000 square feet. 

The mystery store will be built at 1701 14th Street NW, which is about one mile from the Kalorama neighborhood where Bezos bought a home in 2016 for $23 million. 

Sign up for Business Insider's retail newsletter, The Drive-Thru.

Original author: Hayley Peterson

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Jan
16

VCs are just tired

I was in SF last week and met with more than a dozen VCs over the course of two days. This was post the holidays, post their visits to the ski chalets in Tahoe and the island beaches, and in the smack dab of one of the most important fundraise periods of the year — the mid-to-late January to April stretch when all the backlog of startups from Q4 initiate their fundraises for the new year.

And the one constant refrain I heard over and over again across these conversations was just this: VCs are tired.

The reasons were similar if not perfectly overlapping. The biggest driver was the sheer flood of venture dollars targeting too few deals in the Valley these days. Consumer investing has become passé as exits disappear and the mobile wave crests (last year was the first year B2B investing overtook consumer investing in modern memory), forcing everyone to chase the same set of SaaS companies.

VCs described to me how the top deals start and close their fundraises in 48-72 hours. Several VCs groused that dozens of firms now descend like hawks on the unwitting but fortunate target startup, angling for a term sheet and willing to give up valuation and preferences left and right for any chance at the cap table. Earlier investors are just as desperate to own that equity, and no longer play any sort of honest broker role that they might have in the past.

Plus, the FOMO of the moment is more acute than ever — a VC at the end of the day might have already seen a dozen companies, but gets a late night intro to one last company — perhaps the company that could make or break their career. And so they will take that one last meeting, and then one more last meeting, hoping to find some meaningful edge against the competition.

And so VCs are running ragged around South Park, and increasingly, flying around the world scouring for any alpha wherever they can find it. Increasingly, it feels, they aren’t finding it though.

Firms are doing what they can. They are staffing up, trying to hire more raw talent in the hopes of finding that last undiscovered company. They scour their own portfolios and probe their founders, trying to find a tip to a deal that their competitor may have missed. They host dinner after dinner (sometimes multiple in one night — as I sometimes witness when I get an invitation to all of them, as if I can be in more than one place at the same time), again, hoping to find some bit of magic.

Ironically, the “tired” line was something I used to hear from seed investors, who constantly had to churn through dozens of under-hearted startups to find the gold. Now, I’ve heard this language more and more from later-stage VCs, where the Excel spreadsheet drives the valuation more than a relationship with a founder — and everyone can read the gridiron of SaaS metrics.

All of this in some ways is good for startup founders (and their earliest investors) — higher markups are going to result in more resources with less dilution, and that’s always nice. The challenge is that relationships are being forged in the most intense of sale processes, and that means that founders may only have a short period of time to work with a partner before committing a board seat to that individual. Personalities are hard to judge in such a crucible.

As are the numbers. We’ve chatted on Equity a bit about reneged term sheets, but it’s a pattern that I hear whispered about more and more. Less due diligence is happening before the term sheet is signed (again, to beat out the rabid competition), and there is now more buyer’s remorse from VCs (and very occasionally founders) that can lead to a botched round along the way.

Lack of bandwidth, hyper-velocity, a pittance of sleep — all of these are intensifying the sensitivity of VC returns. Email a VC an hour before or after and it may well change the result of a fundraise. VCs once had a reputation for plodding and slow deliberation. That old normal is definitely dead right now, and in its place is a new, modern VC who is going to determine millions of dollars in a few minutes on a jet fuel of caffeine and ambition.

It’s the best and worst of times, and I can’t help but wonder what the results of the 2019 and 2020 vintage years are going to look like eight-10 years from now.

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Jan
16

'Where do downloads go on Android?': How to find your downloads on an Android device

You can find your downloads on your Android device in your My Files app (called File Manager on some phones), which you can find in the device's App Drawer. Unlike iPhone, app downloads are not stored on the home screen of your Android device, and can be found with an upward swipe on the home screen. Within My Files or File Manager, you can access your downloads, images, videos, audio files, and various cloud services, such as Google Drive or OneDrive.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

With all of the amazing features available on Android, like a high definition camera, apps for everything, lighting fast processing power, and so on, there is one thing that can be less than convenient: the difficulty of finding downloaded files.

It's almost as if your smartphone's downloads disappear just as soon as the transfer of data has been completed.

In fact, unless you know where to look, on some phones that's effectively what happens. So let's tell you where to look for downloads on your Android phone. It's a little place called the app drawer.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $899.99 at Best Buy)

How to find downloads on your Android device 

1. Open the Android app drawer by swiping up from the bottom of the screen.

2. Look for the My Files (or File Manager) icon and tap it. If you don't see it, instead tap the Samsung icon with many smaller icons inside it — My Files will be among them.

On some Android devices, the app will be called File Manager instead of My Files. Steven John/Business Insider

3. Inside the My Files app, tap "Downloads."

For files downloaded via Chrome, you can access them by tapping the three dots at the top-right corner of the Chrome browser. Steven John/Business Insider

You should now be able to see all of your downloads.

 

Original author: Steven John

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Jan
16

The best FreeSync monitors

Monitors with FreeSync allow AMD gamers to play with zero screen tearing, input lag, and frame stuttering.The ASUS VG279Q monitor's IPS panel — combined with its fast 1ms, 144Hz performance — makes it the best FreeSync monitor you can buy for gaming.

Have you ever played a computer game and the buildings, characters, and practically everything in the world seems to rip apart? It's not a bug and definitely isn't a visual enhancement. It's most often a symptom of screen tearing.

Screen tearing occurs when the frame rate of the content — counted in frames per second, or "fps" — doesn't perfectly match the refresh rate of the monitor — measured in Hertz, or "Hz". To compensate, frames of in-game graphics sit your graphics card's memory until there's room in its frame buffer to deliver them to your monitor.

The monitor is constantly refreshing its display contents to get those buffered frames in, and the imperfections in the loading and flushing of those frames create an ugly tearing effect that can ruin a movie or your gaming experience. It can also create a frame stutter that makes your game appear jittery or choppy.

The old trick to fixing this issue was enabling virtual sync. It's a technology that's usually effective at reducing the effects of screen tear, but many swear it off due to the input lag it can cause. This is especially damning for esports gamers who need every advantage possible.

That's where FreeSync comes in. FreeSync is the name of the variable refresh rate technology backed primarily by AMD. The monitor works directly with the graphics processor (GPU) to sync frames perfectly, so you completely eliminate the symptoms without the added input lag.

Unfortunately, not all monitors support this technology, and you need an AMD GPU to take advantage of it. Nvidia support for the open standard is building, but G-Sync is what you want if you're in that camp. If you need help finding a monitor to step your game up, look no further. We've uncovered some of the best monitors with FreeSync no matter your budget, need, or style.

Original author: Quentyn Kennemer

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Oct
20

Report: Ransomware affected 72% of organizations in past year

More than 70 years ago, a group of chemicals known as PFAS promised to make people's lives easier and more efficient. The category of chemicals — whose full name is per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances — was developed in the 1940s to resist heat, grease, stains, and water. That made them ideal coatings for food packaging, paper plates, and cookware. 

They were also used as firefighting foam for military training exercises and emergency responses starting in the 1970s.

But since then, scientists have uncovered links between PFAS and cancer, liver damage, thyroid disease, and developmental issues.

Today, the chemicals are in the bloodstreams of 99% of Americans, The Intercept reported. They've been found at more than 700 sites across 49 US states, according to EWG.

PFAS can linger in water and air for thousands of years, so consuming or inhaling them means they could stay in the body for life — hence their nickname, "forever chemicals."

But a group of researchers at Clarkson University in New York is developing a way to destroy PFAS in water. Together with the US Air Force, the team is using machines called plasma reactors to sever the chemicals' carbon-fluorine bonds — the same bonds that make them virtually indestructible in the environment. 

The technology applies only to PFAS in groundwater. (The researchers are working on a separate project to remove PFAS from soil.) But it could eventually be cheaper than the current water-filtration process.

Scientists are splitting PFAS molecules apart

The Air Force began using a new firefighting foam that doesn't contain PFAS in July 2018, but it still has to contend with the legacy of the old one. The chemicals have gotten into the groundwater at numerous Air Force bases across the US, forcing the military to spend more than $2.2 billion to clean up PFAS-contaminated sites, according to a report on the Environmental Protection Agency's website. 

That's why the Air Force is looking for a cheaper way to clean contaminated water.

The Enhanced Contact Plasma Reactor at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Clarkson University

To test their technology, the Clarkson researchers built a 20-foot-long mobile trailer that holds two plasma reactors. For two weeks in September, they pumped PFAS-contaminated groundwater from the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio into the reactors.

Argon gas at the bottom of the reactors carries the PFAS molecules to the surface. The researchers then use high-voltage electrodes to generate plasma, an ionized gas made of free-roaming electrons and positive ions. 

The plasma zaps the water's surface, where it spreads across like fire, hitting the PFAS molecules and splitting them apart. Once the carbon and fluorine molecules have been separated, the PFAS compound is effectively destroyed. 

Clarkson doctoral candidate Chase Nau-Hix adjusts the settings on the plasma reactor. Clarkson University

Selma Mededovic, the principal researcher overseeing the project, said treating a single gallon of water this way takes one minute.

That's far slower than one of the standard methods for removing PFAS: adding carbon to contaminated water. With that approach, the chemicals stick to carbon, allowing clean water to be filtered out. Hundreds of gallons of water per minute can be treated this way, but Mededovic said the spent carbon needed to be incinerated afterward.

That incineration process costs about $3 to $4 per gallon of contaminated water, she said. Her plasma method, by contrast, is at least 40% cheaper (though the estimate does not include the cost of the reactors).

Mededovic said she would have a better sense of how much the reactors cost once the first commercial prototype is built. She expects it to be operational by the end of this year.  

In the meantime, her team is ramping up the technology to treat 15 gallons of contaminated water per minute. Eventually, they hope to treat about 200 gallons per minute.  

"We are working on scaling up our process to be competitive to carbon," Mededovic said. 

The EPA doesn't have a legal limit for PFAS in water

The Clarkson team's plasma reactor reduces PFAS concentrations in water well below the EPA's general limit for drinking-water contaminants: 70 parts per trillion.

But environmental groups have expressed concern that the limit is too high when it comes to PFAS. (The nonprofit Environmental Working Group endorses a limit of one part per trillion). 

The EPA pledged to develop national drinking-water regulations for PFAS by the end of 2019, but the deadline came and went.

On Friday, the US House of Representatives passed a group of measures that would require the EPA to set that guideline. The measures would also label PFAS as "hazardous substances," which would allow the EPA to require industrial manufacturers to clean them up. 

The Trump administration has threatened to veto the measures, however, calling them "problematic and unreasonable" and a "litigation risk."

But Mededovic said even scientific innovations like hers weren't enough without regulations.

"Elevated levels of PFAS have been found in many public and private water sources, and we need to regulate these compounds," she said. "Companies need to be accountable for what they're producing and releasing."

Original author: Aria Bendix

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Dec
19

Despite winter’s chill, the Northeast’s tech ecosystem is white-hot

You can share your location between an iPhone and Android device by using Google Maps' "Share your location" feature.Google Maps lets you send your exact location in a text message, which can be sent between iPhones and Android devices with no issue.When you share your location, you can choose how long you'd like the location link to be active.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The lack of compatibility between iPhones and Android phones can often be annoying. And if you want to share your location across devices, you might think it's too complex — but there's a quick way to do it. 

Fortunately, Google Maps allows you to bridge the divide from iPhone to Android. All you have to do is share your location by sending a link through text message. 

Here's how to do it. 

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Best Buy)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $899.99 at Best Buy)

How to share location between an iPhone and Android phone

1. Download Google Maps from the App Store if you don't have the app downloaded on your iPhone already.

2. Open Google Maps, and enable location services by selecting "Allow While Using App" if you're prompted. 

Allow Google Maps to access your location while using the app. Emma Witman/Business Insider

3. Tap the blue arrow in the bottom right corner to see your current location in the app.

Press the arrow to see your location in Google Maps. Emma Witman/Business Insider

4. Tap your blue location dot to pull up more options. 

5. Select "Share your location."

6. You can choose a period of time to share your location, or "Until you turn this off." For the purposes of sharing your location easily with a contact, choose a period of time. 

Select how long you'd like someone to see your location. Emma Witman/Business Insider

7. Tap the Message icon and type in your Android contact to share your location with them. 

Share your location through a text message to an Android phone. Emma Witman/Business Insider

8. Hit send as is, or modify the message. Just be sure to leave the Google Maps custom-created link intact. 

You can also share your location from an Android phone to an iPhone, as the steps within the Android Google Maps app are the same. You'll also send a link via text message. 

The process for sharing your location from an Android to an iPhone user is essentially the same. Emma Witman/Business Insider
Original author: Emma Witman

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Jan
16

Casper's money-losing mattress business will face a tough IPO path, and some observers think the IPO might even get scrapped

Online mattress company Casper, which filed for an initial public offering last week, could find it hard to complete its IPO, business experts told Business Insider.Wall Street has soured on unicorns, or startups valued at $1 billion or more, that lose money.Casper is losing money, thanks to high marketing, administrative, and return costs.But the company's valuation could also hinder its IPO; comparable public companies that are actually profitable are valued far less on a price-to-sales basis."They all want to pitch themselves as tech companies," Synovus' Dan Morgan said. "To me, this isn't a tech company. I hate to tell you, you're just an online marketer that sells mattresses."Click here for more BI Prime stories.

Wall Street may not end up being a friendly place for Casper.

There's a good chance that the company's bid to go public will meet with a chilly reception from public investors, business experts told Business Insider. WeWork's aborted initial public offering and the poor performance of many of the high-profile startups that completed their offerings last year could dampen demand for shares in yet-another money losing and arguably overvalued young company, they said.

"I would refer to Casper's IPO as 'Casper's possible IPO,'" said Robert Hendershott, an associate finance professor at Santa Clara University's Leavey School of Business. "If WeWork is any sign, it's going to be very hard for them to go public."

Casper filed for a public offering last week. Its IPO document revealed that it lost $65 million in the first nine months of last year, or about 20 cents for every dollar of revenue. Huge marketing and administrative costs have weighed on its results.

Wall Street has shied away from money-losing unicorns

So too have product returns. Like many of its competitors, Casper offers a generous return policy; customers can send back mattresses up to 100 days after receiving them. And consumers have taken advantage of that. Refunds, returns, and discounts cost the company $80 million in the first three quarters of last year.

Unfortunately for the company, Wall Street hasn't had much of an appetite lately for money-losing unicorns, or startups with a valuation of $1 billion or more — a level Casper reached with a funding round in February. Uber, Lyft, and Slack shares are all trading well below the prices at which they debuted last year. Pinterest and Peloton are barely above their IPO prices.

"I think that gravity is back," said Rob Siegel, a lecturer in management at Stanford Graduate School of Business, adding that companies both public and private are being forced to focus on their unit economics rather than on growth at all costs. "This is going to be a tough market to go public in."

Investors got burned so much last year by companies that were bleeding cash, that they almost certainly will be less aggressive about investing in such companies this year, Hendershott said.

"I think that we are going to see a lot fewer money-losing IPOs in 2020 than we did in 2019," he said.

Casper's valuation looks pricey compared to its peers

Part of what could hinder Casper's public offering — in addition to its losses — is its valuation. The company hasn't given an estimate of what it expects to be worth in its public offering, but private investors valued it at $1.1 billion last year. That would give it a price-to-sales ratio of about 2.7, based on its trailing-twelve-months revenue.

When compared with some of last year's IPOs, that doesn't seem super-excessive, said Dan Morgan, a senior portfolio manager at Synovus Trust and a longtime tech investor. When Uber debuted last year, it had a price-to-sales ratio of around seven to eight. Lyft's ratio at the time of its IPO was 11. And Slack's was a whopping 50.

But those aren't necessarily the best companies to which to compare Casper. The company after all is basically a mattress manufacturer. As such, its peer group includes Tempur Sealy, Sleep Number, and Purple Innovation. Collectively, those companies are valued at about 0.8 times their sales — or about one third Casper's corresponding valuation. What's more, unlike Casper, all three are profitable.

Purple may be the best company to stack up against Casper. It had similar sales in the first nine months of last year — $304 million for it, compared with $312 million for Casper. But its revenue grew at more than twice Casper's rate in that time period —47% compared with 20%. Unlike Casper, it turned a year-earlier loss into a modest profit of $126,000.

From those numbers, you might think that Purple would be worth a lot more than Casper. But you'd be wrong. Purple's market capitalization stands at $607 million, or about half that of Casper's last private valuation.

"I think it will be interesting to test this billion-dollar valuation point for this particular category," said David Hsu, a professor of management at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. "It's not a great IPO market, obviously."

Casper isn't really a tech company

Another factor that could weigh on Casper is that investor sentiment has completely reversed on startups like it that aspire to be considered as tech companies but really operate in other industries. WeWork was the pre-eminent example of that phenomenon, Hendershott said. 

A year ago, SoftBank valued WeWork at $47 billion, and in its IPO documents, the company tried to play up its technology bona fides. But Wall Street investors saw through the ruse, recognized its as a real-estate company that was bleeding lots of money, and scoffed at the idea of paying a tech-like premium for its shares. The company ultimately pulled its offering, even after reportedly being willing to consider a valuation of as little as $10 billion. When SoftBank bailed out WeWork this fall — weeks before it was expected to run out of cash — it valued it at less than $8 billion.

Casper appears to be following in WeWork's footsteps, at least in terms of trying to present itself as a tech company. Its IPO paperwork mentions the words "technology," "technologies," and "technological" 121 times combined. That's more than even WeWork did.

In the document, Casper touted its "cutting-edge technology," bragged about its "large digital product and technology engineering teams," and talked about how its growth will be driven by "new technologies."

"We believe that technology will increasingly play a role in the continuous optimization of a sleep environment," the company said in the IPO paperwork. 

But the business experts weren't buying it — and they suspect Wall Street won't either.

"They all want to pitch themselves as tech companies," Synovus' Morgan said. "To me, this isn't a tech company. I hate to tell you, you're just an online marketer that sells mattresses."

Got a tip about Casper or another startup? Contact this reporter via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., message him on Twitter @troywolv, or send him a secure message through Signal at 415.515.5594. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Troy Wolverton

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Jan
16

SiteMinder raises $70M at $750M valuation after cresting $70M ARR in 2019

Today SiteMinder, an Australian software company focused on the hotel industry, announced a $70 million (USD) round that values the company at $750 million. That’s about $1.08 billion in Australian dollars, making the firm a Down Under Unicorn, even if it’s a bit shy here in America.

According to SiteMinder, the round was “led by equity funds managed by BlackRock.” The company has previously raised capital from TCV and Bailador.

TechCrunch discussed SiteMinder earlier this year as part of our running examination of companies that have reached certain annual recurring revenue (ARR) thresholds. At that time, we noted that the firm’s revenue was at AU$100 million ARR, while it was a bit light of the level in American dollars.

As we understand the company’s new valuation in both countries’ currencies, it is possible to calculate the company’s current ARR multiple. It’s about 11x. That price is similar to what public SaaS companies command in today’s market, according to Bessemer’s cloud index.

Growth

SiteMinder announced some time ago that it had surpassed the AU$100 million ARR mark in 2019. Software companies — SiteMinder appears to also generate service-oriented revenues from activities like website design — that reach similar scale tend to slow down in percentage growth terms.

To understand the company’s approach to growth, TechCrunch asked SiteMinder if its new capital would allow it to maintain its current pace of ARR growth. The firm had cited “accelerated go-to-market strategies” as a possible use for its new funds, helping frame the question.

According to SiteMinder CEO Sankar Narayan, the answer is “Yes, absolutely.” Narayan went on to say that the company has “the widest global footprint and the largest multilingual capability in our category, giving us pole position as technology adoption accelerates across the hotel industry.” Narayan also cited planned hiring and expanded distribution work in Europe and Asia as giving his company “even greater opportunities for growth.”

SiteMinder operates globally, providing it with a closer presence to some customers (80% of the firm’s revenue is international, it says). That distribution, however, raises a question. Quickly growing companies often struggled to hold their culture together when they are in a single office. SiteMinder operates in over a dozen countries, likely compounding the issue.

Narayan told TechCrunch that SiteMinder is “no stranger to the challenges that come with being a global business.” To combat cultural drift, the CEO says that he visits an overseas office every month, and that his company recently introduced “an all-staff shadow equity plan” to let everyone profit from the company’s progress.

With new capital, and presumably more staff and offices to come, it will be interesting to see what new things the company’s cultural integrity requires.

Regardless, SiteMinder is now the inaugural member of the AU$100 million ARR club, and is a local-currency unicorn to boot. And as it’s harder to reach that valuation outside of Silicon Valley than inside of it, neither of those honorifics should be viewed as dismissive; they’re compliments.

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Oct
18

Tiltify opens Jacksepticeye’s Thankmas charity event to all streamers

Forget the consumer market for electric vehicles. It turns out delivery vehicles could be the “Trojan horse” for electric to really take off.

Korean auto giants Hyundai and Kia put more than $110 million in U.K. startup Arrival, which emerged from relative stealth today. The investment immediately makes Arrival one of Britain’s most valuable startups, valuing it at €3 billion ($3.4 billion), a company spokesperson said. According to the latest research from CB insights, only five other U.K. startups are worth more than this.

Although a five-year-old London-based company that has about 800 employees across five countries, including Germany, the United States and Russia, Arrival has been cagey about its activity until now.

Their idea is to make electric vehicles at similar costs to traditional fossil fuel vehicles but by drastically cutting costs by using “microfactories” close to major cities for manufacturing.

Its modular “skateboard” platform will allow a range of models to be built on one system and its prototypes are already participating in trials by global delivery companies such as DHL, UPS and Royal Mail.

In a statement, Youngcho Chi, Hyundai’s president and chief innovation officer said: “This investment is part of an open innovation strategy pursued by Hyundai and Kia”

Hyundai is understood to be investing $35 billion in autonomous driving and electric cars.

Last year Hyundai announced a $35 billion commitment to develop self-driving technology and electric vehicles. As part of that, it wants to release 23 types of electric vehicles by 2025. Last week, it unveiled a flying taxi concept with Uber at the CES tech conference in Las Vegas.

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Jan
16

Matera raises $11.2 million to let you handle residential property management yourself

Matera, the French startup formerly known as illiCopro, is raising an $11.2 million funding round (€10 million). The company has been building a SaaS platform to give you all the tools you need to handle property management for your residential building.

Index Ventures is leading the round, with existing investor Samaipata also participating. Business angels, such as Bertrand Jelensperger, Paulin Dementhon and Marc-David Choukroun are also participating.

In France, there are two ways to handle property management of residential buildings. Co-owners of the hallways, elevator and common space of the building can either hire a company to do it and handle all the pesky tasks, or you can do it yourself.

Matera wants to target the second category — co-owners who want to manage their building themselves. Other startups, such as Bellman, have chosen a different approach. Matera has built a web-based platform to view information, communicate with other co-owners and make sure everything is up-to-date.

Everybody has their own account and can access the platform. Co-owners meet regularly to handle outstanding issues. Matera centralizes all topics, helps you write a report and checks that it complies with legal requirements.

Matera then handles everything that involves money. You can collect money from co-owners every month and check how your money is spent. The platform tries to do the heavy lifting when it comes to accounting.

Finally, Matera helps you manage contracts with partners — elevator maintenance, heating maintenance, cleaning company, water, electricity, insurance, taking care of the garden, etc. You get an address book for your partners, and the company is working on a way to help you switch to another partner from the platform.

If there’s something you don’t feel comfortable doing yourself, Matera can help you work with legal, accounting, insurance and construction experts.

So far, Matera has managed to attract 1,000 residential buildings representing 25,000 users. The company plans to expand to other European countries in the future, starting with Belgium, Spain, Italy and Germany. With today’s funding round, the company plans to hire 100 persons.

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