Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Y Combinator narrows its focus

TechCrunch Newsletter
TechCrunch PM Logo

By Christine Hall

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Good afternoon, and welcome to TechCrunch PM. Love is in the air today, as is some big news. Today we get into Y Combinator's call for startups, some robotics jobs if you have the skills, why dating apps aren't getting the job done and a handful of funding rounds.

Christine

 image

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

Make your money hustle with Betterment, the automated investing and savings app that makes it easy to be invested

Sponsored by Betterment LLC

With automated investing technology and tax-smart tools designed to help maximize your returns, Betterment puts your money to work and your mind at ease. Start investing at betterment.com today. Investing involves risk. Performance not guaranteed.

Learn More

TechCrunch PM Top 3

Y Combinator sets its sights on new areas: Spatial computing, climate tech and applications of AI technology join the newly announced list of startup incubator Y Combinator's newest request for startups. That's not to say it won't accept companies in other industries, but it's all about what the investors will ultimately like.

Seeking a robotics job?: We've got you covered with this list of companies and the number of open roles.

Rasa raises $30M: We've featured enough stories in this newsletter lately to confidently say that conversational AI is having a moment. Rasa is the latest startup attracting venture capital attention in this area for its approach to making interacting with chatbots more human-like.

TechCrunch PM Top 3 image

Image Credits: Darrell Etherington / TechCrunch, with stock photos from Getty under license

More top reads

Roses are red: We can't do Valentine's Day without some dating news. It might come as a surprise that dating app downloads are slowing down. Why? There are actually a number of reasons, and some may not surprise you.

Where do satellites go after they are retired?: We'll have to ask SpaceX, which made the decision to de-orbit 100 of its Starlink satellites that were discovered to have a flaw that has not been identified yet.

Slack's search gets smarter: Throw away those conventional search tools — Slack has a few new features designed to make finding all that institutional knowledge hiding in channels more accessible. Summaries are big now — just ask Otter — so you'll see one of those in Slack, too.

Classify this under emails we don't like to get: The U.S. military had the unpleasant job of notifying 20,000 people that their personal information was exposed during a large spill of unclassified emails.

The security hits keep coming: We learned that a researcher scanning the internet came across some sensitive company information belonging to BMW.

Developers like Apple's Vision Pro: And they are wasting no time in designing apps. Two weeks after its debut, there are now over 1,000 apps specifically made for the new device.

Who would have thought robots don't like routine?: Robots, in many ways, were built to help humans avoid the mundane. However, software designed for robots tries to correct that, leading to problems. Jacobi Robotics is out to fix that.

Startups, but ethically started: Over on TechCrunch+, Haje speaks with some founders who have come up with an alternative organizational structure for more sustainability and regenerative business practices.

Get growing: Hippo Harvest lands $21 million to combine robotics and AI with indoor farming to grow lettuce for Amazon Fresh and others.

More top reads image

Image Credits: skodonnell / Getty Images under a CC BY 2.0 license.

On the pods

Today's Equity walks through the week's leading startup and venture capital news. Alex gets into Bret Taylor's new startup, a bunch of new funding rounds in fintech and software, some new funds and mushrooms. Lots of mushrooms. Listen here.

On the pods image

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin

Read more stories on TechCrunch.com

Newest Jobs from Crunchboard

See more jobs on CrunchBoard

Post your tech jobs and reach millions of TechCrunch readers for only $349 per month.

Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Flipboard

View this email online in your browser

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Unsubscribe

© 2024 Yahoo. All rights reserved. 110 5th St, San Francisco, CA 94103

Layoffs hit Instacart, Mozilla as tech companies sharpen focus

TechCrunch Newsletter
TechCrunch AM logo

By Alex Wilhelm

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

Happy Valentine's Day! May it be full of candy and comfort. Today's TechCrunch AM focuses on Mozilla's future plans, big rounds raised by software testing and Latin American fintech startups, layoffs at Instacart, and a blizzard of Big Tech updates. Let’s dive in!

Alex

Make your money hustle with Betterment, the automated investing and savings app that makes it easy to be invested

Sponsored by Betterment LLC

With automated investing technology and tax-smart tools designed to help maximize your returns, Betterment puts your money to work and your mind at ease. Start investing at betterment.com today. Investing involves risk. Performance not guaranteed.

Learn More

TechCrunch Top 3

  1. Mozilla is narrowing its focus to work more on Firefox, which, TechCrunch's Frederic Lardinois writes, is bound to make the browser's fans happy. However, there's a cost: Mozilla is cutting staff and some product work, including its Mastodon instance and its Hubs virtual world effort. The company is moving several teams under Firefox itself. Let's see if the changes can help the well-known browser grab some market share from Chrome, Edge and the like.
  2. Antithesis wants to remake software testing: Flush with $47 million in new capital, the former makers of FoundationDB, a distributed database platform that was sold to Apple, want to use simulated environments that mimic hardware to allow for continuous code checking. This startup is not alone in tackling software testing, a large space that includes Qase and CodiumAI.
  3. Instacart cuts staff: 2024's wave of tech layoffs is hitting companies of all sizes. Grocery delivery company Instacart is letting go of 7% of its personnel, or around 250 jobs. That's a lot of savings, and the company told its backers that the cuts will help it build a flatter organization. A leaner, faster team is not something that Instacart is the first tech company to cite in its choice to downsize.
TechCrunch Top 3 image

Image Credits: Mozilla

Don't miss these

Foundry to close after current fund: Despite raising a $500 million fund somewhat recently, Foundry Group isn't going to raise another. The firm had raised $3.5 billion during its lifetime, but its backers say that they didn't intend to build a firm that would stretch to a second generation of investors. Fair enough, but still a slightly novel ending to a long venture saga that saw the firm backing successful companies like Fitbit and Zynga.

Earlybird Health closes larger, second fund: With a second fund worth €173 million, Europe-focused healthtech investors at Earlybird are sticking to their thesis and sector. This is great, since we saw many venture firms raise larger funds in 2021, but the trend has reversed somewhat since.

France's Alan looks to AI to bolster profitability: We just can't stop talking about France, can we? This time, it's Alan, a French insurtech startup that has become quite large, but remains unprofitable. But the startup is hopeful that with the help of modern tooling it can grow its revenue at a quick clip this year without a commensurate rise in its expense base. That's operating leverage, and we love to see it.

Intuitive Machines takes aim at the Moon: We tend to consider Lunar milestones in nation-state terms, but Intuitive Machines wants to become the first private company to land a spacecraft on Earth's OG satellite. If the upcoming launch goes well, Intuitive Machines' spacecraft will enter orbit around the Moon and try to touch down. We'll be watching.

Roam recharges with fresh capital to scale its EV business: EV companies have been a thing in North America for a while now, and China has its share of successes in the space, but other parts of the world are hardly idle in developing their own EVs. Roam, for one, is a Kenyan EV company that just added $24 million to its own coffers.

Fintech in Latin America is still venture-backable: Colombian payments startup Bold just raised $50 million. That's a big check in a region that has seen venture capital interest fade in recent years. The round is also a win for fintech startups in LatAm more generally — it was a popular niche during the last venture boom, but has seen its capital inflows slow in recent quarters.

Andrej Karpathy dips from OpenAI: TechCrunch is famous for having boomerang employees. Folks work here, go away, and then come back when they discover that life outside of their home publication isn't always replete with greener grass. Karpathy had left OpenAI to go join Tesla back in 2017, and now the research scientist is out once again. He insists there's no drama and he wants more time instead for personal projects.

And from the world of Big Tech: TikTok is building a feature that will give creators more ways to hang out with their subscribers. It's called "Sub Space," and you have to wonder how the name made it through brand checks, but here we are.

Airbnb also wants to use AI to become a better concierge, and is working on those despised cleaning fees. Meanwhile, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg thinks that his company's VR headsets are better than Apple's offerings; Waymo is updating its self-driving software, and Akamai doesn't intend to allow mega-cap tech companies control over edge computing.

Don't miss these image

Image Credits: mustafaU / Getty Images

Before you go

Why does everyone want me to eat more mushrooms? I consider mushrooms to be useful as pizza toppings but little else, but they can apparently do everything. They can be used to make fake leather, energy drinks, and in the case of Spacegoods, a powdered drink that will help you relax and put you in a better mood.

I always thought that other, greener plants were good at that, but perhaps mushrooms will sit well in the herbal pantheon. Bottoms up!

Before you go image

Image Credits: Spacegoods

Read more stories on TechCrunch.com

Newest Jobs from Crunchboard

See more jobs on CrunchBoard

Post your tech jobs and reach millions of TechCrunch readers for only $349 per month.

Facebook Twitter Youtube Instagram Flipboard

View this email online in your browser

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Unsubscribe

© 2024 Yahoo. All rights reserved. 110 5th St, San Francisco, CA 94103

Latest News About Gadgets – TechCrunch

Latest News About Social Media – TechCrunch

Epic Gardening Tips and Advices