Gift Guide: Picking out the right iPad

Back in my day, Apple gave us one iPad, and we had to use it, otherwise we’d go to bed iPad-less.

Kids today have all the iPad. There’s an iPad for every mood and every day of the week. Big iPads, small iPads, expensive iPads, slightly less expensive iPads.

If you’re looking for an iPad, it can be tough to know where to start – and that’s doubly the case if you’re looking to pick one up for someone else. There are currently six different models available for purchase from Apple’s site.

They are:

iPad Pro 12.9 inch (6th gen) – Starts at $1,099
iPad Pro 11‑inch (4th generation) – Starts at $799
iPad Air (5th generation) – Starts at $599
iPad (10th generation) – Starts at $449
iPad (9th generation) – Starts at $329
iPad mini (6th generation) – $499

The differences on the models aren’t entirely clear on the face of it, and things are further muddied by different refresh cycles and the fact that a new edition of a specific model doesn’t mean its predecessor necessarily goes away (as is the case with the 9th and 10th gens of the standard iPad). So here’s a quick guide based on different users and use cases.

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Laptop Replacement: 11‑inch (4th generation)

Image Credits: Apple

The notion of an iPad as a laptop replacement would’ve seemed downright bizarre as recently as a few years ago. But while many of us are a long way from giving up our notebooks, plenty (including a TechCrunch staffer or two) have made the jump to an iPad/keyboard case combo and not looked back. The transition has certainly been made easier by recent multi-tasking additions to iPadOS.

You’re best off going with one the Pro models here. While there are bound to be certain elements you miss from your PC days (ports spring immediately to mind), the addition of the M2 chip’s processing power will ease the blow a bit. Couple that with the Magic Keyboard, Smart Keyboard Folio or any number of third-party keyboard cases, and you’ve got a fairly capable laptop replacement (plus a much better camera system that you’re going to get on non-convertible PC).

We went with the 11-inch here for sizing and pricing reasons. Your mileage will vary, of course. Screen size is important for true multitasking and if you plan to use the system to watch movies and the like. You may also consider to $200 upgrade to 5G to always be connected.

Price:Starts at around $799

For Creative Pros: iPad Pro 12.9 inch (6th gen)

Image Credits: Apple

We’re definitely recommending the 12.9 inch version of the Pro here, for the simple reason that a little added real estate goes a long way when it comes to the digital canvas. As above, mileage will vary, but if your friend or loved one is the type to take Apple Pencil to digital paper, it’s probably worth the additional splurge.

Add in elements like the ProMotion and True Tone technology for the display and an excellent dual-camera system with 12MP Wide and 10MP Ultra Wide sensors, and you’ve got a well-rounded creative work slate.

Price:Starts at $1099

Frequent Travelers: iPad mini (6th generation)

Image Credits: Apple

Our two prerequisites here? Thin and light, obviously. The 6th generation iPad mini isn’t the most powerful device in here (though it does, notably, sport the A15 Bionic, vs. the 10th gen iPad’s A14), but for those constantly on the go, shaving off a few ounces goes a long way. The mini weighs in at 0.65 pounds, to the 10th gen iPad’s 1.05.

You are, obviously sacrificing a good deal of screen size here. The mini’s display is only 8.3 inches – somewhere between a very small tablet and very large phone. That’s more than enough for casual gaming, but you’re probably going to be less amenable to a movie marathon on the thing.

Price: Starts at $500

No Frills: iPad (9th generation)

Image Credits: Apple

An important thing to remember in all of this: even the cheapest iPad is an expensive gift – particularly in a bad economy. While it’s true that someone on your list would be over the moon to get a decked-out 12.9-inch iPad Pro, we’re talking about a nearly $800 difference in prices. Or look at this way: you could buy three 9th-gen iPads for the price of one 12.9 inch Pro and still pocket $112.

Certainly not everyone requires the latest and greatest. For most straightforward tablet tasks, a slightly out of date iPad will still get the job done. No shame at all in not buying the most expensive model for things like watching movies, surfing the web and catching up on emails.

Price: Starts at $329

Gift Guide: Picking out the right iPad by Brian Heater originally published on TechCrunch

Pitch Deck Teardown: Hour One’s $20M Series A deck

Over the years, Mike Butcher has covered Hour One a number of times here on TechCrunch. The company is using AI to create text-to-video solutions with realistic-looking human avatars. The space seems to be exploding, and Hour One has been on quite the trajectory. The company raised $5 million back in 2020, was taking on the language learning verticaland raised another $20 million in a round that closed in April of this year.

I’m pretty excited to take a closer look at the deck Hour One used to raise its most recent round, so let’s dive right in!

We’re looking for more unique pitch decks to tear down, so if you want to submit your own, here’s how you can do that.

Slides in this deck

Hour One raised its $20 million round with a tight 11-slide deck. The company shared its deck, dated November 2021, in full, without edits or redactions, so we can see what the investors saw as they were reaching for their checkbooks.

Cover slide
“At a glance” summary slide
Solution slide
Market size slide
Value proposition slide
Product slide 1
Product slide 2
Target audience slide
Case study slide
Team slide
Closing slide

Three things to love

I love a deck that is able to distill its story to the bare essentials. Most of the decks I’m seeing these days, both through my consulting practice and through the pitches submitted to TechCrunch, are a lot longer than the 11 slides Hour One used here. The question is … did they go too far into sparsity? Let’s find out!

Love the “at a glance” approach!

[Slide 2] This is a great approach to get everybody on the same page. Image Credits: Hour One

Let’s admit it: One of the main reasons startup founders need a deck in the first place is to help potential investors figure out whether they want to take a meeting with you. Having a summary slide can help investors figure out if you are in the right vertical and company stage — in other words, you can help them decide if you fit their investment thesis. This slide gets a few of those things right.

By leading with traction (characters and videos produced), customers and funding history, along with a screenshot showing how the interface works, this slide goes a long way toward setting the stage. Personally, I would have added a couple of additional points:

A one-line summary about what the company does (“Human-like AI character videos at the click of a button” could work.)
Make explicit the business model (B2B SaaS).
Make explicit how much money you’re raising (“Raising $20 million Series A”).

The lesson here is to include all the pertinent information about your company in one place, as early in the story as possible.

Great product summary

[Slide 6] This is how you do a product summary. Image Credits: Hour One

Apart from the great pun in the name for its product, this slide is jam packed with really good content, offering a really clear summary of the product complexity Hour One has already built through a simple, user-focused story. To make this slide even better, I’d have preferred that the story was benefits driven rather than feature driven, but it does a lot of heavy lifting as-is.

The reason why benefit-driven product stories work better is obvious: You help the investor connect the dots. It isn’t about what the user can do, but about why they might do these things to save time, money and frustration. Here’s how that might have looked:

No code required –> “Anyone can make AI character videos.”
Voices and languages –> “Connect with your audience in their language.”
Characters –> “Embrace diversity by choosing from more than 100 presenters.”
Data input –> “Customized content on the fly by easily pulling in data from external sources.”

Incidentally, I’m confused about this slide: On the summary slide, we are talking about 150+ characters, and on this slide, it’s 100 presenters. Are presenters and characters different? If so, how? And if not, why are the numbers different? I presume that the founders would be able to talk about this more as they pitch the story, but it would have been better if it were more obvious why there’s a difference here.

A variety of target customers

The very best companies create a product that works well for one set of target users, and then expand the user base to capture a broader market share. Hour One tells that part of the story on its eighth slide:

[Slide 8] Target audiences. Image Credits: Hour One

What really works about this slide is that Hour One is able to show the breadth of its appeal; each of these categories could be big enough to build a successful company, but by being vertical agnostic, Hour One is able to build up a little fear of missing out (FOMO) in me as an investor: I can easily see how the company could be on an extraordinary growth trajectory.

Apparently, I’m in a nitpicking mood today, and as good and as clear as this slide is, I think it would be even better if they combined the target customers with their outcomes. Imagine how much stronger this part of the presentation would have been if the company had used actual case studies for each of these categories.

Here’s how that might look:

E-commerce companies: +15% average basket value.
Real estate: +19% of inquiries.
Language learning: +40% vocab retention.

Obviously, I’m making up the numbers here, but as a founder, these are the kinds of slides where you can really show off how deep your market understanding is. Another approach might be to make it more benefits driven, connecting the customers with the use cases. “E-commerce uses Hour One to connect with customers” and “CFOs use Hour One to make their financial reports come to life.”

For a gold star, combine them for even deeper narratives: “Company X uses Hour One to make its internal training programs, resulting in a 35% increase in completion of new training initiatives.”

As a startup founder, what you can learn from this slide is to always be on the lookout for ways that you can show the depth of your knowledge, both in terms of domain expertise and market context. Understanding your customers deeply and that your product solves real problems for them is an indication that there’s something special about you and your team; being uniquely positioned to solve a problem becomes part of your “moat” — the reason why nobody else could be doing what you are doing.

In the rest of this teardown, we’ll take a look at three things Hour One could have improved or done differently, along with its full pitch deck!

Pitch Deck Teardown: Hour One’s $20M Series A deck by Haje Jan Kamps originally published on TechCrunch

Explore accessibility via Amazon Alexa at Sight Tech Global 2022

A little-appreciated fact about Amazon’s Alexa is where the voice service’s public debut took place before it became widely available to customers. The venue was CSUN, the longstanding conference dedicated to assistive technology for people with disabilities, notably vision loss. No one had more to gain from a machine that could provide quick replies to spoken questions, and no group could provide more incisive feedback.

At the upcoming Sight Tech Global conference on December 7 & 8 (virtual and free — register here), two of Amazon’s foremost accessibility leaders, Peter Korn, Director of Accessibility, Devices & Services, and Dr. Joshua Miele, Principal Accessibility Researcher, will discuss how Amazon continues to dig deeper into the accessibility and fairness surrounding the remarkable Alexa voice service, which is used by millions of customers around the world, billions of times each week.

As Korn and Miele will point out, the advantages Alexa confers to blind people, for example, does not necessarily work in the same way for people who have speech disabilities; at the same time, Alexa’s capabilities long ago escaped the bounds of speech-based interaction. Today, 30% of Alexa interactions in the home are not prompted by users’ voice commands but by Alexa’s fascinating side hustles like Hunches and Routines.

And in a nod to the reality that not everyone speaks in a way that Alexa can understand today, Amazon recently joined a consortium of technology companies, including Apple, Google, Meta and Microsoft, to launch the Speech Accessibility Project with the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), which is using AI and new voice datasets to make speech recognition systems, like Alexa, and other voice services better able to understand diverse speech patterns.

For people who work in assistive technologies, it was no surprise that Alexa’s first public debut was at CSUN. Many remarkable technologies have started with the blind. It was technology legend Ray Kurzweil who in 1976 took a huge step forward in optical character recognition (OCR), the ancestor of today’s computer vision, when he unveiled the $50,000 Kurzweil Reading Machineat a press conference hosted by the National Federation of the Blind. OCR spawned countless businesses outside of accessibility, as well as many powerful and virtually free tools used by the blind today, including many we discuss at Sight Tech Global.

The Alexa that Amazon demoed nearly eight years ago in front of the CSUN audience has done just the same, growing into a service with a vast number of features, like Show and Tell and Notify When Nearby, that help an increasing number of people, in part because of the Amazon team’s focus on an inclusive approach that aims to leave no one behind while also making Alexa better and more helpful for everyone.

Join Sight Tech Global for this session and many more, which you can see on the complete agenda. Now in its third year, Sight Tech Global brings together the world’s top technologists in AI and other advanced technologies to address assistive technology for the people who are blind. Register today.

We’re grateful to sponsors iSenpai, Google, Amazon, LinkedIn, HumanWare, Microsoft, Ford, Fable, APH and Waymo. If you would like to sponsor the event, please contact us. All sponsorship revenues go to the nonprofit Vista Center for the Blind and Visually Impaired, which has been serving the Silicon Valley community for 75 years.

Explore accessibility via Amazon Alexa at Sight Tech Global 2022 by David Riggs originally published on TechCrunch

‘Indie App Santa’ returns, this year offering 40 deals on free and discounted iPhone apps

It’s the most wonderful time of the year…for free and discounted iPhone apps, that is. Here’s your reminder that today marks the return of Indie App Santa, an initiative started to help smaller app developers reach new audiences without having to pay for expensive App Store ads. The event, which began in 2020, is now entering its third year, offering both a Twitter feed of deals as well as an advent calendar-style app of its own where iPhone users can unlock one premium app either for free or for a sizable discount every day.

The deals are starting today, Dec. 1, 2022 and will run through Jan. 10, 2023. It’s sort of like a month-long Black Friday event, but only for indie apps. While typically TechCrunch doesn’t typically write about sales or promotions, this one is worth checking out as it inevitably turns up some undiscovered gems and helps support the indie app developer community.

This year, the Indie App Santa event will feature 40 deals across an expanded number of categories, including mobile games. While the names of the apps aren’t released in an advance, Indie App Santa’s creator François Boulais tells us there’s at least one app that won an Apple Design Award making an appearance this year. He also notes that half the deals featured will be for free downloads of otherwise paid apps instead of only discounts.

Image Credits: Indie App Santa

Boulais credits two friends who help him to run the event, back-end developer Jean Delasalle and front-end developer Thibault Saint-Germain.

Though developers who participate have to offer discounts to join, they end up reaping the rewards in other ways. Beyond the initial surge of users, the increased exposure often helps them to long-term loyal users who also leave higher ratings and reviews. It also gives their app a boost in the App Store charts around one of the busiest times of the year for downloads — the holidays. And the apps that offer other in-app purchases have the ability to profit from increased sales in the days that follow their deal’s listing.

As Luilux’s developer, Christian Lobach, remarked last year, “I have spent more money on Search Ads campaigns with much worse outcome [sic].”

This year’s event kicked off with today’s launch of Posture Pal, a mobile app that cleverly uses the motion sensors in your AirPods to help you improve your neck, shoulder, and back posture without the need for an additional tracking device of some kind. Instead, the app tracks if your neck tilts and sends an alert. Typically, the Pro subscription is $14.99, according to its Indie App Santa listing, but users today can head into the app’s Settings and select a Lifetime free plan.

Further deals will be released throughout the weeks to come, which you can track on the @indieappsanta Twitter feed or by downloading its app. If you choose the latter, you get the experience of tapping on little festive windows that open up to reveal the free or discounted app’s icon. You can then tap through to learn more about the app and deal and install the app on your iOS device. If you opt to support the program through an in-app purchase of $4.99, you’ll gain access to other features like push notifications to alert you to deals as soon as they arrive, alternate app icons, and soon, widgets. Many don’t necessarily pay for the feature set, however, they pay to support the program itself — and the app lets you increase your donation, as well.

‘Indie App Santa’ returns, this year offering 40 deals on free and discounted iPhone apps by Sarah Perez originally published on TechCrunch

Macro machines

The phrase “mission creep” entered the popular discourse in the early to mid-1990s. It popped up in a number of big papers in articles describing the Somali Civil War. Here’s the New York Times in October ’93:

The trick is to do this without inviting what a senior official called “mission creep” — the expansion of the role to include, for example, raiding neighborhoods controlled by General Aidid and searching for weapons.

Like countless military and sports terms before it, we now understand it in a broader context. It’s one of those phrases that perfectly encapsulates a commonly understood experience — projects whose size, scope and focus shift so gradually you hardly even notice. I bring this up in the context of an op-ed the Electronic Frontier Foundation published last year.

“Mission creep is very real,” analyst Matthew Guariglia wrote in July 2021. “Time and time again, technologies given to police to use only in the most extreme circumstances make their way onto streets during protests or to respond to petty crime. For example, cell site simulators (often called “Stingrays”) were developed for use in foreign battlefields, brought home in the name of fighting “terrorism,” then used by law enforcement to catch immigrants and a man who stole $57 worth of food. Likewise, police have targeted BLM protesters with face surveillance and Amazon Ring doorbell cameras.”

Last week I wrote a story titled“It’s time to talk about killer robots.” On reflection, I wonder whether “We missed the boat on killer robots” might have been the better title. Certainly I stand by the “They already walk among us” subtitle. In the piece, I talk about a precedent set by military drones decades ago. I also note the minor firestorm that arose after Boston Dynamics showed videos of Spot being used in Massachusetts State Police hostage drills. The ACLU told us at the time:

We urgently need more transparency from government agencies, who should be upfront with the public about their plans to test and deploy new technologies. We also need statewide regulations to protect civil liberties, civil rights, and racial justice in the age of artificial intelligence.

Police advance on demonstrators who are protesting the killing of George Floyd on May 30, 2020, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was arrested for Floyd’s death and is accused of kneeling on Floyd’s neck as Floyd pleaded with him that he could not breathe. Floyd was pronounced dead a short while later. Chauvin and three other officers, who were involved in the arrest, were fired from the police department after a video of the arrest was circulated. Image Credits: Scott Olson/Getty Images

San Francisco Board of Supervisors president Shamann Walton made a comment at a meeting Tuesday night that echoes the ACLU’s sentiment. “We continuously are being asked to do things in the name of increasing weaponry and opportunities for negative interaction between the police department and people of color,” he said. “This is just one of those things.”

Walton was referring to the Board’s 8-3 vote to approve the use of robots for lethal force. The initial proposal prompted last week’s writeup. The vote was prompted by Assembly Bill 481, which California governor Gavin Newsom signed in September of last year. The bill was designed to bring more transparency to police use of military equipment — itself a product of the 1997 National Defense Authorization Act. Section 1033 allows for the military’s “transfer of excess personal property to support law enforcement activities” for the sake of drug enforcement. The subject jumped back into public consciousness recently, courtesy of various large-scale protests over the past couple of years.

The relevant part of Assembly Bill 481 requires a written inventory of the military equipment utilized by law enforcement. The SFPD’s list includes the Lenco BearCat armored vehicle, flash-bang grenades and 15 submachine guns, among others. There are also 17 robots listed — 12 of which are fully functional. None, it should be noted, were designed for killing. Quite the opposite, in fact. They’re mostly bomb detection and disposal robots — the kind police departments have deployed for years.

The proposal sent to the SF Board this week notes:

The robots listed in this section shall not be utilized outside of training and simulations, criminal apprehensions, critical incidents, exigent circumstances, executing a warrant or during suspicious device assessment. Robots will only be used as a deadly force option when risk of loss of life to members of the public or officers is imminent and outweighs any other force option available to SFPD.

That last little bit is the sticking point. It’s effectively an authorization for the use of robots to kill. I will say, I believe it falls under the standard definition of “justified” deadly force, which allows officers to shoot to kill in cases of self-defense or where others are facing death or serious bodily harm.

An earlier attempt to add “Robots shall not be used as a Use of Force against any person” was reportedly removed by the SFPD.

Following the vote, department spokesperson Allison Maxie echoed the language in the initial proposal, stating, “Robots equipped in this manner would only be used in extreme circumstances to save or prevent further loss of innocent lives.” She then outlined a specific use case involving equipping one of the existing robots with an explosive to kill a suspect. Such an application would be the polar opposite of their intended use of detecting and disabling explosives.

Yes, the precedent exists. In 2016, Dallas police used a bomb disposal robot to intentionally kill a suspect — believed to be the first time in the U.S. this has happened. Police chief David Brown told the press, “We saw no other option but to use our bomb robot and place a device on its extension for it to detonate where the suspect was.”

So, mission creep. “Robots will only be used as a deadly force option when risk of loss of life to members of the public or officers is imminent and outweighs any other force option available to SFPD.” There are a lot of ethical questions we need to be asking right now, but let’s start with this: Are bomb disposal robots armed with bombs an end point or the beginning of something even more troubling?

In recent years, we’ve seen guns mounted on robot dogs designed for the battlefield. We’ve also seen plenty of products designed for the battlefield be deployed domestically. For now, this leap is purely hypothetical — but it’s important to have this conversation before it becomes something more than that. “Mission creep” is a great phrase in this context, given its own military origins.

Maxie, it should be noted, rebuked the idea of robots armed with guns, saying it isn’t in the SFPD’s plans. I’m certainly in no position to say with certainty that San Francisco will be arming robots with guns at any point. I will only say that as the years pass, these scenarios feel less and less like speculative fiction.

A handful of prominent robotics firms — including Boston Dynamics, Agility, ANYbotics, Clearpath Robotics and Open Robotics — recently signed a letter condemning the weaponization of “general purpose” robots. It reads, in part:

We believe that adding weapons to robots that are remotely or autonomously operated, widely available to the public, and capable of navigating to previously inaccessible locations where people live and work, raises new risks of harm and serious ethical issues. Weaponized applications of these newly-capable robots will also harm public trust in the technology in ways that damage the tremendous benefits they will bring to society.

I’m quite aware that not everyone feels the same way I do about weaponized robots. I anticipate getting some pushback here. I’ve had numerous conversations with people working in robotics who don’t draw the same ethical distinctions. The argument that putting robots in harm’s way eliminates the risk to police officers and soldiers has its merit. But I’m also naturally inclined to believe that remote operations can have the effect of dehumanizing suspects. Another important question here: Does taking the human out of the situation potentially lower the burden of pulling the trigger?

The answer is complicated because human brains are complicated. Some very interesting studies on the emotional impact of remote killing are being published. Quoting here from “Emotional Reactions to Killing in Remotely Piloted Aircraft Crewmembers [sic] During and Following Weapon Strikes” published in the March 2018 issue of “Military Behavioral Health”:

The majority (76%) of [Predator/Reaper ] crewmembers reported experiencing both positive and negative emotions in response to weapon-strike missions, suggesting that engagement in remote combat operations is emotionally complex.

The paper concludes that the picture of drone missions possessing all the emotional heft of a video game is misleading. And what of the potential biases highlighted by Walton and others above? Not to mention the kind of visceral fear response to weaponized robots roaming the streets.

I will say, I was surprised this passed in San Francisco. It seems like a strange fit for a city that has so long been held up as a bastion of progressive values. Across the Bay last month, a similar proposal was scrapped due to public backlash. What is less surprising, however, is that some board members were clearly concerned about the optics of being painted as anti-cop.

“I think there’s larger questions raised when progressives and progressive policies start looking to the public like they are anti-police,” board member Rafael Mandelman noted during the meeting. “I think that is bad for progressives. I think it’s bad for this Board of Supervisors. I think it’s bad for Democrats nationally.”

I suppose there’s an extent to which a politician’s job is determining the best of various bad optics. For San Francisco Board members, that meant accepting the proposal and, perhaps, hoping potential mission creep doesn’t eventually put the city on the business end of an autonomous rifle.

I can’t imagine this is going to be the last time we discuss this subject in these pages. Stay tuned.

Image Credits: Locus Robotics

Raise news has slowed down a bit. I suspect this is a combination of (1) things generally slowing down in this dead space between Thanksgiving and Christmas here in the U.S., and (2) the general slowdown in VC as economic headwinds persist.

I anticipate asking anyone with funding news during this period the same basic questions, including “Why now?” and “How tough is this macroenvironment?” broadly speaking. Here’s what Locus Robotics’ CEO Rick Faulk had to say on the subject:

In today’s environment, investors are focused on high-quality companies that have both strong growth/market leadership and business unit economics. Therefore, it is important to have a track record and forecast that supports both. Late-stage private companies are competing with beaten down public companies for investment dollars.

Companies are focused on improving operational efficiency and Locus assists with exactly that…therefore, there is strong excitement around being a differentiated solution in a very large end market. The raise will enable Locus to continue to extend its leadership in the market.

Certainly external forces weren’t enough to slow down its massive to-date funding. A new $117 million Series F led by Goldman Sachs, G2 Venture Partners and Stack brings its total north of $400 million, while placing its valuation “close to” $2 billion. In the crowded fulfillment category, the Massachusetts company has made a name for itself with flexible, brownfield robotic systems that can easily adapt to existing warehouse environments.

Image Credits: Bionaut Labs

And there was a $43.2 million Series B for Bionaut Labs. Based in Los Angeles, the firm is working to commercialize research into magnetically controlled microrobots that can be used to deliver drugs to the midbrain — a more direct application than standard systemically delivered (intravenously, orally, etc.) drugs.

The company’s co-founders, Michael Shpigelmacher and Aviad Maizels, were both involved in PrimeSense, which developed the 3D imaging technology behind Microsoft’s Kinect. Apple acquired the firm in 2013 and has since used its tech as the basis for Face ID.

“There has been a dearth of innovation around treatments for conditions that cause tremendous suffering, in large part because past failures have discouraged even the best of researchers,” Shpigelmacher says about this latest round. “Bionaut Labs remains committed to finding new ways to treat these devastating diseases, which are long overdue for a breakthrough.”

This round will go toward development of a treatment for malignant glioma brain tumors and Dandy-Walker syndrome, as well as future R&D. Bionaut has set a 2023 timeline for preclinical studies, with human trials potentially following the next year.

Bay Area agtech firm Verdant Robotics, meanwhile, recently closed a Series A. Following an $11.5 million 2019 round (initially reported as a Series A, which the company is referring to as its seed), the company has raised $46.5 million to date. Verdant’s aim is to be more than simply a robotic weeder, adding fertilization and pest control to its offering, along with the kind of data collection/analysis that’s really the secret sauce for these sorts of systems.

Image Credits: Owlchemy Labs

All right, that’s it for this week — and for the next few. Your boy is finally getting some of his vacation days in before the end of the year and boldly exploring what it might feel like to not be burned out all the time. I’ll let you know how it goes. In the meantime, I’ve spoken to bigwig industry folks and asked for their thoughts on 2022, 2023, and beyond. We’ll be publishing those in my stead the next few weeks.

See you in just under a month when I go into full CES panic mode.

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch

Give yourself the gift of Actuator this holiday season.

Macro machines by Brian Heater originally published on TechCrunch

YouTube launches its first-ever official trends podcast, ‘Like & Describe,’ with content creator MatPat

YouTube launched its first-ever official trends podcast today, the company announced. Hosted by popular content creator MatPat and produced by YouTube’s Culture & Trends team, the “Like & Describe” podcast will tackle lesser-known stories behind the biggest YouTube trends.

Episodes will release monthly on YouTube’s main channel for viewers to watch as well as all on major podcast platforms for listeners, including Spotify, Apple, Amazon and Google. Episode one debuted on December 1 with a second episode set to premiere on January 1.

The announcement comes a few months after YouTube introduced a dedicated podcast homepage. It’s likely the company launched “Like & Describe” to further cash in on the ever-growing podcast industry. Plus, MatPat could draw in millions of listeners since the creator has over 34 million subscribers in total across his four channels–The Game Theorists, The Film Theorists, The Food Theorists and his gaming channel, GTLive.

In the first episode, titled “The Rise of the VTubers,” MatPat explores Virtual YouTubers (aka VTubers), animated characters voiced by humans that garner a collective total of 1.5 billion views every month, according to YouTube.

MatPat meets with VTubers like Gawr Gura, a 9,000-year-old half shark/half girl, and Mori Calliope, a Grim reaper that raps in motion-capture music videos, among others. He also speaks with Earnest Pettie, Trends & Insights Lead of YouTube’s Culture & Trends team, content creator Dave Cherry and other experts.

Unlike most video podcasts where hosts sit in front of a camera and speak into a mic, “Like & Describe” has viewers follow along with graphics as MatPat narrates—similar to his video style for his YouTube channels.

The second episode will have MatPat meet with more special guests from the Culture & Trends team as they provide commentary on the biggest videos and creators of 2022.

YouTube launches its first-ever official trends podcast, ‘Like & Describe,’ with content creator MatPat by Lauren Forristal originally published on TechCrunch

Canoo sends its EV pickup truck to the US Army for testing

Canoo, the beleaguered EV startup-turned-SPAC, has delivered its first “Light Tactical Vehicle” to the U.S. Army for a demonstration project aimed at showing how its modular electric platform can support mission-specific configurations for less money.

Canoo has landed orders for its customizable platforms with a variety of customers, ranging from NASA to Walmart. The U.S. Army, which aims to incorporate scalable vehicles into its operations, awarded the company a contract in July to supply a vehicle for analysis and demonstration.

The contract itself is just $67,500 — not exactly a material amount. If Canoo’s vehicle meets or exceeds the Army’s expectation, it could lead to a much more fruitful relationship down the road. It’s this possibility that appears to have assuaged investors. Canoo shares popped more than 4% following the announcement.

Canoo said the purpose-built vehicle for the Army is designed to be durable in extreme environments, with a focus on passenger and battery safety. The company describes the LTV as a “jack-of-all-trades” with a convertible flatbed platform that can carry standard sized plywood, tactical equipment and construction and oversized materials.

“The LTV is another milestone proving the power of our technology and how it can be used, even in tactical situations,” Canoo Chairman and CEO Tony Aquila said in a statement. “This is a winning algorithm for our customers and company.”

The startup faltered after going public in a 2020 SPAC merger with Hennessy Capital Acquisition Corp., being investigated by the SEC while burning through cash, but appears for now to have overcome the stumbling blocks that have thwarted competitors.

Earlier this month, the EV maker said it planned to acquire a vehicle manufacturing facility in Oklahoma City to bring its battery-electric Lifestyle Delivery Vehicle (LDV) and Lifestyle Vehicle (LV) SUV to market in 2023. It also said it will build anEV battery module manufacturing facilityin Pryor, Oklahoma.

The 600-horsepower, all-wheel-drive LTV for the Army uses high-strength, lightweight Carbon Kevlar and incorporates air-springs, a raised suspension, and 32-inch all-terrain tires to increase ground clearance suitable on extreme or rugged terrain.

The LTV can be converted from a pickup into a flatbed truck or cargo vehicle. NASA chose Canoo’s multi-purpose platform to transport astronauts to the Artemis launch site for lunar missions that will help establish the first long-term presence on the Moon.

Canoo sends its EV pickup truck to the US Army for testing by Jaclyn Trop originally published on TechCrunch

Does B stand for Bankman-Fried or Bankruptcy?

Welcome back to Chain Reaction.

Happy December! Just one more month until we reach 2023 and start it all over again (or something like that). Time flies when you’re reading crypto news, am I right? Feels like every day something is going down in the crypto world and this week continued to prove that.

On Wednesday, FTX’s former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried spoke at The New York Times’ annual DealBook summit in an interview with Andrew Ross Sorkin. SBF said FTX failed on risk management and he didn’t “knowingly co-mingle funds.” Hmm. I was out of the office moving to a new apartment, but I’m catching up with my amazing colleagues’ coverage of SBF’s claims, which you can read about here, here and here.

Speaking of FTX, the contagion is continuing to spread in the crypto markets as the latest domino to fall was BlockFi, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Monday. In July, FTX signed a deal with the option to buy BlockFi for up to $240 million, the CEO of BlockFi Zac Prince tweeted. Since then, things have tumbled, as FTX collapsed and also filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, weeks before BlockFi. With that said, “the company expects that recoveries from FTX will be delayed.”

This news follows a number of crypto-focused companies, like Voyager and Celsius, which are also currently going through bankruptcy proceedings.

Whether or not there’s more contagion to come is the question everyone seems to have. While I don’t have a crystal ball to predict the future, I’m pretty sure that this won’t be the last company to squawk post-FTX.

Last week, we shared an episode of a conversation with Binance’s top dog, aka CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao. This week, for the Tuesday episode, we released a recording of our discussion live onstage with Alchemy’s CEO Nikil Viswanathan at TechCrunch Sessions: Crypto 2022.

If someone forwarded you this message, you can subscribe on TechCrunch’s newsletter page.

this week in web3

Here are some of the biggest crypto stories TechCrunch has covered this week.

SBF claims massive ignorance on obvious conflicts in FTX downfall

As mentioned above, Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF), the founder and former CEO of the fallen FTX, spoke at The New York Times’ annual DealBook summit in an interview with Andrew Ross Sorkin. SBF said that he didn’t “knowingly co-mingle funds” between Alameda and FTX. “Given the size of the position, I think it was not our intention, it was, in effect, tied together substantially more than I would have ever wanted to be,” he said.

BlockFi files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy

This past year has been hectic for the crypto lending platform BlockFi, and today is no different as the company shared an announcement that it filed for voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey.

Binance launches proof-of-reserves system for BTC holdings

Cryptocurrency exchange company Binance has released a new site that explains its proof-of-reserves system. The company is starting with BTC reserves. Right now, Binance has a reserve ratio of 101%. It means that the company has enough bitcoins to cover all users’ balances. This move comes a couple of weeks after the collapse of FTX, another popular crypto exchange.

Lawyers see crypto regulation coming in 2023 because industry needs to rebuild trust (TC+)

Despite an uneven year in the crypto markets, many market participants are unperturbed about the long-term health of the sector and say that legal frameworks in 2023 could restore trust in the industry. “Crypto will recover,” Katherine Dowling, general counsel member at Bitwise Asset Management, said to TechCrunch. “This is not the death of crypto.”

As BlockFi files for bankruptcy, how contagious will FTX’s downfall become? (TC+)

Crypto lending platform BlockFi filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on Monday, just a few weeks after once-major crypto exchange FTX did the same. While BlockFi has been struggling to stay afloat for months now (and was even potentially going to be acquired by FTX), this latest filing signals that the bankruptcy contagion may run deeper than what the crypto industry sees at the surface.

the latest pod

In Chain Reaction’s Tuesday episode Alchemy’s CEO Nikil Viswanathan had a lot to say about how the industry and developers’ focus on infrastructure has shifted, what will drive the next wave of consumer interest and which blockchains he’s seeing the most developer activity on.

He also shared, for the first time ever, why his startup Alchemy is named after a medieval form of chemistry (disclaimer: it has nothing to do with science).

As a friendly reminder, this was Chain Reaction’s last episode for this season and we’ll be taking a break for the month of December, but catch up with us in the New Year where I’m confident there will be a lot to talk about!

Subscribe to Chain Reaction on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or your favorite pod platform to keep up with the latest episodes, and please leave us a review if you like what you hear!

follow the money

Web3 developer platform Fleek raises $25 million led by Polychain Capital
Cameroonian crypto and savings platform Ejara raises $8 million, led by Anthemis and Dragonfly
Ethereum staking-focused startup Kiln raises $17.7 million
Crypto market maker Keyrock closes $72 million Series B
Web3 gaming platform Burn Ghost raises $3.1 million to reward NFT prizes to players

This list was compiled with information from Messari as well as TechCrunch’s own reporting.

Does B stand for Bankman-Fried or Bankruptcy? by Jacquelyn Melinek originally published on TechCrunch

Five reasons why you need to go to TC Sessions: Space

A galaxy of opportunity awaits you at TC Sessions: Space 2022 on December 6 in Los Angeles. Sounds corny? Sure. But is it true? Absolutely. Some of the space industry’s great visionaries, founders, scientists, engineers and investors will gather for a full day dedicated to expanding humanity’s presence in the final frontier.

During interviews, panel discussions and breakout sessions, you’ll hear them share the latest thinking, trends and technology — and they’ll discuss where to find exciting opportunities within the new space economy.

Be in the room: Buy your pass today, and tap into the cutting edge of opportunity in space.

Need more reasons to get down off that fence? We’ve got you covered:

1. Speakers par excellence

We have quite an array of brilliant minds taking the stage at this event. Here’s just a sample, so be sure to study the full agenda to make the most of your time at the show.

Frank Calvelli, Assistant Secretary, Air Force for Space Acquisitions and Integration
Emily Henriksson, Principal, Root Ventures
Christopher A. Solee, Acting Director of the Capability and Resource Integration Directorate (J8), United States Space Command

2. Break out your questions

Our smaller breakout sessions allow time for Q&A, and here’s just one topic that we reckon will generate plenty of questions.

ISAM: A Commercial Linchpin for the New Space Economy: Large-scale commercial investments will dominate the next wave of space innovation, including commercial space stations in low Earth orbit (LEO) and technologies that will enable a permanent human presence on the moon. The United States has issued a national policy for developing In-space Servicing, Assembly, and Manufacturing (ISAM) capabilities that can operationally sustain the new space economy with efficiency and scale. Led by Carolyn Mercer, chief technologist at NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, this session encourages participants to roll up their sleeves, break past the 411 on ISAM, and get practical advice on how to stimulate ISAM capability development.

3. Shooting-star startups

Be sure to make time to meet the early-stage startups exhibiting their tech and talent at the show. Whether you’re looking for investment candidates, a new gig, potential customers, or collaborators, be sure to get to know these rising stars and what they offer. Here’s a sneak peek at a few of them.

4. Galaxy-class networking

TC Sessions: Space is ripe with networking opportunities, and our event app is the perfect tool to help you find people who align with your goals, schedule meetings and make genuinely valuable connections. Case in point: Engaging with people who can help you navigate the complexities of government funding for commercial space projects.

5. A space pitch-off

Ever meet a founder or an investor who doesn’t like a pitch-off? Neither have we! Don’t miss the chance to watch some of the most exciting early-stage space founders take the stage in front of a live audience. They’ll pitch their tech to this panel of expert VCs: Jory Bell (Playground Global), Mark Boggett (Seraphim Space), Tess Hatch (Bessemer Venture Partners) and Emily Henriksson (Root Ventures).

That’s five out-of-this-world reasons to set course for TC Sessions: Space 2022 in Los Angeles on December 6. Buy your pass, and get ready to explore for opportunities to help you build a better business among the stars.

Is your company interested in sponsoring or exhibiting at TC Sessions: Space? Contact our sponsorship sales team byfilling out this form.

Five reasons why you need to go to TC Sessions: Space by Lauren Simonds originally published on TechCrunch

Amazon announces Eventbridge Pipes, a simpler way to connect events from multiple services

As developers use multiple Amazon services to compose an application, they typically have to write glue code to communicate between the different services, which can be a time-consuming manual exercise. But today at AWS re:Invent in Las Vegas, the company announced an easier way to connect AWS services called Amazon Eventbridge Pipes.

Werner Vogels, chief technology officer at Amazon introduced the new feature today at his keynote address, saying it brings the simplicity of pipes to the process. “So many of our customers who want to actually build these sort of connections between different services, have to write a little glue code. And as always, I kept thinking why can’t we just use the pipes principle here? So I’m happy to announce today, Eventbridge Pipes, which allow you to easily stitch AWS services together,” he said.

It’s highly flexible, allowing developers to use a lambda function or an API, or whatever they are using to manipulate the date inside the pipe before it reaches the consumer. “So the idea is that you should no longer have to to write the glue code because you can easily stitch these services together. And if you would want to actually manipulate the events before they reach the consumer, you can actually provide a lambda function or a point-to-step function or API gateway to actually run some code to manipulate the events that are flowing through your pipe,” he explained

As the company wrote in a blog post announcing the new feature, “With Amazon EventBridge Pipes, you can integrate supported AWS and self-managed services as event producers and event consumers into your application in a simple, reliable, consistent and cost-effective way.”

Eventbridge Pipes is now generally available in all regions, accord to AWS.

Amazon announces Eventbridge Pipes, a simpler way to connect events from multiple services by Ron Miller originally published on TechCrunch

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