More top reads Gotta love a good IPO pop: Astera Labs certainly did. The company priced its IPO last night at $36 per share and watched that rise to $52.56 per share, up 46% when the bell rang. Letâs hope this is a positive sign for another IPO we are looking at ⦠cough, cough, Reddit. The latest features: GitHub launched the first beta of its code-scanning autofix feature for finding and fixing security vulnerabilities during the coding process. It promises to remediate more than two-thirds of the vulnerabilities it uncovers. Meanwhile, TV recommendation app Watchworthy has two new features around more personalized recommendations and a way to get movie suggestions from your friends. Casper co-founder starts an incubator: Philip Krim doesnât think enough is being done to solve a lot of the climate industryâs problems, so the mattress company co-founder put his money where his mouth is and started Montauk Climate, an incubator for climate tech startups. A warranty for that aging Tesla: Owners of these electric vehicles know there isnât much in the way of options if something breaks on your Tesla after the warranty expires. Well, aftermarket warranty startup Amber is on the phone and wants to talk to you about your Teslaâs extended warranty. Youâll probably want to take this call. What can AI do for you?: Or actually, what canât it do? ServiceNow is out to make sure that any enterprise that wants to have AI do something for it, can. Money, money, money: Healthcare platform Anima grabbed $12 million in new capital to give clinics some Salesforce-like capabilities. Mermaid Chart, a tool for creating diagrams, raised $7.5 million. And AirMyne secured $6.9 million for its approach to direct carbon capture. Around the web: Apparently Redditâs IPO is a bit unusual. So much so that Bloomberg found seven ways that show it is not a typical tech listing. The Washington Post digs into the latest EPA climate change rules that it calls âthe strongest everâ for cars. And Engadget has your look at Dysonâs brand-new robot vacuum. TechCrunch Early Stage: Planning on going to Early Stage in April? Of course you are. As such, we published the first list of roundtables touching on topics venture capitalists and startups want to know. If youâre keen to volunteer, you can get a free ticket. |