TechCrunch Master Template TechCrunch Newsletter
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There is officially only 8.3% left of the year. You know what that means! Holidays, cheer, and daydreaming about what shenanigans weâll get ourselves into in 2024. Yes, 2024, because clearly weâre just going to skip past all of 2023. Weâre pretty excited for 2025 already, tbh. â Christine and Haje |
| Image Credits: Sarah Silbiger/Bloomberg / Getty Images |
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The TechCrunch Top 3 Celebrity strong arm: Plant-based food brand Huelâs newest capital raise comes with a side of Idris Elba, Christine writes. The actor and his wife are among a handful of new investors backing U.K.-based Huel, which offers protein powder, snack bars and hot lunch products. Oh, and Huel is now valued at $560 million. Not too shabby. Whoâs calling?: Why, itâs smartphone re-commerce startup Badili, which raised $2.1 million in pre-seed funding to work with individuals and dealers to repurpose phones as demand soars across Africa for more affordable phones. Annie has more. Returning to its roots: Zoe made a name for itself during the global pandemic when it launched a COVID-tracking app. Now it has shifted back to its roots as a self-reporting tracker for personal nutrition and has a healthy $30 million chunk of change (and a $303 million valuation) under its belt to onboard over 250,000 people who have been patiently waiting for this moment, Ingrid reports. |
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Investors who work at the intersection of climate tech and proptech seek out potentially profitable startups that can reduce emissions and enhance the built environment. It’s a high-stakes balancing act with significant risk, but considering the upside for category winners and the health of the planet, “the potential market is enormous,” reports Tim De Chant. For his second proptech investor survey in a three-part series, he interviewed: Jake Fingert, managing partner, and Lionel Foster, investor, Camber Creek Anja Rath, managing partner, PropTech1 Ventures Othmane Zrikem, chief data officer, A/O Proptech Three more from the TC+ team: CVC meets accelerators: Alex explores how Up.Labs threads the needle between corporate venture capital and accelerators. Ads to the rescue: Alex Song shares 5 methods for leveraging digital advertising during a downturn. Whereâs your plans, friends? Haje is back with his weekly Pitch Deck Teardown, this time putting Hour Oneâs $20M Series A deck in the X-ray machine. TechCrunch+ is our membership program that helps founders and startup teams get ahead of the pack. You can sign up here. Use code âDCâ for a 15% discount on an annual subscription! Read More |
| Image Credits: Andriy Onufriyenko / Getty Images |
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Big Tech Inc. Before we step into the news, we just want to offer the AWS re:Invent 2022 link once again because Kyle, Ron and Frederic added more stories today. Okay, here we go. Yesterday, Bret Taylor shocked us by stepping down as co-chair and CEO of Salesforce to âreturn to his entrepreneurial roots,â Ron reports. After ruminating on it overnight, Ron also provided more insight on Taylorâs move and what might be next for the CRM giant (TC+ subscription needed). If you rush over to Google every day to see the new Doodle, the latest lets you create your own mini arcade game in honor of the late video game pioneer Jerry Lawson, who would have been 82 today. Aisha has more. Meanwhile, Brian wrote a story yesterday reporting that âSan Francisco police can now use robots to kill.â Today he goes more in-depth in his Actuator column. Enjoy! And we have five more for you: Todayâs Twitter update: We know itâs been mere seconds since we last read what was on Elon Muskâs mind, but Taylor reports that your Twitter feed may soon be controlled by a higher force, while Natasha L writes that Musk may lose even more sleep in order to get Twitter in compliance with European Union rules. This might be one club you want in on: Netflix is reportedly letting more subscribers preview its films and TV shows and provide their feedback, Lauren writes. This might be one inbox you donât check: If youâre upset that your LinkedIn inbox has become a place where spam and scams live, Ingrid has something you might like: focused inbox and messaging safety tools to rid you of some of that. This might be one too many: Password manager LastPass has more bad news: it says it was breached â again, Zack writes. Gadgets and gizmos aplenty: Brian has curated a list of go-to gifts for frequent flyers. |
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