To get a roundup of TechCrunchâs biggest and most important stories delivered to your inbox every day at 3 p.m. PDT, subscribe here. Today was a big day for news, so buckle up, folks. Weâve got Giphy being sold for pittance, lots of Microsoft news and some venture capital funds cleaning up. Enjoy learning who the Disrupt Audience Choice breakout winners are because this is your Daily Crunch for Tuesday. â Christine Meta is either poppinâ bottles right now or nursing a hangover after finding a buyer for Giphy. Find out who bought them and what kind of deal the buyer got. MS Build 2023 is going on this week, and the team has already filed 10 Microsoft-licious stories. The top read was about Fabric, a new end-to-end data and analytics platform that centers around OneLake. Weâve set you up with all the ooey, gooey Microsoft goodness. If size matters to you, Amazon launched the Fire Max 11, its biggest tablet. Get the scoop. Some big changes are happening over at Reliance JioMart. The online shopping platform is reportedly laying off 1,100 employees, and this is just the start of it. Find out how many more jobs are being cut. Generative AI is now going into Photoshop with some Firefly-based features. See what those are. Builder.ai is on a roll right now, securing $250 million in Series D capital a few weeks after signing a strategic collaboration with Microsoft. Read more on where all that capital is going. Driving ourselves is so overrated. If youâre headed to Phoenix, you can be among the first to order a Waymo self-driving car from Uber. Find out how. Brian ponders if you need the sports car equivalent of a home appliance. Well, if you do, then Dyson has some upgrades to its vacuums that might get your engine purring. Learn more. If you didnât get enough generative AI talk with that Photoshop story, then read about Anthropic raising $450 million to build next-gen AI assistants. HBO Max is no more. Warner Bros. Discovery debuted the Max app to U.S. subscribers with 35,000 hours of content. And letâs hope there are also some good â80s movies. But if you want all that content to come free of ads, itâs going to cost you. Read more. |