|
Welcome to TechCrunch AM! Today we have IPO news (at last), a massive venture round for consumer audio, a biking boom, and even what lessons one startup hopes to learn from cancer survivors. â Alex Did someone forward this to you? Sign up here to receive TC AM in your inboxes! |
|
|
|
TechCrunch Top 3 - Astera Labs prices IPO above previous range: Astera Labs has priced its offering at $36 per share, above its final estimated price range. The question now is whether the market is betting more on the companyâs improving profitability and quick growth, or the AI story its S-1 filing tells.
- Nvidiaâs CEO predicts better-than-human AI timeline: While discussing the question of when weâll develop artificial general intelligence (AGI), the chipmaking giantâs CEO Jensen Huang expects that day to arrive in about 5 years. That is provided you define AGI as a âset of tests where a software program can do very well â or maybe 8% better than most people.â Past that, and the answer becomes heavily dependent on how you define AGI.
- Pocket FM bags $103M: The India-based audio service has raised a nine-figure Series D, and is now valued at $750 million. After tackling the United States, the service has its eyes on Europe and Latin America. Notably, Pocket FM runs a âpay as you goâ model instead of a subscription, which helps it stand out from its competitors.
|
| Image Credits: Mikhail Konoplev / Getty Images |
|
|
Morning must-reads Who is evil enough to hack Pokémon? Really, kids love that stuff. I mean, me too, but come on. The Pokémon Company found out that some of its usersâ accounts were getting hacked, and so has asked those folks to reset their passwords. The company had previously let its users know that it âproactively locked the accounts of fans who might have been affected,â which is more disclosure than we usually get from companies that get hacked. Still, hackers, go do something more fun â like playing Pokemon Crystal. White House pitches $8.5B for Intel, domestic chip manufacturing: This morning, the United Statesâ Department of Commerce said it would give Intel a truckload of capital to shore up U.S.-based production of chips. The backdrop to the massive deal are an uneasy geopolitical tussle between the U.S. and China for chip supremacy, and Taiwanâs massive chip business putting the sovereign island nation in the middle of the larger conflict. Carevoice raises $10M for âembedded health:â Insurtech has had a rough few years, but embedded insurance products have seen some market and investor momentum. Now thereâs another sub-category of insurtech to pay attention to, embedded health. The service-type âintegrates health functionalities, like fitness and wellness, into a single platform run by service providers, especially insurers.â The new sub-sector is hot enough that Carevoice just closed a $10 million Series B for its work in the area, across 15 markets today. Who survives cancer, and what can they teach us? Thatâs the question Cure51 wants to answer. Itâs the flip of cancer mortality statistics, and a pretty cool idea. The company just landed â¬15 million in a large seed round. Paris-based Sofinnova Partners led the investment. |
| Image Credits: The Pokémon Company |
|
|
Around the Web The Verge reports that an update to popular gaming title Stardew Valley has sent its concurrent player count to more than 146,000, which is massive for the indie title. Given the troubles in the gaming world lately, itâs nice to see some good news. Bloomberg has a cool piece on how web traffic is being routed around the world after subsea cables took a beating due to a landslide in West Africa. It makes you realize just how fragile our global Internet infrastructure is. And Ars Technica reports that Glassdoor is shedding users after it started using their âreal names without consent.â Given the serviceâs dependence on employees to review their employers honestly, you can imagine why users are upset. TechCrunch also has a report on the massive surge in the number of two-wheeled electric vehicle startups in India. Government incentives seem to be driving a founding wave, even if more companies than are likely needed are being built. Metaâs Threads is rolling out trending topics more broadly, which is good news for people who donât want to use X anymore. Cowboy has launched a new electric, all-road bike, which is targeting a different demographic of people than the young-ish commuters the companyâs current bikes are popular with. The launch is welcome given that we have seen some e-bike companies fold in recent quarters. PocketHealth has wrangled $33 million for its âmedical image exchange platform,â in a win for healthtech startups everywhere. Smart ring leader Oura is being challenged by Indiaâs Ultrahuman. Which will become the one ring to rule them all? I donât know, but do love to see competition in neat categories. |
| Image Credits: Stardew Valley |
|
|
Before you go Keeping up with AI news is hard: Reading TechCrunchâs coverage of Nvidiaâs recent AI keynote, I canât help but feel dazed by the mountain of artificial intelligence news out there today. New chips, new models, new integrations, new use cases, the list goes on and on and on⦠Itâs odd to see one sector booming while the larger venture capital market remains depressed. At least we get to live through history, right? |
| Image Credits: Nvidia |
|
|
|
Newest Jobs from Crunchboard | - VP of Data Management at RetireeFirst (Mount Laurel, NJ, USA)
- Senior Policy Analyst / Senior Economist at Center for AI Policy (Washington D.C., DC, USA)
- Unified Technology Solutions Supervisor at Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission (Middletown, PA, United States)
- Principal Software Engineer/Developer at Health Research, Inc. (Menands, NY, USA)
- Systems Administrator II at City of Newport (Newport, Oregon, USA)
See more jobs on CrunchBoard Post your tech jobs and reach millions of TechCrunch readers for only $349 per month. |
|
|
|
|
|