Friday, March 31, 2023

Tecno Phantom V Fold manufacturing in India starts, launch date and price revealed

Chinese phone maker Tecno today announced it has begun the production of the Phantom V Fold in India as a part of its commitment to the "Make in India" program. It will be manufactured at Tecno's facility in Noida, which is currently capable of producing 24 million phones a year. The brand also announced that the Phantom V Fold will be launched in India on April 11, with early access sale on Amazon starting from April 12. The foldable smartphone will be sold for INR77,777 ($945/€870) in India, but this price is applicable only for limited stock, and the brand hasn't revealed how much the...



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3 recruiting metrics that can help startups make more data-driven hiring decisions

Navigating the current economic storm, startup founders have to focus on the key resource for their early-stage startup to survive and grow — the people. The biggest difference, however, between hiring in a healthy economy and hiring now is that there’s no room for mistakes.

According to Harvard Business Review, the price of a bad hire is 30–50% of their salary, which can hit startup budgets hard in 2023. To make fewer mistakes, founders should adopt a more data-driven approach to hiring.

A good start is to track these three metrics:

Startup founders have to focus on the key resource for their early-stage startup to survive and grow — the people.

Сost per hire

Cost per hire is one of the most essential business metrics, which must be included in a company’s profit and loss report. It helps a recruitment team test different strategies, as well as spot areas where they can trim costs and optimize hiring.

This metric is used to calculate the total expenses a company incurs to attract, recruit, and onboard employees. To calculate cost per hire, you would add up all the direct and indirect costs of the hiring process and divide it by the number of hires made within a specific period.

First, define the period. It can be a month, a quarter, half a year or a year. I track the cost per hire monthly to continually optimize the process.

Second, tally up all expenses. Take into account the internal costs such as salaries and bonuses of recruiters, licenses for corporate email accounts, the cost of applicant tracking system software and LinkedIn Premium, and education courses for new employees.

Also, include the external costs of job ads and referral programs, fees of staffing agencies, as well as background checks and relocation expenses.

Cost per hire ($) = (Internal recruiting costs + External recruiting costs) / Number of hires made

If your company spends $10,000 on recruiting per month and hires four people, the cost per hire is $10,000 / 4 = $2,500.

For an early-stage startup, a reasonable cost per hire is valued between $3,000 and $5,000. A recent study says the average benchmark is $4,700. If the cost is over $6,000, it makes sense to review your strategy.

To identify the stages incurring the highest costs and find ways to cut expenses, it’s essential to assess each recruitment stage. If candidates decline your offer, gather feedback about the reasons for rejection and conduct new research on market salaries — you may be offering too little.

When you don’t hire frequently, outsourcing recruitment may be more cost-effective than handling all operational costs internally. Compare your current recruitment expenses to the pricing plans of recruitment agencies, which usually charge 15-35% of a new hire’s annual salary.

3 recruiting metrics that can help startups make more data-driven hiring decisions by Jenna Routenberg originally published on TechCrunch



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Sony WF-C700 TWS earphones leak, WH-1000XM5 blue version also surfaces

Sony is expected to bring in a new wireless earbud model soon as well as a new blue color for its WH-1000XM5 over-the-ear headphones. The WF-C700 is expected to arrive as the latest midrange offering in Sony’s TWS range. Sony WF-C700 While we don’t have much info on their specs we can see they will be available in at least four colors – black, white, blue and green. The buds feature a similar design to 2021’s Sony WF-C500 and will ship with replacement ear-tips and a USB-C charging cable. WF-C700 in its four color options The other new bit of imagery shows us...



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Read’s AI-powered summary feature squeezes a meeting into a two-minute clip

Summarization is one of the common use cases of different AI models. Multiple tools have come up with a summarization of articles, PDFs, videos, and transcripts. Meeting intelligence tool Read has introduced a new feature that trims an hour-long meeting into a two-minute clip with important pointers.

The company said that it is using large language models — without specifying which one — combined with video analysis to understand the most notable parts of the meeting. Read also incorporates participants’ reactions in the highlight reel. Users can go to their recording of a meeting and turn off the “Play highlights only” toggle to see the condensed clip.

Image Credits: Read.ai

Read was co-founded in 2021 by former Foursquare CEO David Shim to gather meeting intelligence. The tool, which works with Zoom, Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, and Webex gives you analytics like sentiment, and participant engagement scores to provide knowledge about the effectiveness of a meeting. The company has raised $10 million in seed funding from investors like Madrona Venture Group and PSL Ventures.

Shim said that watching a recording of an hour-long meeting is very boring. He compared watching the two-minute reel to watching highlights of a sports game. He also mentioned that during the test period, the company found that some clients had an impactful increase in productivity.

“During a preview period, agency clients experienced a 30%+ increase in productivity for employees. Tedious tasks including pulling together notes were completed automatically, and the sharing of these notes along with manually generated video highlights eliminated the need to set up a meeting to talk about the last meeting,” he said in a statement.

Image Credits: Read

In January, Read introduced a text-based summary powered by OpenAI’s GPT model. The video highlight feature is an evolution of that. The demo below shows that at times the highlights cut the speaker mid-sentence, which becomes annoying when trying to listen to important points. The company said it is working on improving this aspect.

Read also noted that in the coming weeks, it will incorporate text summaries in the videos using captions.

Tons of companies — including Otter and Zoom — are working on providing AI-aided summaries of meetings. While most of them use some kind of large language model, Read’s approach to having a TikTok-styled short video summary can appeal to a person looking to skim through multiple missed meetings.

Read’s AI-powered summary feature squeezes a meeting into a two-minute clip by Ivan Mehta originally published on TechCrunch



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vivo X Fold2 unboxing confirms design, improved UI

The vivo X Fold2 teasers continue to come from the 2023 Boao Forum for Asia, taking place at Hainan Island in China. A local blogger took the device for an unboxing, later reposted by vivo on Weibo, clearly as a coordinated marketing event, allowing fans to learn more about the upcoming foldable. The new phone will have a 3/4 red leather panel on the back, while the remaining 1/4 has a glossy finish. During the handling of the X Fold2, we saw some new UI features of the OriginOS Ocean, including a taskbar for better app handling, multi-window modes and easy gestures - none of which...



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Ambani bats for cricket glory as Disney scales back in India

Mukesh Ambani’s Jio, the South Asian telecom powerhouse, has long sought to entice its customer base with a plethora of services aimed at boosting subscriber retention. Despite amassing over 425 million customers and claiming the mantle of India’s top network provider—due in large part to its aggressively competitive data pricing—Jio’s array of additional services has yet to gain significant traction.

With the highly anticipated Indian Premier League (IPL) cricket tournament starting later today, Ambani is eyeing this as the perfect opportunity to revamp Jio’s service adoption strategy.

Viacom18 – a venture between Ambani’s Reliance and Paramount – outbid Disney to secure five years of IPL’s streaming rights for the Indian subcontinent region with a sum of $3 billion. Unlike Disney’s Hotstar, which restricted access to IPL streaming to paid subscribers in recent seasons, Viacom18 is opening the floodgates for IPL games to everyone on the Jio network.

In a move that proved transformative, Star India executives Ajit Mohan and Uday Shankar’s strategic investment in cricket streaming nearly a decade ago catapulted Hotstar to prominence as a household name. The platform drew over 100 million digital viewers during the two-month-long event year after year, with cricket alone solidifying Hotstar’s position at the pinnacle of the market.

Star India’s Hotstar was a crown jewel in Fox’s large portfolio in the $71 billion acquisition by Disney, prompting the Mickey Mouse company to expand the service to many international markets.

However, Disney’s decision last year to relinquish digital streaming bids in favor of securing television broadcast rights under the leadership of former CEO Bob Chapek left many industry insiders perplexed. The company has also decided not to renew the licensing rights for HBO content in India in a move that has understandably frustrated many Hotstar subscribers.

In 2016, as Reliance prepared to launch Jio, the company emerged as the first telecom operator to believe in Hotstar’s vision and commit to collaboration, according to a source familiar with the discussions. Disney reaped significant benefits from Jio’s competitively priced data plans, which enabled tens of millions of Indian consumers to alter their internet consumption habits virtually overnight.

Now, it appears that Reliance is shifting gears and focusing on its own interests.

Jio has been assertively recruiting talent from Disney’s Hotstar, restructuring its infrastructure to accommodate a large user base. The company plans to provide 16 distinct feeds for IPL matches, featuring ultra-HD resolution – a first for cricket in India – and coverage in 12 languages.

Analyst group Media Partners Asia estimates that Jio Cinema, where Viacom18 plans to stream matches, will be able to drive sales of up to $350 million during the IPL season this year, up from $128 million in digital sales in 2022. The group marked down advertising sales on pay TV to $220 million, from $442 million last year.

“The US$550 mil. number across digital and pay-TV is marginally flat Y/Y and represents a steep loss against annualized 2023-27 IPL rights fees of US$1.2 bil. Subscription fees are expected to be very modest this year because of challenges on pay-TV distribution and the lack of a subscription fee on digital,” it wrote in a report.

Reliance has “promised” advertisers that cricket streaming on Jio Cinema will reach 400 million users, said Media Partners Asia. Jio Cinema has also promised a concurrent user base of 100 million, nearly four times of the current records, the analyst group added.

Nonetheless, this underscores a considerable leap for Jio Cinema, which currently boasts fewer than 30 million monthly active users, as per data from mobile intelligence firm Sensor Tower. This is despite the fact that over 400 million Jio subscribers are eligible to access Jio Cinema at no extra charge.

Numerous industry executives have expressed skepticism regarding the likelihood of such a significant number of users transitioning to streaming on their smartphones when they have the option of watching games on their satellite televisions.

Additionally, whether Jio Cinema can effectively manage the technical demands of tens of millions of viewers tuning in to cricket matches remains an open question for the time being.

Ambani bats for cricket glory as Disney scales back in India by Manish Singh originally published on TechCrunch



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Thursday, March 30, 2023

Samsung Galaxy S23 series gets camera-improving major update

Samsung has released a new software update for the Galaxy S23, Galaxy S23+, and Galaxy S23 Ultra, which brings camera improvements and fixes to the Galaxy S23 trio. For starters, the autofocus algorithm has been changed for faster photography, meaning when a user presses the camera shutter button in the default camera app, the phone's camera takes the photo even if the focus is not completely set. Galaxy S23 (left), Galaxy S23+ (center), and Galaxy S23 Ultra (right) However, those who want the app to capture a photo only after a proper focus is set can change the behavior by...



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Uber expands Comfort Electric to 14 new US, Canadian markets

Uber is expanding Comfort Electric, the ride-hailing giant’s premium electric vehicle offering, to 14 new markets across the U.S. and Canada. Now, customers in a total of 40 North American markets can book a flashy, environmentally friendly ride.

Eligible luxury EVs include Tesla models S, 3, X and Y, the Polestar 2, the Ford Mustang Mach-E, the Audi e-Tron, the Porsche Taycan and the Hyundai Ioniq.

The expansion is in line with Uber’s goal to become a zero-emissions mobility platform by 2030 in the U.S., Canada and Europe. That goal is fueled in part by California’s 2021 ruling that ride-hail trips must be done in EVs by that same year. So far only 4.1% of trip miles have been completed with electric vehicles, luxury or otherwise, in the U.S. and Canada. Uber didn’t provide TechCrunch with the percentage of rides done by EVs in California specifically.

Uber said its partnership with Hertz to rent Teslas to drivers in over 30 U.S. and Canadian cities has helped accelerate EV adoption across its drivers in the U.S. Already, nearly 50,000 drivers have rented a Tesla through the program, completing more than 24 million electric trips, the company said.

Uber expanded its Hertz partnership to Europe in January, making up to 25,000 Tesla and Polestar vehicles available to drivers by 2025, starting in London, then Paris and Amsterdam.

Uber also offers riders Uber Green, which provides access to trips driven by hybrid or less fancy EVs, your standard Nissan Leafs and Chevy Bolts of the world.

Uber launched Comfort Electric in May 2022 in Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego and Dubai. The new markets opened Thursday include Detroit, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Montreal (Canada), Nashville, New Orleans, Orlando, Palm Springs, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, Salt Lake City, Tampa Bay and Toronto (Canada).

The price point of Comfort Electric rides is usually something in between Uber Comfort and Uber Black, a spokesperson told TechCrunch. As a sweetener, Uber is offering riders a discount of up to 25% off for two Comfort Electric trips with the code GOELECTRIC from April 11-30.

Getting drivers to switch to electric

Uber says it has quadrupled the number of EV drivers on its platform over the past year, with around 38,000 monthly active EV drivers in the U.S., Canada and Europe recorded in Q3 2022 (Europe likely makes up a larger portion of drivers with EVs). But the company still has a ways to go until it can achieve 100% zero emissions rides. That goal is made more complicated by the fact that Uber’s drivers are independent contractors not employees, and therefore have to acquire EVs on their own dime.

While federal EV tax incentives under the Inflation Reduction Act promise drivers up to $7,500 in rebates, most EVs, particularly luxury EVs, are still expensive. According to Kelley Blue Book, the average price of an EV at the end of 2022 was $61,488 compared to $49,507 for all passenger cars and trucks.

Some drivers who buy higher end vehicles are feeling the sting of high upfront cost and low earnings, especially after Uber this week disclosed CEO Dara Khosrowshahi’s total compensation rose 22% last year to $24.3 million — broken down that’s $1 million base salary, around $14 million in stock awards, $6 million in option awards, a $2.9 million bonus and $170,000 in other compensation for personal travel and security.

For its part, Uber has invested $800 million in resources to help drivers make the switch by 2025. The company offers drivers $1 per trip completed with an EV (capping out at $4,000), and drivers have said it makes a huge difference — especially when they purchase cheaper EVs and can see cost savings from not using gas. The company has also teamed up with Truecar to give drivers perks worth up to $2,000. Drivers in certain markets can also rent or lease EVs at discounted rates from Hertz, Avis, Ford, Drive Sally, Hive, Zevvy and HyreCar.

Uber also says drivers are eligible for discounts on EVgo charging and can get $100 off a Wallbox charger, and another $100 off installation. The company recently updated the driver app to show drivers where the nearest EV chargers are located.

Uber expands Comfort Electric to 14 new US, Canadian markets by Rebecca Bellan originally published on TechCrunch



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Oppo Find N3 leaked specs suggest larger display and Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset

Oppo’s Find N2 launched back in December and now we get our first set of rumors for its successor – the Find N3. The upcoming horizontal foldable will allegedly bring a larger 8-inch main display with a 2268 x 2440px resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. For reference, the Find N and Find N2 featured identical 7.1-inch panels with 1792 x 1920px resolution. Find N3 is also expected to bring two selfie cameras - one for the cover screen and one positioned on the main display. Their resolutions will be 20MP and 32MP respectively. The back of the device will house a 50MP Sony IMX890 main...



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IDC: Foldable shipments to reach 48.1 million units by 2027

Foldable phones have been around for a few years now but their shipments are nowhere near the levels of traditional bar smartphones. The latest IDC report forecasts a healthy increase in the number of foldable shipments in the year to come with an estimated 48.1 million flip and fold devices making their ways to consumers in 2027. At that point, the CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of foldables for the 2022-2027 period is expected to surpass traditional smartphones by tenfold. The new IDC report sees foldables earning a combined 3.5% market share by 2027 compared to the 1.2% for...



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Parloa raises $21M to add a little automation to contact centers

It’s estimated that over $400 billion are spent annually to run customer contact centers around the world. To cut costs, in recent years, contact centers have embraced AI and automation; research from The Harris Poll indicates that 46% of customer interactions were already automated as of 2021.

That’s good news for the vendors selling contact center automation software. VCs believe that to be the case, certainly, judging by recent investment upswing. Startups including Invoca, Replicant, PolyAI and Observe.ai have raised hundreds of millions of dollars from backers over the past year alone, reflecting the bullish views of labor-saving customer service tech.

Another winner in the contact center automation boom is Parloa, a German-based enterprise software provider that uses a combination of conversational AI tech and low-code tools to help companies lighten the load on their contact center employees (or so the sales pitch goes). Parloa today announced that it raised €20 million (~$21.67 million) in a Series A funding round led by EQT Ventures, with participation from Newion and Senovo.

The fresh cash, which brings Parloa’s total raised to €25 million (~$27.09 million), will be put toward customer acquisition efforts, opening a U.S. office and product R&D.

“AI is waiting in the wings right now to disrupt the multi-billion customer service market for good,” co-founder and CEO Malte Kosub told TechCrunch in an email interview. “The status quo in customer service is the same across Europe, Middle East, and Africa and the U.S.: not a good customer experience. So also the speed of the AI adoption in customer service will be the same in those areas.”

Parloa began as an internal effort at Future of Voice, a conversational AI agency that Kosub co-launched with Stefan Ostwald in 2017. Kosub and Ostwald built a low-code tool for developing “multi-channel voice experiences” (e.g. Alexa skills, phone bots) for Future of Voice’s clients, which they code-named Parloa. In 2020, Kosub and Ostwald sold Future of Voice and recruited the employees that had been working on Parloa to help scale the software independently.

Parloa offers a patchwork of apps and services that, when meshed together via low-code drag-and-drop dashboards, can power contact center automation flows. For instance, Parloa’s speech-to-text module — driven by Microsoft Cognitive Services, Microsoft’s set of API-based AI services — can be combined with Parloa’s natural language understanding models to create a phone dialogue tree. Or Parloa’s integrations with third-party text-generating models, including OpenAI’s recently released GPT-4, could be connected with the aforementioned speech-to-text module to answer commonly-asked customer questions and complaints.

Parloa

Parloa connects various modules and services to help automate contact centers. Image Credits: Parloa

To put it in more concrete terms, a typical company might use Parloa’s tools to create a phone-answering bot that can automatically figure out what a customer’s calling about (e.g. changing their billing address) and respond to their questions in natural language. Or it might use Parloa’s translation tools to let its customer service agents speak with customers in multiple languages.

Parloa’s approach isn’t exactly novel — lots of contact center platforms offer the same type of setup — but the startup claims that its platform is superior in some ways from a technical standpoint. For instance, Parloa claims its AI tools, apps and modules can reduce spelling errors and other “unwanted conversational patterns” during calls and continue listening during natural pauses in conversations.

“The pandemic was a particular driver for the increased demands on digital customer service, which we as Parloa are helping to automate,” Kosub said. “Customer service is as old as business itself. So we are not inventing a new market environment or focusing on small sub-segments, but helping an established multi-billion market with innovative technology.”

Kosub wouldn’t say exactly how many customers Parloa currently has, save a few big names like Decathlon and German Red Cross. When asked about macroeconomic headwinds like the Silicon Valley Bank collapse, he countered with a stat he argues illustrates one of the reasons the contact center automation market will continue to grow: 71% of agents thought about leaving their job in the past six months, according to a Salesforce study.

“Companies have to deal with a decreasing availability of agents, staff shortages of agents and job unattractiveness — much of an agent’s time is spent on repetitive tasks, like authentication, that could be done by AI,” Kosub said.

One might argue that agent turnover is better avoided with higher wages and better benefits as opposed to automation. Among the common complaints from workers in the industry are high production demands and a lack of training; in 2021, call center workers at healthcare giant Cigna went so far as to circulate a petition calling for better working conditions.

Investments in automation are an easier sell, of course — particularly in a down economy. Parloa’s biggest challenge likely won’t be finding new customers, but standing out in a crowded field. Kosub says he’s up to it, fortunately.

“We weren’t affected by the slowdown or the pandemic at all. Customer service demand is growing and the pressure to be more efficient is increasing as well,” he said. “Corporate-wise, we grew from 30 employees during our seed funding to more than 100 in less than 12 months, with new joiners from Google, Salesforce, SAP, TeamViewer and Celonis.”

Parloa raises $21M to add a little automation to contact centers by Kyle Wiggers originally published on TechCrunch



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vivo X Fold2 revealed in Red with three Zeiss cameras

The vivo X Fold2 is arriving next month, and today company officials showcased the device as part of the company's participation at the Boao Forum. The new foldable will have a Red color and a circular camera island on which we can see just three shooters and one LED flash. The vivo X Fold2 follows the overall design of the previous vivo foldables, but reports are it will be significantly lighter than the 311g of those two. It will also be thinner, according to early reports, but we cannot confirm this visually by looking at these angled images. The trio of cameras includes a...



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Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Over 100k Realme C55 units moved within 5 hours of its first sale in India

Realme has announced it sold more than 100k units of the Realme C55 within five hours of its first sale in India yesterday. The company also revealed that Realme C55 received over 66k pre-orders - the highest yet for a C-series smartphone. The Realme C55 is sold in India through Realme's official website, Flipkart, and retail stores in Rainy Night and Sunshower colors with three memory options - 4GB/64GB, 6GB/64GB, and 8GB/128GB, priced at INR10,999 ($135/€125), INR11,999 ($145/€135), and INR13,999 ($170/€155), respectively. Realme C55 in Rainy Night color • Realme C55 in...



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Google wins partial relief in Android antitrust case in India

Google received some relief in the key overseas market of India on Wednesday after a tribunal court set aside four of the 10 directives, including the need to permit hosting of third-party app stores within Play Store and restricting uninstallation of pre-installed apps by users, in an antitrust case related to the abuse of company’s dominant position in Android.

The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal upheld the $161 million penalty levied on Google by the local watchdog Competition Commission of India, saying the earlier verdict was “not in violation of the principles of natural justice,” but offered the Android-maker some relief.

India is Google’s largest market by users. Android operating system powers 97% of the country’s 600 million smartphones, according to research firm Counterpoint. The watchdog’s ruling directed Google to make several changes to its business practices that many analysts argued could topple the company’s global operations.

Google in 2020 pledged to invest $10 billion in the South Asian market over the coming years. It has already financed up to $5.5 billion in the local telecom giants Jio Platforms and Airtel.

The CCI had also ordered Google to not deny access to Play Services APIs to OEMs, developers and competitors, and not restrict an app developer’s ability to distribute their apps through side-loading. These two directions have also been set aside by the NCLAT, which said these four directions were “unsustainable.”

Google had argued that the CCI’s order suffered from “confirmation bias” and was too similar to a verdict by the European Commission in 2018. The company had also argued that Google’s dominance in the smartphone market does not prove that it was abusing its power.

The CCI had ordered Google to not force smartphone makers to bundle so many Google apps on their handsets by default. It had also asked the firm to give users the ability to remove Google apps, use third-party billing options on Play Store, and change their search engine, if they so desire.

Google, which appealed against the order, agreed to make several changes to its business practices nonetheless. The company said it will allow smartphone vendors in India to license individual apps for pre-installation on their Android-powered devices. Consumers will also have the ability to change search engine and use third-party billing options for apps and games purchases on Play Store, the company said.

Google wins partial relief in Android antitrust case in India by Manish Singh originally published on TechCrunch



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Lenovo discontinues Legion gaming phone lineup

We haven’t seen a new Lenovo Legion phone in a while – the Legion Y70 was announced back in August last year and it seems the reasoning behind the long hiatus is that Lenovo has discontinued its Legion gaming phone business. A Lenovo spokesperson confirmed the departure of the Legion phone lineup in a statement to Android Authority which describes a wider “business transformation and gaming portfolio consolidation”. Lenovo is discontinuing its Android-based Legion mobile gaming phones as part of a wider business transformation and gaming portfolio consolidation. As a leader in...



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Payday wants to power the future of work for Africa with $3M seed led by Moniepoint Inc

Payday, a neobank issuing global (USD, EUR & GBP) accounts to Africans, has raised $3 million, money the platform intends to use to fuel its “future of work” initiative through borderless payment alternatives in major currencies.

The oversubscribed seed investment was led by Moniepoint Inc. (formerly TeamApt Inc), the U.S. entity that houses Moniepoint Microfinance Bank and TeamApt Nigeria. Other investors participated, including Techstars, HoaQ, DFS Lab’s Stellar Africa Fund, Ingressive Capital Fund II and angel investors such as MFS Africa chief Dare Okoudjou and Norebase CEO Tola Onayemi. Existing investors like Techstars and Angels Touch followed on.

When Favour Ori launched Payday in June 2021, the initial play was to build PayPal for Africa, for which it secured a million dollars in pre-seed funding. Customers in 11 African countries, including Rwanda, where it first established its headquarters due to its business-friendly environment, had access to the platform and could send money to each other. Subsequently, the fintech, which became the first Rwandan company to join Techstars (Toronto program), learned that enabling cross-border payments was expensive despite raising a $1.2 million pre-seed extension. As such, it shut down nine corridors and focused on Nigeria, where it has since witnessed tremendous transaction volume and user growth.

With Payday, African remote workers and freelancers, particularly in Nigeria and Rwanda, can send and receive money in USD, GBP and EUR, as well as 20 other currencies. This allows them and those in the diaspora who work remotely for international organizations to be paid and withdraw money in their currency choice. Payday also offers virtual dollar and naira cards (which allow Nigerian users to purchase goods and services on foreign platforms), currency swaps, payment links, local bill payments, and peer-to-peer transfers. These features are commonly provided by other VC-backed B2C fintech apps serving African customers and those in the diaspora, such as Grey, Lemonade Finance, Send by Flutterwave and Chipper Cash, making the landscape a competitive one where each attempts to outdo the other with speed and better fees or rates.

“We are building TransferWise for Africa; we want our customers to move money faster with the bank accounts and cards we issue. Other platforms focus on Africans in the diaspora; we’re focusing on people in Africa while planning to focus on those abroad by expanding to the U.K.,” Ori told TechCrunch during an interview about Payday’s place in Africa’s remittance and global neobanking space. “We were the first startup to start issuing virtual accounts in Africa around June 2021, and we’ve done this for over 20 months, so we know what works and understand our market and users.”

Payday ramped up its social media marketing push over the last few months to increase market share, which seems to be paying off. While the fintech ended 2022 with slightly over 100,000 users, it now offers its virtual cards and other products to more than 300,000 users. Payday also processes an average of 40,000 transactions daily and over $25 million monthly, numbers that have subjected the fintech to a $15 million acquisition offer by one of the continent’s unicorns, which, according to Ori, was turned down.

Image Credits: Payday

The fintech’s burn rate has tripled as a result of extensive marketing. However, Ori claims that the company remains profitable (the startup achieved profitability in August 2022, according to the CEO), and its monthly revenues, which it makes by charging a fee on transactions, have quadrupled owing to its increasing user base. Similarly, the two-year-old startup became a payment partner for SpaceX’s Starlink, enabling users in Nigeria and Rwanda to purchase Starlink routers. The company claims to have helped process close to $1 million already.

“At Moniepoint, we’re excited about the unique things Favour and the team are doing with PayDay. Personally, I connect deeply with his drive, technical depth, and desire to execute. This is something that isn’t very common, and the urge to encourage that fire inspired us to want to be a part of this,” Moniepoint CEO Tosin Eniolorunda said on the investment. “There’s also the alignment in our goal to provide financial happiness by addressing key international payment pain points with merchants and individuals. We see a potential to leverage their infrastructure to further deepen our suite of financial services for merchants as well, and we’re looking forward to all that’s to come.”

Having raised over $5 million since its inception, Payday will now look to secure operational licensing in the U.K. and Canada while building out operations in the former, where the startup has recently been incorporated. The Kigali and Vancouver-based fintech will also intensify its marketing efforts while hiring more talent as it looks to expand from 35 to 50 employees in the coming weeks. It already made fresh additions to its founding and executive team, which initially comprised Ori, who ran Payday as a solo founder for 18 months. Elijah Kingson joined the company as co-founder and CPO from global fintech Revolut while Yvonne Obike, the company’s current COO who had previous stints with Nigeria’s Bank of Industry, now wields a co-founder title. Sean Udeke, an ex–Goldman Sachs and Expedia product manager, works at the fintech as its new head of products, where he might oversee new offerings such as loans and credit cards.

“We’re supporting the future of work by targeting remote workers and freelancers, and we want to be able to study customer and spend behaviors and use that to offer loans,” said Ori, who also ran the now-defunct tech outsourcing platform WeJapa before stepping down following allegations of misconduct. “That’s going to be the future for us. We also want to issue credit cards where if you’re a student trying to go to the U.S., you can start building your credit from Nigeria with Payday.”

Payday wants to power the future of work for Africa with $3M seed led by Moniepoint Inc by Tage Kene-Okafor originally published on TechCrunch



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vivo X Fold2 officially coming in April, more specs leak

The vivo X Fold2 has been part of the rumor mill for over a month, and today the company finally acknowledged the smartphone. Huang Tao, VP at vivo, revealed the new foldable will be the officially designated phone of the 2023 Boao Forum. The new foldable will be a demonstration of China’s technology, design, and innovation, and the executive expects leaks and spy shots to emerge before the official announcement in April. vivo banners at 2023 Boao Forum The phone is expected to have a 4,800 mAh battery with 120W fast charging. According to a now-deleted post by Digital Chat Station...



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Hygraph raises $30M to scale out a new, federated approach to managing digital content

Digital content and how we consume it continue to endlessly evolve, and with that, so too does the tech that helps manage all of it behind the scenes. In the latest development, Hygraph, a startup out of Berlin that has built a platform around a new, “federated” approach to content management — think: many sources of data, and many endpoints for using it, and using composable architecture, orchestrating all of it from a single platform — is announcing that it has raised $30 million. The startup now has around 400 customers — including major brands like Samsung, Philips and the FMCG conglomerate Dr Oetker — and the plan is to use the funding to continue developing the platform and how and where it can be used, as well as expand into new geographies.

The round is a Series B and it is being led by European investor One Peak, with previous backers OpenOcean and SquareOne, as well as new individual investor Boris Lokschin (cofounder and CEO of Spryker Systems), all also participating. The startup previously raised $13 million and it’s not disclosing its valuation.

A number of startups have identified the opportunity to improve how organizations create and manage their content online, including focused on specific verticals like Shopify, those like Wix that have built frameworks to quickly get sites up and running, and a newer generation of “headless” systems be more flexible with controlling interfaces while also still handling potentially huge amounts of data at the backend. (And there are even some new players emerging, such as Vue Technologies taking an open source approach to improving management of the front end, which I covered last week.) Hygraph represents yet another chapter in that story.

Its positioning goes a little like this: When it comes to engaging with digital content, the landscape has changed dramatically in the last 15 years: not only do we have a plethora of screens from traditional TVs and computers through to phones, watches, and more, but the formats we see on these are constantly fragmenting and evolving. But so, too, are the sources of data that are used to create and manage that digital content.

While there are a number of services already on the market to address aspects of this state of play (see above), there is no single platform out there that de-fragments the experience and brings the back and front sourcing and data management challenges together into one place. This is what Hygraph is aiming to do and it calls its approach “federated content.”

“We are turning headless around,” Michael Lukaszczyk, the CEO and co-founder, said in an interview. “We are not just front-end agnostic but also back-end agnostic. We make it easy to integrate the back-end and front-end into one universal content API.” One of the big benefits for this is that, by building all of this around APIs you can essentially update information and send information out to other systems much more efficiently, essentially in real time, which makes systems overall work better and more cheaply over time. This may be an “overpowered” approach for basic sites these days, he admitted, but it’s essential for large organizations coping with huge amounts of traffic and multiple experiences on multiple platforms, marketplaces, social media sites and more. That could have an e-commerce focus, but equally could apply to media organizations managing video and so on.

The company was originally called GraphCMS — it bases its framework around GraphQL and how it was built around the concept of composable architecture. Last September it also released an API that supercharges where and how Hygraph can be used.

“Despite the rise of the composable enterprise, many organisations are unable to unlock full value from their content,” said David Klein, co-founder and managing partner, and Tatjana Kast, director, One Peak, in a joint statement. “Hygraph solves the customisation and integration challenges that continue to slow the creation of new or complex digital services at scale. We have been hugely impressed with Hygraph’s strong and capital efficient growth trajectory and believe that its federated content platform presents a sizeable market opportunity. One Peak is incredibly excited to back the excellent Hygraph team and its founders in their next phase of explosive growth.”

 

Hygraph raises $30M to scale out a new, federated approach to managing digital content by Ingrid Lunden originally published on TechCrunch



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Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Apple Music Classical is now available for download to everyone

Apple’s new app for classical music, Apple Music Classical, is available for download to everyone. The app is free for everyone, but you need an Apple Music subscription. Notably, it is not available in countries like China, Japan, Korea, Russia, Taiwan and Turkey.

The company said that there are more than 5 million tracks available on the app right now. While a ton of compositions are focused on western classical music, I was able to find some Hindustani classical and Carnatic titles.

The new service is based on Primephonic, an Amsterdam-based company Apple acquired in 2021. It also features exclusive albums, composer bios, and editorial deep dives on certain key works.

The app focuses more on the discovery by composers rather than interprets. Apple Music Classical allows you to browse through tracks using filters like composers, periods, genres, conductors, orchestras, ensembles, and choirs under the “Catalog” tab; different instruments through “Instruments” tab; and curated playlists under the “Playlists” tab.

You can add a track to the library or your own playlist, but sadly, you can’t download any tracks. However, you can add them to your library and download them via Apple Music. A bit of a tedious process. Apple has also made an interesting choice of not making shuffle available on the Classical app.

All compositions are available in quality up to 192kHz/24-bit Hi-Res Lossless. Also, a lot of tracks are available in immersive spatial audio with Dolby Atmos support if you have speakers or headphones that support this technology. At the moment, only AirPods Pro (1st or 2nd generation), AirPods Max, AirPods 3rd gen, or Beats Fit Pro supports spatial audio.

Currently, the app is only available on iPhones, so you can’t access the app on Mac or iPad. You have to be running iOS 15.4 or newer to use that app.

On Monday, Apple also released the iOS 16.4 update with features like new emojis, notifications for web apps, and voice isolation for better call quality.

Apple Music Classical is now available for download to everyone by Ivan Mehta originally published on TechCrunch



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Techstars-backed Fez Delivery gets funding to scale its last-mile logistics platform

Fez Delivery, a Lagos-based last-mile logistics startup with hubs across Nigeria, has raised $1 million led by pan-African investor Ventures Platform with participation from Voltron Capital, Acasia Ventures and other angel investors. 

Founder and CEO Seun Alley, in a statement, said the company plans to use the seed investment to deepen its work in Nigeria (which has a $10 billion transport and logistics market) while it considers expansion — from Q4 2023 — into other African markets, including Ghana, Kenya and South Africa. The startup also intends to improve its technology and operation efficiency, hire more talent and increase its marketing spend.

Alley, who worked for over a decade in Nigeria’s banking sector and later in startups such as OPay and Bloc, founded Fez Delivery in 2020. It was a spin-off from a B2B janitorial service and side hustle she opened two years prior. While running the business, Alley received several complaints from her customers regarding the janitors: Although they did thorough cleaning in the mornings, they were primarily absent to carry out the necessary touch-ups throughout the rest of the day. “We realized that this happened because the janitors went on lots of errands for our clients’ employees,” the chief executive told TechCrunch over a call. “And the reason for this, we learned, was because most of the places they were buying stuff from did not have a dispatch or logistics service.”

The situation is peculiar to many businesses across Nigeria, as evident in a simple market research Alley undertook before launching Fez Delivery. Alley said she spoke with entrepreneurs and small business owners, including those outside and within her circle, to ask about their major issues: talent and logistics topped the list.

While logistics is one of Nigeria’s fastest-growing industries, it is also one of its most fragmented. The sector is still pretty nascent in many parts of Africa and has barely scratched the surface even though the millions poured into startups — operating in various facets from haulage to last mile — are yet to build sustainable businesses. Meanwhile, in the last-mile category, pricing, reach and delivery times are common headaches that startups and small businesses encounter; these features are what Fez Delivery’s solutions optimize for, according to Alley. Individual customers can access its services via mobile and web apps to place and track orders, manage spend, collate data on specific business points and make payments. On the other hand, the startup offers APIs and dashboards to its business clients. Fez Delivery claims to have over 17,000 customers using its platform (70% are individuals, while 30% are a combination of SMEs and startups).

Last year, the two-year-old startup launched a vertical: FEZ for fintechs, where it helped fintechs deliver debit cards and POS terminals to all their customers and agents across Nigeria. To meet up with the demand, Fez Delivery recently developed a SaaS platform to onboard and verify trained third-party two-wheeler logistics platforms, with fleet sizes of about five-10, to help complete orders that it can’t fulfill. These third-party partners share in the revenue Fez Delivery makes by charging individuals per delivery (based on the distance covered and size of items) and businesses a monthly flat-fee subscription (based on a set range of deliveries).

Fez Delivery said it completed 200,000 trips last year and grew revenue by 20% month-on-month. Its clientele base includes the likes of Flutterwave, Kuda Bank, Moniepoint, OPay, Red Bull and Famasi Africa, per its statement. 

The Techstars Toronto-backed platform faces competition in Nigeria, including Uber, via its Uber Connect product, Kwik Delivery and Gokada, among other upstarts. Alley argues that Fez Delivery’s differentiator is in its model; while others operate on-demand, her startup is a hybrid of on-demand and the hub and spoke model. “We pick items from customers in bulk and take them to a central location where they’re zoned before assigning them to riders to complete,” the CEO commented. “So I like to refer to Fez as running a hybrid model. We have the technology and still own 30% of the assets on our platform. What that does is that if third-party partners don’t show up for any reason, we have backup and can complete our deliveries by ourselves. So for us, we think that gives us an edge because we also own a significant number of assets while also providing technology.”

Speaking on why Ventures Platform invested, Dotun Olowoporoku, general partner at Ventures Platform, in a statement, said his firm decided to back Fez Delivery because its technology, which enables other market players to thrive, is well-aligned with the firm’s investment thesis to support market-creating innovation in underserved industries such as logistics.

“I’ve realized we can build and create solutions around payment and core fintech. But there are other problems within the ecosystem that no one is looking at, one of which is logistics,” noted Alley, who also had a brief stint at mobility fintech Moove, when asked why she was building in the logistics and delivery space instead of fintech, where she has several years of experience. 

Techstars-backed Fez Delivery gets funding to scale its last-mile logistics platform by Tage Kene-Okafor originally published on TechCrunch



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Moto Edge+ (2023) appears on Google Play Console with SD 8 Gen 2

Motorola’s next flagship phone appears to have made an appearance on the Google Play Console. The Moto Edge+ (2023) listing reveals the phone will come equipped with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset and 12GB RAM. Motorola Edge+ (2023) Google Play Console listing The device is expected to serve as a sequel to last year’s US-exclusive Edge+ (2022). Edge+ (2023) will also feature an FHD+ resolution display and will boot Android 13 out of the box presumably with the MyUX interface on top. Moto Edge+ (2023) is expected to launch as the US-version of the Moto X40 – a phone which...



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When life gives you carbon, make Carbonaide

Concrete. Ubiquitous. A mainstay of the construction industry — over 10 billion cubic meters of concrete are used every year. And also responsible for up to 8% of CO2 emissions — one ton of ordinary Portland cement creates somewhere between 800 and 900 kilograms of CO2 emissions. Finnish startup Carbonaide has just raised €1.8 million (~$1.9 million at today’s exchange rate) in seed funding to knock down concrete’s carbon emissions but not the construction industry.

“Our goal at Carbonaide is to create a more sustainable future with cutting-edge tech that doesn’t just reduce the carbon emissions of construction materials like concrete, but that traps more CO2 than they emit throughout their lifetime,” explains Tapio Vehmas, Carbonaide’s CEO. “It is very natural that the constructed environment becomes a CO2 sink as it is the largest volume of man-made material.”

Carbonaide’s process binds carbon dioxide into precast concrete using an automated system at atmospheric pressure. By reducing the quantity of required cement content and mineralizing CO2 into the concrete itself, Carbonaide believes it can halve the carbon dioxide emissions of traditional Portland cement concrete. If it can introduce industrial waste products, for example, industry slag, green liquor dregs, and bio-ash into the process, it has the potential to produce concrete with a negative carbon footprint.

The next step for Carbonaide is to scale the technology into a production line at its factory in Hollola, Finland, which is where this seed funding round comes in.

“The goal for this funding round is to scale the technology into an industrial-scale pilot factory. With the funding, we can implement the technology into a precast concrete production line that allows carbon curing as a part of the industrial process,” says Vehmas. “When we have done that, we will know exactly the cost structure and needed parameters for effective curing,” because it does need to add up.

“Can we develop technical solutions that also make sense commercially? Low-carbon products have to have a lower price than normal products — otherwise, we can’t be sure that our technology will prevail,” says Vehmas.

Carbonaide has calculated that a fully operational chain could mineralize up to five tons of CO2 per day and increase production by 100-fold of its carbon-negative concrete products, but it’s not just about making this type of concrete industrially scalable, though. Carbonaide also needs to bring the naturally conservative construction industry with it.

“The technology must fit in perfectly — otherwise, it won’t make a change,” says Vehmas. The industry is very conservative, but there is a good reason for that. We build structures that are meant to last, and by being conservative, we can ensure that they will remain in the future.” It’s easy to say that if something isn’t broken it doesn’t need to be fixed, but Vehmas recognizes how the carbon footprint of concrete is breaking the Earth, and it does need to be fixed: “I want to see how a low-carbon industry can become a reality in highly conservative markets. If we can make this happen, maybe our generation will have some hope to pay our carbon debt for future generations.”

Importantly, Vehmas has the experience in the construction industry to bring with him on this lower carbon quest, and he believes that the investment that Carbonaide has raised validates both its necessity and viability.

“I also have 20+ years of experience working with concrete, meaning I have dealt with industry my whole adulthood. I basically live and breathe concrete. That helps a lot when introducing new technology into a highly conservative industry,” says Vehmas. He added that: “This investment is a sign of good progress for us because we’ve received the support and backing of players in the industry already.”

Backing for Carbonaide comes from Lakan Betoni and Vantaa Energy, which led the seed funding. The round was completed with public loans and in-kind contributions from Business Finland and other Finnish concrete companies and strategic investors.

The concrete and energy companies supporting Carbonaide are doing so in more ways than just financially. They are also able to provide CO2 for Carbonaide’s processes, because believe it or not, while too much carbon dioxide is fizzing its way into the atmosphere, the captive kind that we need for everything from concrete to soda is in short supply.

If Carbonaide’s pilot factory goes to plan, Vehmas hopes that it can have a planet-saving impact on the construction industry.

“After the piloting, our goal is to commercialize the technology. We want to make this process easy to implement by packing the technology into a modular unit that is easy to install and enables easy implementation of the technology on-site,” says Vehmas. “If everything goes as I dream, our technology will start a process where the constructed environment becomes a carbon sink in the future, not a source of massive emissions.”

When life gives you carbon, make Carbonaide by Haje Jan Kamps originally published on TechCrunch



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Oppo and OnePlus officially decline rumors about leaving Europe

Yesterday rumors started doing the rounds, suggesting Oppo and OnePlus are exiting key European markets, including the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, and France. OnePlus representatives quickly declined the rumor, later followed by Oppo, both issuing official statements about their companies’ dedication to the European markets. OnePlus Global PR Manager James Patterson told Tech Advisor: OnePlus will not exit from Europe and the UK and maintains stable operations in local markets. OnePlus will continue to invest in Europe and provide more innovative product and solutions...



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Monday, March 27, 2023

Sonos Era 100 and Era 300 review: The next generation of great, reliable multi-room sound

Sonos has two new speakers going on sale Tuesday, March 28, and they’re both significant new models that occupy a couple of key spots in the overall Sonos line-up: The Era 100 is essentially the replacement for the Sonos One, arguably the ‘default’ starter speaker for anyone looking to build out a Sonos system. The Era 300, its larger sibling, is the first Sonos speaker to support spatial audio, and occupies a place somewhere between the now-defunct Play:3 and the Sonos Five. We took both for a test drive, and found plenty of reasons to get excited about Sonos’ Era era.

The basics

The Sonos Era 100 basically drops in as a replacement for the Sonos One in the existing product lineup, and it’s got a design to match. Unlike the Sonos One, the Era 100 is a true rounded cylinder (instead of a 3D rounded rectangle like the One) and is slightly taller than the One, but with a more svelte appearance overall thanks to being more narrow side-to-side.

Sonos Era 100 smart speaker

Image Credits: Darrell Etherington / TechCrunch

The Era 100 connects via wifi to your Sonos system, and includes Apple AirPlay 2 like its predecessor. It also has a mic and supports Sonos’ own voice control as well as Amazon Alexa (unlike on older devices, Google Assistant is no longer an option). It has a physical switch for disabling the mic, on top of the touch control mute from prior models, and the redesigned top touch surface a dedicated volume slider, play/pause and skip controls.

New to the Era 100, and the Era 300, are two additional connection options: Bluetooth, and physical line-in. These are both welcome, but it’s important to note the USB-C port used for line-in on both requires the addition of the Sonos Line-In Adapter for connecting to 3.5 mm sources. I thought that since it was USB-C, it would be easy to just connect a source like a MacBook Pro directly and have it recognized as an external audio device, but that doesn’t work – nor does using existing USB-C-to-3.5 mm audio adapters that I had on hand.

The Era 100 also gains two separate tweeters for the first time in a speaker this size from Sonos, as well as a larger subwoofer. The result should be more clarity and natural sound vs the Sonos One. More on how that delivers later one.

Sonos Era 300 smart speaker

Image Credits: Darrell Etherington / TechCrunch

The Sonos Era 300 is a much more net-new speaker for the company, though it roughly occupies the place in the lineup left behind by the discontinuation of the Play:3, which was not immediately replaced with another model at or near its price point. The Era 300 is quite different, however, both in terms of its design – which looks like an hourglass laid on its side – and in terms of its feature set, since it includes support for spatial audio for the first time.

Sonos designed the internals of the Era 300, which packs four tweeters facing in all directions but down, as well as a pair of woofers, to be able to fill a room with sound from a single point. It can reproduce both stereo and spatial mixes, and doesn’t artificially manipulate stereo to sound spatialized, thankfully. Sonos also provided the Era 300 with the ability to act as rears for a Sonos surround setup, which means if you have a basically unlimited budget you can get two plus an arc, and a Sonos Sub to create a virtual 7.1.4 sound system.

Of course, both the Era 100 and Era 300 can join an existing Sonos setup and gain access to all the synced multi-room playback features that Sonos is know for. Both also feature auto-TruePlay tuning that uses the built-in mic to adjust sound to best fit your room. Also, if you have the input adapters, you can play back audio from your line-in source across your various Sonos speakers.

Design

Both these Sonos speakers achieve new highs for the brand in terms of design, in my opinion. The Era 100 is a straight across the plate, fundamental bookshelf speaker with just a hint of edge thanks to the oblong shape. It seems more innocuous in situ across a range of domestic settings, including in the kitchen or set up as rears, thanks to some subtle tweaks, like the fact that the speaker grill goes almost all the way to the top of the speaker, unlike on the Sonos One which had a band of solid surface nearer the upper edge.

Sonos Era 100 smart speaker

Image Credits: Darrell Etherington / TechCrunch

The new volume rocker indentation is a welcome change and adds some tactile benefit to distinguishing it from the forward/back buttons, and the subtle vertical logo on the front grill is a nice bit of branding that doesn’t mar an otherwise very covert look.

For the Era 300, Sonos obviously went a bit more adventurous, coming up with this shape that tapers to the middle and then re-expands out towards the back. This is likely at least in part functional as well as aesthetic, to provide the Era 300 with its spatial audio and height channel surround capabilities. It makes for a much more striking design vs. the Era 100, but it’s one that I think works quite well in a range of settings. It’s definitely a bit more attention-grabbing, but since it ends up looking like a modern architectural mini sculpture, that’s not at all a bad thing. In fact, I would say the Era 300 is maybe the best-looking speaker Sonos has ever made.

Features & Performance

Let’s get the basics out of the way first: Sonos’ new speakers are just as reliable in terms of the core Sonos magic as any that have come before. They provide rock-solid multi-room synced audio playback, and will integrate instantly with your existing setup should you have one.

Okay, with that out of the way, let’s talk about what these speakers uniquely provide that Sonos’ existing lineup hasn’t offered.

Sonos Era 100 smart speaker

Image Credits: Darrell Etherington / TechCrunch

The Era 100 has internal hardware changes that the company claims provides better sound vs. the Sonos One. Based on testing, that does indeed seem to be the case – with a couple caveats. The first is that I would say if you’re looking to use an Era 100 on its own, you definitely get a lot better audio quality vs. a Sonos One acting solo. The added tweeter and bigger woofer do deliver more accurate sound with less muddied mixes, especially at lower volumes.

If you’re debating whether or not to upgrade an existing Sonos One pair to Era 100s, I think things get a lot more murky. The fact is that in most settings, for most setups, you likely won’t get enough of a difference in overall experienced audio quality to justify the price of upgrading. But if you’re coming to it new, or upgrading from a much older pair of Play:1s, it’s definitely a great-sounding speaker – alone or together.

As for the Era 300, it’s far easier to recommend this more broadly, in part because there’s nothing really equivalent in Sonos’ recent history to compare it against. It genuinely provides terrific, room-filling sound with surprising clarity and sophistication given its footprint and size. The Era 300 is a great sole speaker for any room where you want to on audio (vs. having a soundbar or home theatre system for a TV) and I found it was even comparable to the more expensive and excellent Sonos Five that the company still sells in terms of overall quality.

Sonos Era 300 smart speaker

Image Credits: Darrell Etherington / TechCrunch

Of course, the Sonos Era 300’s big fancy new feature is support for spatial audio, which it provides if you use Amazon Music Unlimited as a source, or Apple Music via a forthcoming update, for tracks mastered with Dolby Atmos Audio. I tested this with compatible tracks from Amazon Music Unlimited, and found that it does indeed make a difference and sounds great – I just couldn’t really say for certain that it sounds better than the same song rendered in stereo only. To be fair, that’s generally been the case for me and spatial audio – with Apple’s AirPod lineup and Apple Music I can definitely tell the difference, but can’t usually say definitively that I prefer one vs. the other. I wouldn’t make spatial audio support the deciding factor in a purchase, but your mileage may vary there depending on how you personally feel about the technology.

Bottom line

Sonos has rarely had a real miss with its product lineup, and both the Era 100 and the Era 300 stand as clear hits. The Era 100 is a smart and subtle evolution of the company’s ‘default’ starter offering, and the Era 300 is a unique and outperforming product in a sea of options that includes Apple’s just-updated HomePod. While each sounds great in its own right, the differentiator for Sonos will always be the flexibility of its multi-room audio technology, and that remains a huge highlight of both of these products that you can’t really get anywhere else. I wish that Sonos had either just made the aux inputs on the back 3.5mm (the argument against being that with USB-C, they also support Ethernet adapters for wired network connections), or that they’d included their proprietary adapters in the box, but the fact that they have these options, as well as Bluetooth, is a major nice-to-have upgrade that has been lacking in most of Sonos’ lineup for years.

You won’t be disappointed with either of these speakers, and as always with Sonos products, if you’ve got the money they perform even more spectacularly in stereo pairs. The Era 300 in particular is a super strong offering with few real competitors out there.

Sonos Era 100 and Era 300 review: The next generation of great, reliable multi-room sound by Darrell Etherington originally published on TechCrunch



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Sunday, March 26, 2023

Oma Fertility to speak on building a better IVF experience on TechCrunch Live

Oma Fertility is on a mission to improve in vitro fertilization. The company says it accomplishes this by offering clients better technology, respectful care, and ethical pricing. Founded by Gurjeet Singh in 2020, the company raised $71.5 million over three rounds of funding. Chrissy Meyer and Root Ventures invested in the last two rounds.

I’m excited to have Gurjeet speaking at an upcoming TechCrunch Live event on March 29 at 12 pm PDT. Oma Fertility investor Chrissy Meyer is speaking at the event, too. TechCrunch’s Hardware Battlefield editor Neesha Tambe is conducting the interview.

Chrissy Meyer knows hardware. She spent nearly six years at Apple, where she was an engineer program manager for five years. After leaving Apple in 2013, she spent a year as an engineering program manager at Square before joining up with Pearl Automation, where she was a founding team member at the ambitious startup. She’s been at Root Ventures for nearly six years, where she writes $1 million to $3 million checks in seed and pre-seed rounds.

This is going to be a great conversation, and I hope you can join the fun. It’s free to register and attend this event. The virtual doors open at 11:30 a.m. PDT and the interview starts at 12:00 p.m. PDT. If you register, you can register for Pitch Practice and ask Gurjeet and Chrissy questions.

Register Here

Oma Fertility to speak on building a better IVF experience on TechCrunch Live by Matt Burns originally published on TechCrunch



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Weekly poll: would you buy the Oppo Find X6 and Find X6 Pro if you could?

The era of the three main cameras has begun – but only in China. While we hope that Oppo changes its mind and does bring the new Find X6 series to the global market, all we can do for now is a full review of the X6 Pro (coming soon) and find out how those Hasselblad-branded cameras perform. Oppo Find X6 Pro at the office The Oppo Find X6 Pro is beautiful, especially in the gray metal plus brown leather combo. And it has one of the biggest camera islands we have ever seen, the cameras on there represent the best that smartphone tech has to offer in 2023. This includes the 1”...



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