Monday, September 26, 2022

Rumored Pixel 7 specs show little deviation from the Pixel 6

Where has the year gone? The Pixel 6 was announced in mid-October 2021 and now its successor is just around the corner – but if rumors are to be believed, it will be nearly the same phone. The Pixel 7 will feature the new Tensor G2 chipset, which will bring some important updates to the GPU, NPU, modem and other hardware, basically everything but the CPU. It probably won’t post headline-grabbing test scores, but it will offer hardware acceleration for Google’s software, which is more important to the Pixel experience. As for the rest of the phone, leakster Yogesh Brar posted a...



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Infinix Zero Ultra pops up with 200 MP camera, 180W fast charging

Infinix announced its 180W Thunder Charge earlier this year, and today a teaser comes to confirm the first phone to have support it. A video popped up on the company's official AliExpress store and it reveals the Infinix Zero Ultra is on its way. On top of the massively fast charging, it will also have a 200MP main camera with OIS and a 120Hz OLED screen with 2.5D curved edges. The teaser also confirms a Dimensity 920 chipset, which raises some questions. In theory, the Mediatek chipset has an ISP that supports 20MP + 20MP dual cameras or 108MP single cameras, meaning the...



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Samsung launches credit card in India

Samsung has launched two credit cards in India, entering a crowded category that sees over 50 companies fiercely compete for consumers’ attention in the world’s second largest internet market.

The South Korean giant said it has partnered with the Mumbai-headquartered Axis Bank and global payments processor Visa to launch the cards, which it is calling Samsung Axis Bank Credit Card. Consumers buying Samsung’s products and services through either of the cards will get a 10% cashback “round the year,” the company executives said at an event in New Delhi.

Samsung, the second largest smartphone vendor in India, said it will also offer customers exciting financing options on the credit cards, which come in two variants. The card is especially aimed at serving consumers in smaller Indian cities and towns, the executives said.

Customers will earn rewards for spendings through their cards and get access to deals from local firms including Zomato, Myntra, Tata’s 1mg, Bigbasket and Urban Company.

Monday’s announcement underscores smartphone makers’ growing attempt to broaden their services. Chinese giant Xiaomi, which commands the smartphone market in the country, launched a UPI-powered payments service in India in 2019 and started to lend to customers last year.

Co-branded cards are generally a win-win for the bank, the partner brand and the customers, as it allows power users of a brand to get higher benefits as they spend more with the brand. The brand gets more loyalty from its users, while the bank obviously benefits by getting access to a different set of customer base the customer acquisition itself coming from the brand or the brand’s loyalist users, a Bengaluru-based fintech executive told TechCrunch, requesting anonymity commenting on other company’s products.

“At Samsung, we believe in transforming the lives of our consumers through the power of innovation. The Samsung Axis Bank Credit Card, powered by Visa, is our next big India-specific innovation that will change the way our customers buy Samsung products and spend on services through a series of industry-leading features. We’re excited to be able to put the control into our consumers’ hands,” said Ken Kang, President and CEO, Samsung South-West Asia, in a statement.

Samsung launches credit card in India by Manish Singh originally published on TechCrunch



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Tecno Pova Neo 2 launches with Helio G85 and 7,000 mAh battery

Transsion brand Tecno launched its latest Pova member in Russia with the Tecno Pova Neo 2. The device brings a 6.82-inch IPS LCD with HD+ resolution and a 90Hz refresh rate. You get an 8MP selfie camera housed in a punch hole notch while the back brings a 16MP main cam and a 2MP depth sensor. MediaTek’s Helio G85 chipset sits at the helm paired with 4/6GB RAM and 64/128GB storage. Tecno Pova Neo 2 Pova Neo 2 packs a sizeable 7,000 mAh battery which supports up to 18W charging. The phone boots Android 12 with Tecno’s HiOS 8.6 on top. Other features include a side-mounted...



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Sunday, September 25, 2022

Disperse, which brings AI-fuelled data to construction projects, raises $16M

Disperse, a U.K.-based construction tech company that offers an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered platform to help project managers track work and capture data from building sites, has raised $16 million in funding.

Founded out of London in 2015, Disperse effectively creates a digital version of an entire construction site, including visual snapshots that track the progress of work to help all stakeholders — regardless of where they’re based — keep up with things. For this, someone employed on the site (e.g. a project manager) walks around equipped with a standard 360° camera at regular intervals, and the resulting imagery is fed directly into the Disperse platform which processes the visuals and applies computer vision techniques to figure out what’s happening.

For example, this can help to show the state of a project at a given moment in time, and solve disputes should they arise in terms of determining whether a job was completed as it should’ve been. It also automatically spotlights potential problems or bottlenecks while they can still be resolved.

Disperse in action

More broadly, Disperse combines drawings, plans, construction schedules, and all the elements that go into a construction project to help those at the helm keep on top of everything digitally, reduce risk, and ensure everyone is on the same page.

Efficiency

While the trillion-dollar construction industry often gets a bad rap for its inefficiency, Disperse founder and CEO Felix Neufeld said that this has nothing to do with attitudes, more that it’s a case of insufficient access to digital technology that can really shift the needle.

“I actually consider this perception or construction as ‘laggards’ to be a misconception,” Neufeld explained to TechCrunch. “Having worked for years on projects and with companies in both Europe and the U.S., we can emphatically say that there is no attitude problem — but there is a severe technology problem. A lot of construction companies and teams are willing to give new solutions a shot despite false promises from technology companies, and have ended up with more of a burden from using technology than a value add.”

Indeed, Neufeld pointed to a swathe of technologies spanning workflow, robotics, and BIM (building information modelling) tools as examples where companies invest in the next hot thing, but which ultimately go nowhere.

“We see most technology on sites quickly become either fully abandoned, or become ‘zombie software,’ which is to say that the initiatives are technically still active but are solely kept alive for perception, or contractual obligations, without fulfilling their functional purpose,” Neufeld said.

Other notable players in the space include San Francisco-based OpenSpace, which recently raised $102 million in funding, and Israel’s Buildots which closed $60 million in financing. So it’s clear that investors are still keen on backing the next big construction industry movers and shakers.

“I would say that the pandemic’s challenges partly contributed to driving investment in this space, but also the productivity problem is still a massive elephant in the room in one of the largest industries in the world,” Neufeld continued. “Construction accounts for about 12% of total GDP, and it impacts almost every other industry that relies on it, but construction productivity has completely stagnated over the past 40 or so years. It’s a massive problem to solve, and not an easy one.”

Building out

Since its previous $15 million fundraise back in 2019, much has changed at Disperse. Previously, the company was chiefly focused on London, with big-name customers including construction giants Mace and Multiplex, though it had just launched into New York City at that juncture. In the intervening years, Disperse has been expanding across both markets, with projects currently ongoing in the Midlands and the North in the U.K., as well as across the water in Ireland. Stateside, meanwhile, Disperse has expanded its work in New York and also now has projects in Washington DC and Florida, with customers including Gilbane.

“So far, the bulk of our business is still in the U.K. where we are working with a large share of the key contractors and developers, but given the momentum we have in the U.S. and the size of the market, the U.S. will likely surpass the U.K. next year,” Neufeld added.

From a product perspective, Disperse has also broadened its horizons beyond residential and commercial projects, and now covers all manner of building types.

“Essentially, if it’s a building, our system can handle it,” Neufeld said. “For example, we are now servicing a number of projects in healthcare, education, retail, and manufacturing.”

With another $16 million in the bank, Neufeld also teased a major new product it has in the works, though he was coy about the specifics.

“We can’t announce anything explicitly just yet, but we have deeply focused our product and engineering efforts for the past year or two on enabling proactive decision making on construction sites, and the initial soft launch has gone well,” he said.

Disperse’s latest tranche of funding was spearheaded by 2150, with participation from Northzone and Kindred Capital.

Disperse, which brings AI-fuelled data to construction projects, raises $16M by Paul Sawers originally published on TechCrunch



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Conservative capitalists are funding their vision of the future

Given the political climate and Peter Thiel’s political views, it initially seemed ironic that Thiel Capital chose now as the ideal time to back 28, a self-described “femtech” company that offers fitness and wellness recommendations based on the phases of one’s menstrual cycle.

Then, you start to do the math.

Thiel is known for having quite right-leaning interests and has poured money into PACs supporting the Senate campaigns of various populist Republicans. For example, early last year, he gave $10 million to a PAC supporting J.D. Vance’s run for an Ohio Senate seat. Vance infamously compared abortion to slavery.

Thiel also backed Blake Masters, a Trump-endorsed Senate candidate from Arizona whose website once stated he was completely pro-life and supported “a federal personhood law that recognizes that unborn babies are human beings that may not be killed.” The entry has since been deleted, NBC News reported. Vance and Masters are former venture capitalists who won their respective Republican primaries. Both are backed by Thiel (although that support seems to be waning.)

“The potential of innovation in the private sector is limitless, but so is the potential to do harm.” Olivia DeRamus, founder, Communia

Then you look at 28, an offshoot of Evie magazine. (A representative for Evie told TechCrunch that 28 and Evie are two separate entities and function as such, stating that the Thiel Capital investment was solely in the former rather than the latter. It should be noted, however, that 28’s website name was “28 by Evie,” and 28byevie.com now redirects to 28.co). Evie is a publication that claims to focus on affirming femininity without the “biased agenda” of other publications.

That itself is coded transphobic language seeking to exclude trans women from the definition of femininity, a fact underscored by Evie publishing a story that pondered whether “the trans debate [is] a cause of the rise in mental health issues in women.” Furthermore, the publication’s thoughts on abortion rights include writing that, for instance, “abortion is the intentional ending of a human being in the womb, and that’s never medically necessary.”

Though it’s clear 28 is now aiming to distance itself from Evie, the version of the startup with ties to the magazine landed a $3.2 million seed round led by Thiel’s venture firm. Per PitchBook, it’s the only “femtech” in which the firm has invested. This is no coincidence. Thiel Capital’s decision to back 28 and its Evie-powered agenda appears to be one of several examples of right-leaning investors and entrepreneurs bringing a particular brand of conservatism to market through several avenues.

Conservative capitalists are funding their vision of the future by Dominic-Madori Davis originally published on TechCrunch



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Samsung Galaxy Buds2 Pro review

For the second year in a row Samsung introduced TWS earphones alongside its foldable smartphones. The August 10 event saw the arrival of the Galaxy Buds2 Pro, the successor of last year’s Galaxy Buds Pro. We spent a bunch of time testing those and here goes our review. The first thing you'll notice is that Samsung managed to lower the weight and removed the glossy finish, making the Buds2 Pro both more comfortable and more attractive. The case for the earbuds is square and unlike previous versions, the color on the outside matches the one on the inside. There are three color options...



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