About Me

header ads

Trends of the week

Trends of the week

Here are a few big news items from big companies, with green links to all the sweet, sweet added context.
  • Apple tries another fix for its failing keyboard design
    Apple’s butterfly keyboards have been one of the biggest product embarrassments for the company since the Apple Maps launch, but after already having made design changes that weren’t completely effective, Apple is giving it another go. They’ve made the bold call of not actually saying what it fixed, but the folks at iFixit tore down the new machines and the changes look minimal.
  • Oculus bets the VR farmFacebook’s VR promises haven’t quite delivered over the past few years, but this week the company started shipping the Oculus Rift S and, more importantly, the Oculus Quest, which is the best product it has made by far. Whether its quality is enough to bring people into headsets for $399 a pop is a very good question though.
  • Kumbaya OUYA
    Here’s a blast from the past; the OUYA, a $99 open Android gaming system that was one of Kickstarter’s biggest successes ever, is officially dying. The shell of the seven-year-old operation had already been acquired by Razer, but now the OUYA Store itself is sunsetting. Read more about its impending death here.

GAFA Gaffes

How did the top tech companies screw up this week? This clearly needs its own section, in order of awfulness:
  1. Google commits a cardinal data storage sin:
    [Google says some G Suite user passwords were stored in plaintext since 2005]
  2. EU data regulator takes aim at Google’s adtech:
    [Google’s lead EU regulator opens formal privacy probe of its adtech]
  3. EU gets angry at Facebook too:
    [Facebook found hosting masses of far-right EU disinformation networks]
  4. EU study showcases Facebook still has a lot of work to do in protecting elections:
    [Facebook still a great place to amplify pre-election junk news EU study finds]
  5. Google isn’t keeping a close enough eye on its ad empire:
    [Google updates ad policies following report on misleading anti-abortion ads]

Extra Crunch

Our premium subscription service had another week of interesting deep dives. I added another great interview to my series “The Exit,” where I profiled Jeremy Uzan, a Parisian VC who was an early investor in Drivy, on which Getaround just dropped $300 million. We talked a bit about the future of car ownership and a lot about SoftBank’s king-making abilities.

The Exit: Getaround’s $300M roadtrip

“So right now, there are two kinds of VCs. You have the smart ones, but that’s not me. I’m more the gut-feeling guy. I have to feel that the team is interesting, smart, ambitious, like they’re the smartest people in the room and they’re working on something interesting.

Enregistrer un commentaire

0 Commentaires