New machinery brought in to help efforts at Key Bridge collapse site
New machinery brought in to help efforts at Key Bridge collapse site
New machinery brought in to help efforts at Key Bridge collapse site
What is mechanical breakdown insurance, and is it worth it?
Give Angel Reese five years and she just might rule the w
It’s early yet, but the first days of the Morris era have drawn positive reviews.
Nearly 50,000 Amazon shoppers are fans of this formula, saying it helps moisturize and firm the tummy, legs and more.
The 10th-gen iPad has dropped to its lowest price ever at $329. It's our pick for the best budget iPad and it should handle basic tasks with ease.
The U.K.'s data protection watchdog has closed an almost year-long investigation of Snap's AI chatbot, My AI -- saying it's satisfied the social media firm has addressed concerns about risks to children's privacy. At the same time, the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) issued a general warning to industry to be proactive about assessing risks to people's rights before bringing generative AI tools to market. GenAI refers to a flavor of AI that often foregrounds content creation.
Harper came through in the clutch in a different kind of way this week.
Young geothermal energy wells can be like budding prodigies, each brimming with potential to outshine their peers. “The history of geothermal has been this notion of degradation,” said Josh Prueher, CEO of XGS Energy, a geothermal startup. Many geothermal power plants inject water underground, where it flows through cracks in the rock to absorb the heat generated deep in the Earth.
While many climate investors focus their efforts on breakthrough, deep-tech solutions, Patrick Sheehan at ETF Partners has other ideas. “I’ve actually got nothing against carbon capture and storage, apart from the fact it’s probably going to be commercialized too late,” he told TechCrunch. Instead, Sheehan and his colleagues are diving into more software-centric companies that promise to still move the needle.
Dan Wetzel, Ross Dellenger and SI's Pat Forde react to Dabo Swinney's recent remarks about not using the transfer portal, why noon kickoffs are the worst, why small conferences are pushing back on the House settlement, and Dan's issues with a New York Times article on landscaping
The new Surface Laptop 6 is a redesigned PC with thinner bezels, a haptic trackpad, better port selection and plenty of AI.
Get out and enjoy the weather this Memorial Day with a cookout and one of these great grill deals.
Attendees at JPMorgan's annual investor day Monday will be listening for answers to some key questions. A top concern is how much longer Jamie Dimon plans to run the largest US bank.
A crucial earnings report from AI leader Nvidia greets a stock market that hit new records last week.
Compare the best savings interest rates available today vs. the national average.
One way to do that is by running an internal hackathon around a theme and having employees attack a problem together. Brandon Kessler, CEO and co-founder at DevPost, a company that helps customers organize and manage internal and external hackathons, says that he’s seen how hackathons help companies encourage their employees to solve big problems. “Without question, innovation and collaboration are the two key value props when it comes to running internal hackathons, and almost everyone wants both,” Kessler told TechCrunch.
One team will go on to the Eastern Conference finals. The other will go home.
This Times Square ad for lactation cookies was taken down. Here's what to know.
When the founders of Sagetap, Sahil Khanna and Kevin Hughes, started working at early-stage enterprise software startups, they were surprised to find that the companies they worked at were trying to sell their innovative tech through old-school methods like repeated cold emails and calls. Khanna, a former product marketer, and Hughes, a former sales manager, knew these methods weren't effective to either sell software or help buyers get the solution they needed. "Company executives are frustrated, their email is destroyed," Khanna, Sagetap's CEO, told TechCrunch.
This week in AI, OpenAI once again dominated the news cycle (despite Google's best efforts) with not only a product launch, but also with some palace intrigue. The company unveiled GPT-4o, its most capable generative model yet, and just days later effectively disbanded a team working on the problem of developing controls to prevent "superintelligent" AI systems from going rogue. Reporting -- including ours -- suggests that OpenAI deprioritized the team's safety research in favor of launching new products like the aforementioned GPT-4o, ultimately leading to the resignation of the team's two co-leads, Jan Leike and OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever.