Monday, August 31, 2020

Everybody is racing to an IPO — even Laird Hamilton’s young “superfood” company

This one is unusual: Laird Superfood, a five-year-old, 100-person, Sisters, Ore.-based startup that was cofounded by famed surfer Laird Hamilton and which makes plant-based packaged beverage products, filed today to raise up to $40 million in an IPO.

We’d reported on this company early last year in large part because it had attracted backing from WeWork, the co-working company that famously made a number of bets that were very afield from its business (including a maker of wave pools) before suffering a major meltdown last fall.

In fact, according to Crunchbase, WeWork Labs provided Laird Superfood with a whopping $32 million — the bulk of the $51 million it has raised altogether, per Crunchbase. (WeWork founder Adam Neumann has said that he surfed with Hamilton in Hawaii.)

At that time, WeWork’s investment was the strangest thing about the business, a largely direct-to-consumer business that makes “superfood” coffee creamers, beverage supplements like “performance mushrooms,” and Peruvian coffee beans, among an assortment of other things like teas and hot chocolate.

This IPO may be even more curious. Founded by Hamilton and another surfer, Paul Hodge, the company is very young to be going public by today’s standards (biotech startups notwithstanding). The company booked $19 million in sales for the 12 months ended June 30, but it lost $9 million over that same period and at the rate it is spending money, including on sales and marketing, it will see a net loss of $10 million this year.

Management says it has $13.1 million in cash on hand and investments. It would have more if it hadn’t spent $7.5 million buying back Series A-1 preferred shares in November 2019 that were purchased for twice that price. (The investor that sold its shares was also relieved of its commitment to fund another $10 million. It’s easy to imagine this was WeWork but we don’t know this.) Because of that outlay, the company actually probably did pretty well last year; it just can’t state it that way.

Still, we’re a little intrigued by this one. The company’s only outside shareholder that owns more than 5% of the company is Danone Manifesto Ventures, the corporate venture arm of the global food and beverage company. It owns 13.4% of the company. Why wouldn’t Danone, which looks to have invested $10 million in the business in April, just buy out Laird Superfood outright?

It could be that there’s much more than meets the eye here (or is reflected in its S-1). We’re certainly not opposed to companies trying to go public much sooner than has been in the case in recent years. We’re just wondering if this food company is completely baked.

Either way, the decision to go public is certainly becoming an increasingly common one, given how hot the market has been despite the pandemic. According to Renaissance Capital, 27 companies joined the IPO pipeline last week alone.

Hamilton owns 13.2% of the startup. Hodge meanwhile owns 6.4%. Canaccord Genuity and Craig-Hallum Capital Group are the joint bookrunners on the deal. No pricing terms were included in the filing.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/3gQ1bxo

Walmart+ launches Sept 15, offering same-day delivery, gas discounts and cashierless checkout for $98/yr

Walmart today officially unveiled its new membership service and Amazon Prime rival, which it’s calling “Walmart+.” The $98 per year service will combine free, unlimited same-day delivery on groceries and thousands of other items, with additional benefits, like fuel discounts and access to a new Scan & Go service, similar to Walmart-owned Sam’s Club, that will allow members to check out at Walmart stores without having to wait in line.

The service will be available starting on September 15, 2020 nationwide, reaching over 4,700 Walmart stores, including 2,700 stores that offer delivery. Members can choose to pay the $98 per year after a 15-day free-trial period, or they can pay $12.95 on a month-to-month basis.

At launch, the new program promises more than 160,000 items for same-day delivery with no per-delivery fee on orders totaling $35 or more. This is the same value proposition that Walmart’s existing “Delivery Unlimited” program offers today. With the launch of Walmart+, “Delivery Unlimited” members will be moved to the rebranded and expanded service.

In addition to delivery savings, the new Walmart+ membership will include fuel discounts of up to 5 cents per gallon on any fuel type at nearly 2,000 Walmart, Murphy USA and Murphy Express stations nationwide. Walmart+ members will enable the discounts by using the Walmart mobile app, either by scanning a QR code or entering a PIN at the pump. Further down the road, the program will expand to include Sam’s Club fuel stations as well.

Image Credits: Walmart

The Scan & Go membership perk, meanwhile, lets Walmart+ members pay without having to wait in checkout lines — a nice perk to have amid a pandemic, where time in store means time exposed to potential carriers of the novel coronavirus. Using the Walmart app, customers scan scan items as they shop, then pay for them using Walmart Pay for a touch-free checkout experience.

Walmart two years ago had tested cashierless Scan & Go technology in its stores, but killed the program due to shopper theft. Arguably, fewer people will use Scan & Go because it’s a paid service, which could help store staff better combat the earlier problems.

Image Credits: Walmart

As with “Delivery Unlimited,” the Walmart+ orders are picked by in-store staff then handed off to partners like Postmates, DoorDash, Roadie and Point Pickup for delivery. Not owning the end-to-end experience can cause issues for consumers, however — especially because a poor delivery experience can damage Walmart’s reputation, or because customer service issues can’t be always dealt with directly when a middleman is involved. Walmart has also seen partners come and go, as delivery services ended their relationship with Walmart over the costs involved.

Walmart claims its new program is not a Prime rival. But it could encourage some number of Prime members to make a switch.

“We’re not launching Walmart+ with the intent to compete with anything else. We’re launching it with the needs of customers in mind,” explained Walmart Chief Customer Officer Janey Whiteside.

“Of course, I hope that brings in more customers and makes them more loyal, but when you’re as big as Walmart is — and serving as many people as we are — this is about really doubling down with the customers that we have and getting more share of wallet and more share of mind,” Whiteside added.

Prime is a much more expansive program. For comparison, Prime offers tens of millions of products for two-day delivery, over 10 million for one-day delivery and over 3 million for same-day delivery on orders of $35 or more. Walmart+ is focused more specifically on same-day delivery, as Walmart.com already offers free one-day or two-day shipping on orders of $35 or more without requiring a membership fee.

Prime today also offers a huge array of other perks — like access to free music, video, audiobooks, Kindle books and more. Walmart+ does not.

Still, for many customers, the value in Prime is rooted in its promise of speedy delivery. But at the same time, Amazon has tested the limits of its customer loyalty by steadily raising Prime’s subscription price over the years to now $119 when paid annually, or $12.99 per month. Walmart+ undercuts Prime at $98 per year or $12.95 per month while largely catering to the online grocery shopper — a target market that has rapidly grown during the pandemic. Walmart recently reported the pandemic helped drive its own e-commerce sales, fueled  by online grocery, up 97% in the past quarter.

Image Credits: Walmart

Meanwhile, Amazon’s grocery strategy since its 2017 purchase of Whole Foods has yet to be streamlined. Amazon today continues to offer two different online grocery services, Amazon Fresh and Whole Foods, with a varying array of pickup and delivery options, potentially leading to consumer confusion.

That said, the pandemic has led to massive sales increases for Amazon and Walmart, along with other essential retailers like Target, with all involved reporting stellar earnings in recent quarters.

Walmart’s plans for a new subscription program had previously been reported and a placeholder website has also been live for some time. In August, Walmart CEO Doug McMillon told investors on the company’s earnings call that it was readying the launch a membership program that would be centered around delivery. He noted also at the time how Walmart’s existing “Delivery Unlimited” subscription, launched last year, would serve a “great base of an offer” for the broader program, but didn’t offer a launch time frame.

Earlier reports said the service would include other perks, like access to more grocery time slots, promotional deals and eventually a Walmart+ credit card. The retailer declined to speak to its plans, only saying that Walmart+ benefits would expand over time.

“As is the case with any great membership offering, these benefits are not intended to be static. We will continue to leverage our assets and scale to bring solutions at unprecedented value, all while holding true to the everyday low prices that customers know they can always expect from Walmart,” Whiteside said. “In the future, we will be leveraging our wide-ranging strengths to add additional benefits for members in a range of both services and offerings,” she added.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/32FZ4r3

Liran Haimovitch on

submitted by /u/stronghup
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2QGRAyn

Over 70 Sorting Algorithms in Under an Hour - Color Circle with Pointer -

submitted by /u/DanniSmanni
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/34Oocys

Over 70 Sorting Algorithms in Under an Hour - Perlin Noise Inputs -

submitted by /u/DanniSmanni
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/32JPzqQ

Another hour!

It's September 01, 2020 at 10:15AM

Small effort to for a tutorial on "spring boot based java web application in AWS Cloud". Jenkins based auto deployment & manual process | CI & CD

submitted by /u/kousik19
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2YS1xxq

Why automation attributes are a non-negotiable part of web development

submitted by /u/warmachine823
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3jywn6g

Programming With Python - Best IDEs for Programming

submitted by /u/codeavail_expert
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2YRmHvA

Another hour!

It's September 01, 2020 at 09:15AM

Autograd: The Missing Machine Learning Library

Wait, people use libraries other than TensorFlow and PyTorch?

Ask a group of deep learning practitioners for their programming language of choice and you’ll undoubtedly hear a lot about Python. Ask about their go-to machine learning library, on the other hand, and you’re likely to get a picture of a two library system with a mix of TensorFlow and PyTorch. While there are plenty of people that may be familiar with both, in general commercial applications in machine learning (ML) tend to be dominated by the use of TensorFlow, while research projects in artificial intelligence/ML mostly use PyTorch. Although there’s significant convergence between the two libraries with the introduction of eager execution by default in TensorFlow 2.0 released last year, and the availability of building static executable models using Torchscript, most seem to stick to one or the other for the most part.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/3beXtfy

Looking for the Best Lightweight Data Analysis Script Tools

Almost all programming languages can manipulate data. Some are too general to lack functions for performing structured computations, such as C++ and JAVA, which produce lengthy code to deal with daily data analysis scenarios and are more suitable for taking care of major special projects. Some are technically-targeted and too highly-professional for daily analysis work, such as mathematical programming languages MATLAB and R, though they provide functions for structured data processing. My subjects in this article are the lightweight programming languages that are suitable for doing desktop analytic jobs. They are lightweight databases represented by MySQL, Excel VBA, Python pandas and esProc.

Now I’ll scrutinize the pros and cons of each to look at their capabilities.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/3jpcT3Q

How Milvus Realizes the Delete Function

This article deals with how Milvus implements the delete function. As a much-anticipated feature for many users, the delete function was introduced to Milvus v0.7.0. We did not call remove_ids in FAISS directly, instead, we came up with a brand new design to make deletion more efficient and support more index types.

In FAISS, deleting an ID and its corresponding vector requires going through the whole dataset to determine which vectors to remove (facebookresearch/faiss). Thus, frequently calling remove_ids greatly worsens system performance and makes deleting and searching at the same time impossible. Furthermore, to delete the data that is flushed to the disk, you need to load it to the memory before flushing it back to the disk. This is prohibitively pricy in terms of system consumption and is obviously not viable for a production environment. Besides, FAISS only supports deletion for FLAT, IVF_FLAT, and IDMAP. Our goal for Milvus is to support deletion for not only all CPU and GPU indexes in FAISS, but also other ANNS libraries going forward. Therefore, we must design a new delete function for Milvus.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/31JWqky

The Story of Curly Braces in Coding

submitted by /u/ElyeProj
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3lBFmp6

Unify-jdocs — A new way of working with JSON documents. No need for model classes and no need for JSON schema!

submitted by /u/deepakarora3
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3bdtAMJ

Another hour!

It's September 01, 2020 at 08:15AM

I made my own programming langauge in C++, its called Pable!

submitted by /u/main-menu
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2YQe58D

FPS game where the maps are recursive

submitted by /u/NeutralPheede
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3beTW11

Another hour!

It's September 01, 2020 at 07:15AM

Gillmor Gang: Platforming

 

Much was made during the Republican Convention of the lack of a party platform. The media characterized this as a capitulation to the Cult of Trump phenomenon, but the questioned begged was: so what? If you’re running as a candidate to disrupt the status quo…. But beneath the media framing, an important question emerges. What exactly is the platform we need to emerge from the toxic situation we find ourselves in?

For months, if not years, the technology industry has been working on a new platform to succeed the previous one. Mobile would seem to be that fundamental shift from the desktop world of Windows and PCs. The twin dominance of powerful phones by Google and Apple has created a new language of notifications and streaming video perfectly timed for the devastating pandemic. Our devices are now the front lines for managing the struggle to stay alive for our loved ones, the economy, and our future.

Zoom is of course the poster child for all that it enables, and certainly what it doesn’t. The notion of work from home is more likely a question of what is home and what’s the difference with work? The routines of life are congealing around the interactions with phone, watch, iPad, laptop, and TV. When I wake up, the first dive is for the notification stream built up overnight from overseas and then the East Coast. The rhythm varies from day to day: intense on Monday as the weekend cobwebs dissipate, more issue oriented through the middle of the week, and finally a thank-god-it’s Friday feel. Email, text messages, media updates, and work calendar reminders.

And then there’s the outline of the new platform — live streaming notifications from what some call citizen media, or the influencer network, or the loyal opposition. That last one refers to the decline in trust of the mainstream media. Maybe it’s just me, but the cable model of host-driven cyclical repetition of the headlines, talking heads, and medical ads adds up to a trip first to the mute button and eventually the off switch. Which plugs me right back into the notification stream and a new contract with us based on whether we click on the link or even allow the notification in the first place.

And these new voices are networks of one or a few, broadcasting on a global reach pastiche of cloud services that begin with the ubiquity of Zoom and its click and you’re there ease of on boarding. Then there are the key networks of record as it were: Facebook Live, Twitter/Periscope, YouTube, and maybe LinkedIn if you’re Brent Leary and got an early invite. There’s a whole bunch of streaming accelerators like Restream and StreamYard and Just Streams (I made that up) to use software and a dash of hardware to do what it took many thousands of dollars and cables just a few years ago. Right now it’s early days, but soon you’ll be seeing something that looks like the media it’s replacing as the OG buys in.

Don’t believe me? Just look at how streaming has disrupted the television industry. Or the music business. Or the reemergence of podcasting and newsletters. Or how messaging is growing rapidly as a preferred digital commerce and marketing channel. The pandemic has certainly had a devastating effect with the loss of theaters, events, and travel that drive so much of our economy and the emotional underpinning of our lives. But as we learn to respect the power of the virus to force this digital wave of transformation, we fuel the winners that emerge from a new hybrid blend of evolution and adaptation.

Technology has often been seen as impersonal and cold to the touch. But now we should be making friends with robots for touchless shopping, At the beginning of this Gillmor Gang session, Frank Radice seemed stunned by the administration’s takeover of the symbols of our Washington monuments for political purposes. By the end, he seemed more hopeful of a different result. We have more ways now of making our voices heard, broadcasting our own names in fireworks above and beyond the fake news and suppression. Our platform: suppress the virus, not the vote.

__________________

The Gillmor Gang — Frank Radice, Michael Markman, Keith Teare, Denis Pombriant, Brent Leary, and Steve Gillmor. Recorded live Friday, August 28, 2020.

Produced and directed by Tina Chase Gillmor @tinagillmor

@fradice, @mickeleh, @denispombriant, @kteare, @brentleary, @stevegillmor, @gillmorgang

For more, subscribe to the Gillmor Gang Newsletter and join the notification feed here on Telegram.

The Gillmor Gang on Facebook
…and here’s our sister show G3 on Facebook



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/31KjmjN

Hacking a basic Windows Box – TUTORIAL [twitch.tv/geolit_]

submitted by /u/geolit_
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3gIRW1R

TablaM: A experimental relational programming language (alpha)

submitted by /u/mamcx
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3jxwWgm

Another hour!

It's September 01, 2020 at 06:15AM

Fashion brand SockSoho is using data science in a bid to become the “Uniqlo of India”

SockSoho co-founder Pritika Mehta with some of the company's socks

SockSoho co-founder Pritika Mehta with some of the company’s socks

SockSoho is a direct-to-consumer brand that aspires to become the “Uniqlo of India.” The company launched sales ten months ago, starting with men’s socks, and recently completed Y Combinator’s Summer 2020 program. Founded by Pritika Mehta, a data scientist who has worked at companies including TripAdvisor, and growth marketer Simarpreet Singh, SockSoho now has more than 30,000 customers, and plans to launch into new menswear verticals soon.

Before launching SockSoho, Mehta and Singh worked together on MindBatteries, a technology and content IP provider whose corporate clients have included The Times of India, The Economic Times, Mercedes, Infosys, the World Economic Forum and Uber.

The two are relying on several factors for SockSoho’s growth: India’s position as one of the largest and fastest-growing e-commerce companies in the world and the company’s in-house technology, which will include proprietary chatbots and AI-based recommendation engines as it scales.

SockSoho launched with a multi-platform distribution strategy, selling on its on site as well as ecommerce platforms. But its main driver is WhatsApp, the most popular messaging app in India with over 400 million users. About 70% of the SockSoho’s sales happen through WhatsApp, and it also uses the messenger for marketing and A/B product testing.

Eric Migicovsky, the Y Combinator partner who invested in SockSoho, told TechCrunch in an email that SockSoho “looks like a fashion brand on the surface but at the backend they operate like a tech company. They’re A/B testing every aspect of the product and ecommerce path, not something every fashion brand does.”

“I think they’re winning strategy here is WhatsApp,” he added. “They have figured out how to acquire and service customers exclusively through the platform.”

One of SockSoho's gift boxes

One of SockSoho’s gift boxes

Before starting SockSoho, Mehta earned a Master’s in computer science from the University of Buffalo, focusing on artificial intelligence. Then she spent several years in the United States, working at tech companies including TripAdvisor. But she continued keeping an eye on her home country.

“When I saw the growth happening in the Indian market, it looked phenomenal because the population is huge and data was becoming really cheap. There was a huge increase in people shopping online,” she told TechCrunch. “That is when I thought, what the hell am I doing in the U.S. when all the action is happening in India?”

Most online fashion brands in India focus on women, so Metha and Singh decided to go into menswear. They say there are about 200 million men living in cities in India, representing a potential $8 billion market. Before doing consumer research, the two wrote down a list of 80 items they could launch with. Socks won because they are easy to fit and ship, and have high margins and low rates of return.

Before launching new socks, SockSoho does its version of A/B testing through WhatsApp by sending design ideas to customers and gauging their interest in pre-orders before placing manufacturing orders.

Data analytics is key to reducing the cost of marketing and customer acquisition, a challenge for many direct-to-consumer companies.

“We are basically gathering data points to understand customer behavior and spending patterns, and those insights help us refine every single thing that we are building, from our designs to marketing and inventory planning, and even expanding into future verticals,” said Mehta.

Analyzing data has already revealed a couple surprises. For example, SockSoho expected almost all of its customers to be men, but about 30% of total purchases are made by women buying gifts. SockSoho’s founders also assumed that most of its buyers would live in major cities like Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore, but its data revealed that smaller cities were major growth drivers. “All these insights came purely from data,” said Singh.

Over the last six months, 15% of SockSoho’s customers have made repeat purchases, and sales grew during India’s COVID-19 lockdown, which started in March.

“COVID has accelerated the shift of people to online shopping,” said Singh. “Like my dad, he never shopped online, but during COVID he’s even buying his toothpaste online. It’s a tectonic shift.”

But many traditional retail brands haven’t nailed the online shopping experience yet, Mehta added.

“With ecommerce, it’s not just about selling the product,” she said.

To keep customers engaged, SockSoho relies on WhatsApp to share new products and customer photos. But that level of personal engagement will become more challenging as the brand grows.

This is where the proprietary technology SockSoho is developing comes into play. This includes AI-based chatbots that can handle simple queries, like exchanges. For example, a customer who receives the wrong item will be able to upload a photo and get a replacement shipped to them. More complicated issues will be be flagged for human customer representatives.

“We are building this proprietary software inside the company, which can actually replicate the human experience. We are collecting all the data, all the interactions that are happening currently with customers to understand the language, the data and the kind of experience they like,” said Mehta.

SockSoho is also developing its own AI-based recommendation engine, that will show customers products they are likely to be interested in based on their browsing and shopping habits. The startup isn’t revealing yet what verticals it will expand into next, but it is already doing A/B testing for its next product lines.

“Once we have built our tech stack, our whole supply chain and nailed down the socks, it will be very easy for us to go into any other vertical and eventually become the Uniqlo of India,” said Singh.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/3lxz7m6

Tips for stable and portable software

submitted by /u/begriffs
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3bc9K4D

BASH Scripting Tutorial - Part 2

submitted by /u/whid0t
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3gGZORB

Sunday, August 30, 2020

Another hour!

It's August 31, 2020 at 12:15PM

How does pay for view work for sites such as Youtube?

submitted by /u/brospotme
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3bbulpr

A Comprehensive Guide on The Uses of MATLAB

submitted by /u/Matlabguru
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3gJvXYA

Don't get stuck

submitted by /u/brendt_gd
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3bcW8Gb

Atom Editor access from Windows Context Menu - little configurator I made since the old one I found online no longer works. For anyone who finds it useful!

submitted by /u/emmyarty
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3hWnJhz

Another hour!

It's August 31, 2020 at 11:15AM

Deployed To Production Is Not Enough

submitted by /u/henrik_w
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/32Db5xf

I just started learning Tkinter in Python, and under 30 min of learning I was able to make a simple calculator......lol

submitted by /u/hrshah14
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/34O64EM

Git CLI - bring Github to the command line

submitted by /u/srebalaji
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3juDXyu

EVERYDAY APPLICATIONS OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE [UPDATED 2020]

submitted by /u/jacobcole008
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/350gHon

Another hour!

It's August 31, 2020 at 10:15AM

Cloudflare‘s Analysis of today’s outages.

submitted by /u/chris-c-thomas
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3lC5dxc

Another hour!

It's August 31, 2020 at 09:15AM

Python for Beginners: Introduction to python programming

submitted by /u/getanswer
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/32DVMEK

Concurrency, Muti-threading, Multi-processing, Asynchronous Programming and Event Loop

submitted by /u/ycshao
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3jqa2aT

Another hour!

It's August 31, 2020 at 08:15AM

Another hour!

It's August 31, 2020 at 07:15AM

The Internet explained from first principles

submitted by /u/vzhou842
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/31HwNB2

Another hour!

It's August 31, 2020 at 06:15AM

Analyzing sources of compiler latency in Julia: method invalidations

submitted by /u/ChrisRackauckas
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2G4g826

Azure Fundamentals — a start to your Azure/Cloud journey or for exam preparation

submitted by /u/hybridpro
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3lE5ZK7

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 03:15PM

The week’s biggest IPO news had nothing to do with Monday’s S-1 deluge

Welcome back to The TechCrunch Exchange, a weekly startups-and-markets newsletter. It’s broadly based on the daily column that appears on Extra Crunch, but free, and made for your weekend reading. (You can sign up for the newsletter here!)

Ready? Let’s talk money, startups and spicy IPO rumors.

The week’s biggest IPO news had nothing to do with Monday’s S-1 deluge

During Monday’s IPO wave I was surprised to see Asana join the mix. 

After news had broken in June that the company had raised hundreds of millions in convertible debt, I hadn’t guessed that the productivity unicorn wouldn’t give us an S-1 in the very next quarter. I was contentedly wrong. But the reason why Asana’s IPO is notable isn’t really much to do with the company itself, though do take the time to dig into its results and history

What matters about Asana’s debut is that it appears set to test out a model that, until very recently, could have become the new, preferred way of going public amongst tech companies. 

Here’s what I mean: Instead of filing to go public, and raising money in a traditional IPO, or simply listing directly, Asana executed two, large, convertible debt offerings pre-debut, thus allowing it to direct list with lots of cash without having raised endless equity capital while private.

The method looked like a super-cool way to get around the IPO pricing issue that we’ve seen, and also provide a ramp to direct listing for companies that didn’t get showered with billions while private. (That Asana co-founder Dustin Moskovitz’s trust led the debt deal is simply icing on this particular Pop-Tart).

This brief column was going to be all about how we may see unicorns follow the Asana route in time, provided that its debt-powered direct listing goes well. But then the NYSE got permission from the SEC to allow companies to raise capital when they direct-list.

In short, some companies that direct-list in the future will be able to sell a bloc of shares at a market-set value that would have previously set their “open” price. So instead of flogging the stock and setting a price and selling shares to rich folks and then finding out what public investors would really pay, all that IPO faff is gone and bold companies can simply offer shares at whatever price the market will bear. 

All that is great and cool, but as companies will be able to direct-list and raise capital, the NYSE’s nice news means that Asana is blazing a neat trail, but perhaps not one that will be as popular as we had expected.

The NASDAQ is working to get in on the action. As Danny said yesterday on the show, this new NYSE method is going to crush traditional IPOs, provided that we’re understanding it during this, its nascent period.

Market Notes

Look, this week was bananas, and my brain is scrambled toast. You, like myself, are probably a bit confused about how it is only finally Saturday and not the middle of next week. But worry not, I have a quick roundup of the big stuff from our world. And, notes from calls with the COO of Okta and the CEO of Splunk, from after their respective earnings report: 

Over to our chats, starting with Okta COO and co-founder Frederic Kerrest:

  • Okta had a good quarter. But instead of noodling on just the numbers, we wanted to chat with its team about the accelerating digital transformation and what they are seeing in the market. 
  • On the SMB side, Kerrest reported little to no change. This is a bit more bullish than we anticipated, given that it seemed likely that SMB customers would have taken the largest hit from COVID.
  • Kerrest also told us some interesting stuff about how the wave of COVID-related spend has changed: “We actually have seen the COVID ‘go home and remote work very quickly’ [thing], we’ve actually seen that rush subside a little bit, because you know now we’re five months into [the pandemic], so they had to figure it out.”
  • This is a fascinating comment for the startup world
  • Okta is big and public and is going to grow fine for a while. Whatever. For smaller companies aka startups that were seeing COVID-related tailwinds, I wonder how common seeing “that rush subside a little bit” is. If it is very common, many startups that had taken off like a rocket could be seeing their growth come back to Earth.
  • And if they raised a bunch of money off the back of that growth at a killer valuation, they may have just ordered shoes that they’ll struggle to grow into.

And then there was new McLaren F-1 sponsor Splunk, data folks who are in the midst of a transition to SaaS that is seeing the firm double-down on building ARR and letting go of legacy incomes:

  • I spoke with CEO Doug Merritt, kicking off with a question about his use of the word “tectonic” regarding the shift to data-driven decisions from Splunk’s earnings report. (“As organizations continue to adapt to tectonic societal shifts brought on by COVID-19, one thing is constant: the power of data to radically transform business.”)
  • I wanted to know how far down the American corporate stack that idea went; are mid-size businesses getting more data-savvy? What about SMBs? Merritt was pretty bullish: “We’re getting to tectonic,” he said during our call, adding that before “it really was the Facebooks, the Googles, the Apples, the DoorDashes, [and] the LinkedIns that were using [Splunk].” But now, he said, even small restaurant chains are using data to better track their performance. 
  • Relating this back to the startup world, I’ve been curious if lots of stuff that you and I think is cool, like low-code business app development, will actually find as wide a footing in the market as some expect. Why? Because most small and medium-sized businesses are not tech companies at all. But if Merritt is right, then the CEO of Appian might be right as well about how many business apps the average company is going to have in a few years’ time.

And finally for Market Notes, my work BFF and IRL friend Ron Miller wrote about Box’s earnings this week, and how the changing world is bolstering the company. It’s worth a read. (Most public software companies are doing well, mind.)

Various and Sundry

We’re already over length, so I’ll have to keep our bits-and-bobs section brief. Thus, only the brightest of baubles for you, my friend:

And with that, we are out of room. Hugs, fist bumps and good vibes, 

Alex



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2G3bVM8

Azure Fundamentals — a start to your Azure/Cloud journey or for exam preparation

submitted by /u/hybridpro
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3lE5ZK7

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 02:15PM

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 01:15PM

Tracking Covid-19 Infection Risk With Local Forecast and a weather API.

submitted by /u/GolddawnGawp
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3gIaak2

BASH Scripting Tutorial - Part 1

submitted by /u/whid0t
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3lwbBpt

Saturday, August 29, 2020

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 12:15PM

Tiny Procedural Sprite Sheet Generator

submitted by /u/Slackluster
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/32CoYfb

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 11:15AM

Effective Python - Production Readiness

submitted by /u/crypto_junkie2040
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2EH9Q8e

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 10:15AM

I solve 3 questions from the website codewars.com while talking through my process.

submitted by /u/w0r10ck
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2EHfwPn

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 09:15AM

Created a dynamic AWS associate practice test generator, it lets you save your answers, tracks your progress and gives you performance insights, try it out!

submitted by /u/G000z
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2Z3yo2z

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 08:15AM

Trigonofighter: A game that teaches people trigonometry

submitted by /u/dataf3l
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/32E60ER

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 07:15AM

How Edge Detection In Images Work

submitted by /u/aryamansharda
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3hBszAt

Another hour!

It's August 30, 2020 at 06:15AM

Solving the Programming Challenge: Array Manipulation

submitted by /u/bajcmartinez
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2YN28Aj

How to configure TailwindCSS with Blazor

submitted by /u/barahonajm
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/31EEW9c

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 03:15PM

Predict "Wine Quality" using "Machine Learning" |Real world problem solve| python| Data Science

submitted by /u/8329417966
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2G97pff

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 02:15PM

Image Decomposition AI - Edit Highlights and Textures Easily

submitted by /u/cloud_weather
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/31DZ0sD

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 01:15PM

Two easy bash scripts

submitted by /u/whid0t
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/34HQwT9

Friday, August 28, 2020

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 12:15PM

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 11:20AM

R vs Stata: Which One is Best For Data Science?

submitted by /u/Matlabguru
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2EBwiQf

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 10:15AM

$883 Worth of Programming & Productivity Books by Mercury for $15 ( - 97% OFF)

submitted by /u/Pollock8954
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/31F9vM9

Quick Intro to path module - nodejs

submitted by /u/Frosty-Relative
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/34MOotd

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 09:15AM

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 08:15AM

Matplot++: A C++ Graphics Library for Data Visualization

submitted by /u/FreitasAlan
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/31AIJEH

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 07:15AM

help with google foobar

submitted by /u/tshrpl
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2QBEbaU

invitation in portuguese, Encontro sabádo as 09:30 para resolver problemas no evento August Lunchtime 2020: , pelo link do meet https://ift.tt/31ATyXf

submitted by /u/name_Do_a
[link] [comments]

from programming https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/iiivbu/invitation_in_portuguese_encontro_sabádo_as_0930/

Another hour!

It's August 29, 2020 at 06:15AM

Introduction to software development

submitted by /u/barahonajm
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3gFCN1i

Software Engineering Tips and Best Practices for Data Science using Python

submitted by /u/ahmedbesbes
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2QB5Qsg

Most Popular Programming Languages from 1965-2019

submitted by /u/ventriloquist12
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2QBxZzI

Neuralink Progress Update, Summer 2020

submitted by /u/ConfidentMushroom
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2YK1uDY

Thursday, August 27, 2020

MOST POPULAR LANGUAGES FOR MACHINE LEARNING IN 2020

submitted by /u/jacobcole008
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2Exh0Mo

Electron 10.0.0 Released

submitted by /u/pareek-narendra
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3bfMOS5

Another hour!

It's August 28, 2020 at 10:15AM

Ionic Framework | Cross Platform App Development

submitted by /u/perrygrande
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2EqpJjD

Learn python,Deom lecture is free,Fill the form below

submitted by /u/deepak12313
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/34Jp07F

Another hour!

It's August 28, 2020 at 09:15AM

Band-Limiting Procedural Textures

submitted by /u/jasonbourne1901
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/2YEIoPk

Another hour!

It's August 28, 2020 at 08:15AM

Model Experiments, Tracking, and Registration Using MLflow on Databricks and StreamSets

Learn how StreamSets, a modern data integration platform for DataOps, can help expedite operations at some of the most crucial stages of machine learning lifecycle and MLOps.

Data Acquisition and Preparation

Machine learning models are only as good as the quality of data and the size of datasets used to train the models. Data has shown that data scientists spend around 80% of their time on preparing and managing data for analysis and 57% of the data scientists regard cleaning and organizing data as the least enjoyable part of their work. This further validates the idea of  MLOps and the need for collaboration between data scientists and data engineers.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/3hzMO1m

How to Extract Data From Tables in Multiple Google Docs and Combine Into One Table in Coda

If your organization creates multiple Google Docs every day and you want a better way to sort, filter, and organize all these Google Docs, this solution may be useful for you. This tutorial walks you through how to extract the important metadata from a table in a Google Doc and sync that data into a table in Coda.

I often see templates for project briefs, meeting notes, or candidate interview as Google Docs at other organizations which are duplicated over and over again. These Google Docs are then stored in Google Drive which can get very unwieldy to manage unless someone is consistently organizing the folders in Google Drive. Another common trait in these Google Docs: a table near the top of the Google Doc summarizing what the doc is about.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/34DPN5c

How Graph Analytics Can Transform Your Business

Introduction

Your business is operating in an ever more connected world where the understanding of complex relationships and interdependencies between different data points is crucial to many decision-making processes. This is the main reason why graph databases have gained a lot of interest in the past few years and have become that fastest-growing database category. They offer powerful data modeling and analysis capabilities your business can use to easily model real-world complex systems and answer challenging questions previously hard to address.

What Is a Graph Database?

You might not be aware of it, but many of the services you use on a daily basis are powered by a graph database. Such examples include Google’s search engine, Linkedin’s connection recommendations, UberEats food recommendations and Gmail’s autocomplete feature. Simply put, a graph database is a data management system specifically engineered and optimized to store and analyze complex networks of connected data where relationships are equally important to individual data points. As a result, they offer a highly efficient, flexible, and overall elegant way to discover connections and patterns within your data that are otherwise very hard to see.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/2Qy152E

How Healthcare Sectors Can Make Use of the CIoMT to Fight Against Covid-19

The unprecedented outbreak of the 2019 novel coronavirus, termed as COVID-19 by the World Health Organization (WHO), has placed numerous governments around the world in a precarious situation.

The scarcity of resources to endure the COVID-19 outbreak combined with the fear of overburdened healthcare systems has forced a majority of these countries into a state of partial or complete lockdown. The number of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases has been increasing at an alarming rate throughout the world, with a report from WHO stating that there are more than 3.23 million confirmed cases as of August 2020. Adding to these woes, numerous false reports, misinformation, and unsolicited fears in regards to coronavirus, are being circulated regularly since the outbreak of COVID19.



from DZone.com Feed https://ift.tt/34GMfzq

Programming: Movies vs Reality

submitted by /u/HunterofSnowmen
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/34GdqtS

Announcing the Rapier physics engine

submitted by /u/joesilver70
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3lxNarZ

Challenge Incredicat! Think of any object and the Incredible Thinking Cat will read your mind!

submitted by /u/twm7
[link] [comments]

from programming https://ift.tt/3losBxS

Another hour!

It's August 28, 2020 at 07:15AM

Presenting TechCrunch Disrupt’s Asia sessions

As you know by now, Disrupt is going completely virtual for its 10th anniversary. TechCrunch’s Asia team (me, Rita Liao and Manish Singh) will miss seeing everyone in Moscone Center, but this will be the most accessible Disrupt ever, and we are excited to bring a full roster of Asia-focused sessions to its agenda for the first time. The sessions, with people from some of Asia’s most influential tech companies, startups and investment firms, will be broadcast during the day in this part of the world, followed by live Q&A sessions. And of course, all Disrupt attendees will get full access to everything TechCrunch’s team has spent months working to bring online: the Disrupt and Extra Crunch stages, virtual networking at CrunchMatch and Digital Startup Alley.

Many of the most important recent startup trends and tech stories have come from Asia, or were driven by Asian companies. The continent is home to several of the world’s most complex and dynamic markets: China, India and Indonesia, to name just some of the biggest ones.

Available at a time that works best for you, catch these sessions Sept 15-18th from 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM HKT. Immediately after each interview, join the speakers for a live Q&A. So come with your questions!

India is Facebook’s biggest market by number of users, and our speakers will include its head of India, Ajit Mohan.

We also have Russell Cohen, regional head of operations at Grab, the ride-hailing company that acquired Uber’s Southeast Asia operations two years ago and is now also one of the region’s largest on-demand delivery platforms.

Byju Raveendran, founder of BYJU’s, India’s most highly-valued edtech startup, will talk about online learning, one of this year’s most important topics.

As another example of how tech innovations in Asia influence other parts of the world, we will speak to Kaisei Hamamoto, co-founder and chief operating officer of SmartNews, which runs versions of its news aggregator app in two very different markets, Japan and the United States.

Our lineup of founders include Sonny Vu, whose last startup, Misfit, was acquired by Apple, and is currently the chief executive officer of continuous carbon-fiber 3D printing company Arevo.

We’ll also talk to Steven Yang of Anker about how he built his company into one of the most popular and well-regarded smartphone charger and power bank brands.

Gillian Tee, founder of Singapore-based caregiving and telehealth startup Homage, will share insights about how tech can serve the world’s most vulnerable people.

On the investment side, we will hear from Edith Yeung, general partner at Race Capital, about emerging technology trends in China and Silicon Valley.

East Ventures, one of the most prolific and influential investment firms in Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s largest market, will be represented by Melisa Irene, the firm’s first female partner.

And Karthik Reddy, co-founder of Blume Ventures, will be on hand to talk about the challenges and opportunities of helping build India’s startup ecosystem.

Each session will be followed by a live Q&A, so attendees will get a chance to ask each speaker questions. Stay tuned for the final schedule. In the meantime, make sure to get your pass to attend these sessions and a whole bunch more! If you move quickly, you can take advantage of savings on your pro pass if you buy before Friday, September 11 at 11:59pm PT.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2D96Gtm

Elon Musk confirms Tesla was target of foiled ransomware attack

Elon Musk called an attempted cyberattack against Tesla “serious,” a comment that confirms the company was the target of a foiled ransomware attempt at its massive factory near Reno, Nevada.

The Justice Department released a complaint Thursday that described a thwarted malware attack against an unnamed company in Sparks, Nevada. Tesla has a factory in Sparks that makes battery cells, packs and electric motors; while Tesla was not named in the complaint several blogs, including Electrek and Teslarati, reported that the company was the target.

The Justice Department alleged that Russian national Egor Igorevich Kriuchkov, 27, attempted to recruit and bribe a Tesla employee to introduce malware in the company’s network.

The malware was designed to install ransomware, a kind of malware that encrypts a victim’s files in exchange for a ransom. Prosecutors said the ransomware used an increasingly popular new tactic that not only encrypt a victim’s files but also exfiltrates the data to the hacker’s servers. The hackers typically threaten to publish the victim’s files if the ransom isn’t paid.

An unnamed employee at the Tesla factory, known as the Gigafactory, met with Kriuchkov, who allegedly offered to pay him $1 million to introduce malware into the computer network. The employee informed Tesla, which then notified the Federal Bureau of Investigations. The FBI used the employee in a sting operation.

Kriuchkov was arrested August 22.



from TechCrunch https://ift.tt/32wp4VI