Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Ford invests $500m in Rivian and intends to build a vehicle on Rivian’s EV platform – TechCrunch

Rivian today announced a major investment from Ford. The 115-year old automaker is investing $500 million into the Michigan-based EV startup. Along with the cash, Ford announced plans to build a vehicle on Rivian’s electric vehicle platform.

“This strategic partnership marks another key milestone in our drive to accelerate the transition to sustainable mobility,” said RJ Scaringe, Rivian founder and CEO, said in a released statement. “Ford has a long-standing commitment to sustainability, with Bill Ford being one of the industry’s earliest advocates, and we are excited to use our technology to get more electric vehicles on the road.”

This investment comes two months after Rivian netted $700 million from a funding round that was lead by Amazon.

Rivian was founded in 2009 by RJ Scaringe but operated in stealth until late 2018 when it unveiled its stunning electric pickup and SUV. Today, the company has more than 750 employees split between four development locations in the U.S. and an office in the U.K. The bulk of its employees are in Michigan to be close to an expansive automotive supply chain.

Rivian chassis

Today’s announcement stopped short about detailing the vehicle Ford intends on building on Rivian’s platform. It’s likely whatever Ford produces will have similar capabilities of the two products Rivian announced last year. Rivian’s five-passenger R1T pickup and seven-passenger R1S SUV both feature over 400 miles of range and the startup previously stated they would be available in late 2020.

Ford already has several electric vehicles in production and in the works. Along with small electric vehicles, Ford is developing an electric version of its best-selling model, the F-150 pickup.

With this investment, Rivian will stay an independent company. Following regulatory approval, Joe Hinrichs, Ford’s president of Automotive, will join Rivian’s board.

 

 

LG reportedly suspending production of phones in home country of Korea

The fortunes of LG Mobile, the embattled and rather overshadowed rival to Samsung Mobile, have been on a downward trajectory for a long time. As part of its effort to reform and optimize that business, LG is now reportedly taking the step of discontinuing smartphone manufacturing in its home country of Korea. The news comes from the local Yonhap News Agency, via Reuters, which suggests that LG will reallocate its current Korean production to a plant in Vietnam.

LG’s home manufacturing is presently focused on its flagship devices, with Reuters reporting that it accounts for somewhere between a tenth and a fifth of LG’s total phone output. There’s a lot of pride invested in putting the “Made in Korea” label on LG’s best mobile products, so this decision will not have been reached lightly. Then again, given the chronic failure of LG Mobile to turn a profit, it’s obvious that LG had to take measures to cut costs. Raising prices, the other path to balancing the books, seems an unlikely strategy for success at the moment, with LG lagging behind Android phone rivals with better cameras, bigger batteries, and smoother performance.

This is far from the end of LG’s mobile division, but it may be the beginning of the end. LG continues to occupy a privileged position as the third option after Apple and Samsung phones in most US carrier stores, and it enjoys a loyal following at home in Korea. Its inability to sustain phone manufacturing at home may well spread to its cheaper plants overseas, and only a series of great new devices is likely to stem the slow demise of LG’s consumer smartphone business.

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Holded, the ‘business operating system’ for SMEs, gets €6M in Series A funding led by Lakestar – TechCrunch

Holded, the Barcelona-based startup that offers a SaaS to help SMEs with a range of business tasks, has raised €6 million in Series A funding. The round is led by Lakestar, with previous backers Nauta Capital and Seedrocket 4Founders Capital following on.

Founded in 2016 by Bernat Ripoll and Javi Fondevila, Holded describes itself as a “Business Operating System”. The idea is to provide a single platform for small to medium-sized business owners to manage every aspect of their business.

The Saas covers financial management such as accounting and invoicing to HR, CRM, and project and inventory management. In addition, the customisable platform offers multiple integrations to connect with a number of popular payment and e-commerce solutions. They include Amazon, Paypal and Shopify.

Alongside this, Holded is able to “automate” a number of core business administration tasks via the cloud-based platform’s own AI. It also uses data garnered through the use of the software to benchmark business performance and provide managers and business owners with actionable insights with regards to how they might increase sales, reduce expenses and save time.

Holded co-founder Bernat Ripoll says the company set out to develop next generation Enterprise-Resource-Planning (ERP) software that addresses the needs of modern companies, which is something that appears to be resonating with SMEs. Since closing its seed round in early 2018, Holded has increased user numbers from 10,000 to 30,000, claiming to now be the leader in Spain.

Meanwhile, Holded says the new capital will be used to accelerate its expansion into international markets. The Spanish startup will also invest further in the development of the software’s core functionality.

“[We] now aim to replicate this [success] in other countries while continuing to consolidate the Spanish market,” says Holded co-founder Javi Fondevila, adding that the startup plans to roll out new product features and “country-specific” integrations.

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Tuesday, April 23, 2019

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The IPO market is heating up again, but it won’t change how fast companies go public – TechCrunch

It’s been an exciting couple of months for startup employees and public market shareholders alike, as a growing number of brands that have talked about going public for some time are finally marching out the door and, on the whole, receiving enthusiastic receptions. Lyft, Zoom, PagerDuty, and Pinterest all priced above their marketed ranges in splashy public offerings. Uber is meanwhile veering toward what’s expected to be the biggest IPO in years by seeking what’s rumored to be a $100 billion valuation.

But industry watchers hoping that companies might start going public sooner as they once did may be in for some disappointment. At least, according to industry players with whom we’ve spoken, a broader shift isn’t likely to happen soon – – if ever — again. In fact, absent a dramatic development, it’s far more likely that startups will continue staying private as long as they possibly can.

The numbers largely tell the story. According to the investment bank Scenic Advisement, private investors doused technology and biotech companies with $130.9 billion last year — far outpacing the $50.3 billion raised via IPOs and follow-on offerings. Meanwhile, says Scenic, the total value of private market investment surged 57.8 percent in 2018, the tenth consecutive year in which private share sales were worth more than those in public markets. That trend continues, too, with venture investment flows far outpacing public-market fundraising so far in 2019.

Consider that Lyft raised $4.91 billion in the private market versus the roughly $2.34 billion it picked up in its recent IPO. Dropbox, which went public last year, raised $756 million in its IPO, versus the $1.7 billion it raised privately. Uber has raised almost $20 billion privately and is expected to raise around $10 billion in its upcoming offering. (There have also been companies that buck this trend. Zoom raised $161 million privately and raised $750 million when it went public last week. DocuSign, which went public last year, also raised more in its IPO — $630 million — than the $550 million investors had funneled into the company when it was still privately held.)

Altogether, IPO proceeds totaled $47 billion last year, compared with $130 billion provided to privately held companies, and that ratio might not change much in 2019 despite the current IPO hoopla. “In the early part of this decade, there was relative parity between how much money was raised in venture and how much was raised through IPOs,” says Shriram Bhashyam, a founder and advisor at the secondary trading platform EquityZen. “But private funding has been outpacing IPO proceeds for a few years, and that gap is continuing to grow.”

Even if not all privately held startups are eventual public market candidates, it “gives you an idea directionally” of how the public and private markets are continuing to shift, he suggests.

The public market exchanges readily acknowledge the change. We talked last week with Jeff Thomas, who oversees Nasdaq’s operations for the Western U.S. and who previously spent several years as a president with Nasdaq Private Market, which the exchange formed in 2013 to offer companies alternative liquidity solutions while remaining private.

Thomas talked at length about companies no longer needing to go public in order to access capital, noting there’s a “ton of capital” flooding into private companies and predicting much more is coming. (Note: the $130 billion invested in startups last year broke the previous record of $105 billion plugged into startups in 2000.)

The appeal of staying private is well-known and well-documented. Aside from the easy money available, founders can avoid the scrutiny of research analysts and regulators, not to mention sometimes short-sighted public market shareholders who aren’t afraid to take action when they feel cheated. Lyft is already being sued by shareholders who are angry the company’s shares are down roughly 25 percent from their opening day peak.  As Bloomberg recently reported, Snap was sued within 10 weeks of going public; Blue Apron was sued within seven weeks of its IPO.

Still, the public markets aren’t going anywhere, also for well-understood reasons. Even as they shrink compared with the public market, companies that can go public will continue to do so because it’s easier for them to acquire other companies once their shares are converted to common shares, because companies will lose employees if they don’t go public (most private companies limit how much equity employees can sell), and because there’s still a certain cache associated with being a publicly traded company. The last is especially important when it comes to charming other companies into partnerships. “Being a publicly traded company and being able to provide visibility into your balance sheet is very helpful in customer development,” says Thomas.

Taking a company public is also one way to tackle income inequality, which has worsened as more private companies investors — already the wealthiest investors in the world — have enjoyed near exclusive access to companies during some of their fastest growing years.

It may not be top of mind for chief executives, but it’s an important point that will hopefully resonate more as these trend lines, and their consequences, grow clearer. “There are now so few people who can participate in the private market on a relative basis,” says Thomas. “America stands for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, including having enough money to pay for college and retirement.” The ongoing shift toward staying private longer is “making it much harder for individuals to pursue that dream,” he adds.

It’s why the Securities and Exchange Commission under current chair Jay Clayton wants to make it easier for individuals like mom-and-pop investors to invest in private companies.

Whether Clayton gets his way remains an open question. If there’s any consolation in the meantime, it may be that mutual fund investors, including T. Rowe Price and Fidelity, have continued pouring more of their own assets into startups, recognizing that if they want alpha, the private market is where they’re going to find it. Private shares are still a small fraction of their assets, but for everyday investors who want access to more of the buzziest startups as they are coming up, it may have to suffice. Still.

AT&T is now telling customers the Galaxy Fold will ship on June 13th

After Samsung delayed the launch of the Galaxy Fold, there are a few hanging questions. What caused the screens the break, and what will Samsung do to change the Fold’s design? But for those who preordered the device and are not put off by all the drama about the screens breaking, the biggest question of all might actually be this: when it will finally ship?

AT&T has been emailing customers one potential answer — June 13th. That’s according to a bunch of screenshots we’ve been seeing on Twitter and Reddit. The screenshots themselves are certainly legit, but that doesn’t mean that the date is. Samsung tells us that it has not announced any updates on the timing. We’ve reached out to AT&T and were told the company did not have any comment.

It’s possible — and to our thinking, likely — that the June 13th date is just a placeholder. Maybe AT&T’s systems required some kind of specific date to keep the preorders alive and the computer wouldn’t accept an entry of “whenever Samsung finishes its diagnostics” in that particular data entry field.

If the June 13th date turns out to have just been a guess, it’s a pretty bad look for AT&T to have just sent a bunch of customers that email without more context. The need for the email could be related to this copy about “federal regulations require us to gain your acceptance of the new shipping date(s),” but that just makes it doubly important that AT&T provide more information about what’s going on. Hard as it may be to believe, some customers might not be fully caught up on what has been going on with the Galaxy Fold and its screen.

It’s all very unclear, but that lack of clarity is not entirely surprising. Delaying the release of a phone so close to its original shipping date is bound to cause some confusion.

Meanwhile, Reuters has reported that Samsung is collecting all the review units it has distributed so far. Likely Samsung wants to forestall any further reports of broken screens. At least one new report of a bulge rising up between the hinge and the flexible screen popped up just today from Michael Fisher. That makes for a total of three review units that have had bulges appear in between the screen and the hinge.

Collecting all the phones that are out there is a smart move on Samsung’s part, but as it finishes retrieving them, it will mean that we are even more beholden to the company for explanations of what happened to these review units. In the meantime, the most cogent guesses we’ve had so far come from iFixit, which pointed out several possible failure points. None of them are definitive, however.

We’ll update this post with more information from AT&T or Samsung if we get it. In the meanwhile, my suggestion to people who preordered the device and are getting these emails is to treat that June 13th ship date like AT&T’s infamous 5G E icon: aspirational, but probably not accurate.

TV Shows Ending in 2019

Every year, we have to say goodbye to some of our favorite shows — sometimes without warning. Thankfully, in this golden age of television, the networks and streaming sites have gotten better about letting fans know when their shows are ending. Still, 2019 is going to be a hard year for anyone who loves Game of Thrones, Broad City, and a bevy of other critical darlings. In fact, quite a few major series are signing off for good in the coming year, but hopefully this list will help you prepare to say goodbye to all of the shows ending in 2019.

Welcome to the German Province of Trüberbrook

Trüberbrook is an atmospheric sci-fi mystery adventure game with handmade scenery. American physicist Hans Tannhauser surprisingly wins a trip to the sleepy village of Trüberbrook. The tranquility advertised in the travel guide is more than welcome, as he struggles with writer’s block and has to continue working on his dissertation on quantum physics. When he arrives in Trüberbrook, his stay is anything but quiet and relaxed, as a mysterious stranger steals his notes!

Investigating the case, Tannhauser’s runs into quirky villagers, travelers and spa guests and is confronted with tricky tasks more than once. Little by little it dawns on him that he might not have won the trip to Trüberbrook by chance after all.

Trüberbrook

Trüberbrook is a classic point-and-click adventure game with a modern approach that focuses strongly on the story and the characters. As a player, you’re invited not only to travel to Trüberbrook to solve the mysteries surrounding this beautiful little village, but also to spend some time with some of the bizarre characters you’ll meet, losing yourself in the extraordinary setting and look.

Handmade Scenery

Trüberbrook

The core of the whole story is the bizarre and superficially gloomy small town of Trüberbrook, somewhere in Germany. This place should definitely get a special and unusual, but also authentic look. Therefore, a rather unusual approach was chosen for a video game: All the locations were lovingly designed in advance and built by hand in the workshop. For several months, set designers worked on the dollhouse-like miniature models.

Trüberbrook

These were then individually staged and filmed. Among other things, we use small lamps and many colorful foils to simulate different hours of the day, different seasons and weather conditions. We then use a process called photogrammetry to digitize the models.

A lot of work, but that’s how the look of Trüberbrook came about – and that’s special, we think. We warmly invite you to come and visit our beloved little Trüberbrook!

Trüberbrook

Trüberbrook is available now on Xbox One via the Microsoft Store. Click here for purchase details.

Postmates has launched in 1,000 new cities since December – TechCrunch

Postmates is expanding like crazy ahead of an initial public offering expected later this year. The food delivery business has launched in 1,000 new cities since December, the company announced today.

San Francisco-based Postmates now operates its on-demand delivery platform, powered by a network of local gig economy workers, in 3,500 cities across all 50 states. Postmates does not yet operate in any international markets aside from Mexico City.

“We want to enable anyone to have anything delivered on demand and this latest expansion allows us to deliver on that promise across all 50 states in the US,” Postmates co-founder and chief executive officer Bastian Lehmann said in a statement.

The company says it now reaches 70 percent of U.S. households and delivers food from some 500,000 restaurants, helping it to compete with food-delivery powerhouses Uber Eats and DoorDash. Additionally, Postmates recently launched Postmates Party, a new feature that lets customers within the same neighborhood pool their orders.

Postmates is poised to follow Uber into the public markets. The company — which has raised more than $670 million in venture capital funding, including a $100 million pre-IPO financing in January that valued the business at $1.85 billion — filed confidentially for a U.S. IPO in February.

The company makes completes 5 million deliveries per month and was reportedly expected to record $400 million in revenue in 2018 on food sales of $1.2 billion. Uber Eats, for its part, was expected to begin reaching 70 percent of the U.S. households by the end of 2018 and reportedly has plans in the works to use drones to deliver food by 2021.

DoorDash, meanwhile, is a rocketship. The food delivery company is active in 3,300 cities and claims to be growing 325 percent year-over-year. The company recently closed a $400 million Series F financing at a $7.1 billion valuation. It’s likely to go public in the next year, too.

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Where Is Bronn in Game of Thrones Season 8?

Warning! This post is full of Game of Thrones spoilers and jumps in logic, so don't read if you haven't watched the latest episode of season eight!

One doesn't necessarily think the word "hero" when describing Ser Bronn of the Blackwater, but a hero he certainly is! He's saved the asses of the Lannister brothers more times than either of them can count, and it looks like he'll have the chance to save them once again.

Let's set the scene for you: we're finally coming upon the great battle of Game of Thrones' final season and all the players are at their stations. Winterfell is getting ready to take on the army of the dead and Cersei is in King's Landing with the Golden Company, waiting to see who will survive the clash up North. The closing scene of episode two shows a few White Walkers on horseback, watching Winterfell from afar, but there's been no sign of the Night King. So what's he up to and what does that have to do with Bronn?

A growing theory among fans is that the great battle of Winterfell is all a distraction for the Northerners constructed by the Night King. While Jon and Daenerys's forces band together to defeat the oncoming threat — totally expecting the Night King to ride up on his ice dragon — the Night King is actually traveling to King's Landing instead. By catching Cersei and her troops unaware, he'll be able to dispatch of them and accomplish two things: one, add over a million people to his army of the undead, and two, trap the North before they can recover from the battle against the White Walkers or try to seek refuge in the South.

It's a devious plan that proves the Night King is no joke and makes any victory 10 times harder for our heroes. But again you ask, how does Bronn factor into this? In the season premiere, Cersei pays Bronn to go up North to assassinate Jaime and Tyrion for betraying her. Though he's visibly just over the entire Lannister family's dysfunction, Bronn takes the crossbow Cersei sent via Qyburn and we can assume he goes on his way. That means that by episode two, when Winterfell learns that the undead army has arrived, Bronn is far on his journey up North. It also means that he's in the perfect place to see a glimpse of a dragon flying its way to the capital, giving him ample time to warn somebody of what's going down.

It makes sense for some to think that Bronn would turn back and head into King's Landing to warn them that the Night King is on his way. It would be the kind thing to do, since there are over a million people living in the capital and they definitely don't deserve to die for merely existing. But since there's also a giant dragon there headed to burn everything down, there isn't much Bronn can do to help since King's Landing lacks the main resource that the North now has in spades: dragonglass. And, at that point, Bronn is probably closer to Winterfell than he is to the South. So we'd put on money on Bronn kicking up speed and heading straight to Winterfell to tell them about what he's seen — coming just in the nick of time to, once again, lend a hand. (We all know he isn't going to kill the Lannister brothers, he likes them too much!)

If Bronn is able to warn Winterfell before they get in too deep, it could save them from being surprised by the Night King and give them enough time to figure out what to do. Of course, then the question is what do they do? Bran seems pretty sure that the Night King is going to be coming after him one way or another, so we're hoping that if the battle goes down this way, he'll have a plan for Winterfell's next move.

Gears of War Esports Pro Circuit to Wrap Up Season 2 in Boston

After 15 Pro Circuit events and a total prize pool of $3 million, the final Gears Pro Circuit event of Gears of War 4 is here. With $300,000 on the line, the top pro and amateur teams from around the world will gather in Boston on April 26-28 at the Hynes Convention Center to take home the trophy and bragging rights leading into the next season of Gears Esports, set to debut following the launch of Gears 5 later this year.

There is no shortage of storylines coming into this event. Perennial favorites OpTic Gaming are looking to claim their 13th Pro Circuit trophy and further prove why they should be considered the most successful esports team of all time. Team Reciprocity (formerly Denial) is looking to avenge a devastating loss in Mexico City where, despite sending OpTic Gaming to the losers bracket, they couldn’t secure the victory in the grand finals. Rise Nation is full of confidence as they are bringing their complete roster for the first time since they placed 2nd at the Columbus Invitational last fall. Ghost Gaming, the top ranked Latin American team, and Elevate, the top European team, both dominate their regions and want to prove they can compete with their North American counterparts.

In addition to the 5v5 Escalation action, there will be the Gears Pro Circuit 2v2 tournament where 128 top teams can compete for a dedicated prize pool of $20,000. The action kicks off on Saturday, April 27 with key 2v2 matches played on the feature stage. The 2v2 tournament is free to join and open to all attendees. Registration takes place at the venue from Saturday, April 27 from 1:00-3:00 PM EDT.

Watch all the action at http://live.gearsofwar.com starting at 2PM EDT on Friday, April 26 and then again on Saturday and Sunday at 10:00 AM EDT.

Visit www.gears.gg and follow @EsportsGears on Twitter to keep up-to-date with the latest information about Gears Esports and the Gears Pro Circuit Boston Open.

Digging into key takeaways from our 2019 Robotics+AI Sessions Event – TechCrunch

Extra Crunch offers members the opportunity to tune into conference calls led and moderated by the TechCrunch writers you read every day. This week, TechCrunch’s Brian Heater and Lucas Matney shared their key takeaways from our Robotics+AI Sessions event at UC Berkeley last week.

The event was filled with panels, demos and intimate discussions with key robotics and deep learning founders, executives and technologists. Brian and Lucas discuss which companies excited them most, as well as which verticals have the most exciting growth prospects in the robotics world.

“This is the second [robotics event] in a row that was done at Berkeley where people really know the events; they respect it, they trust it and we’re able to get really, I would say far and away the top names in robotics. It was honestly a room full of all-stars.

I think our Disrupt events are definitely skewed towards investors and entrepreneurs that may be fresh off getting some seed or Series A cash so they can drop some money on a big ticket item. But here it’s cool because there are so many students. robotics founders and a lot of wide-eyed people wandering from the student union grabbing a pass and coming in. So it’s a cool different level of energy that I think we’re used to.

And I’ll say that this is the key way in which we’ve been able to recruit some of the really big people like why we keep getting Boston Dynamics back to the event, who generally are very secretive.”

Brian and Lucas dive deeper into how several of the major robotics companies and technologies have evolved over time, and also dig into the key patterns and best practices seen in successful robotics startups.

For access to the full transcription and the call audio, and for the opportunity to participate in future conference calls, become a member of Extra Crunch. Learn more and try it for free. 

 

Amazon can now leave packages safely in your garage

Starting today, Amazon Prime members in the US can have their packages delivered directly to their garages. Key for Garage, which Amazon first announced back in January, is an expansion of the company’s existing Amazon Key service, which already lets Amazon’s drivers deliver packages directly into your home or the trunk of your car. It’s a compromise between the invasiveness of letting a driver into your home and the risk of leaving a package vulnerable to the elements, not to mention passing porch pirates.

In order to use the new service, you’ll need a myQ-compatible garage door opener from Chamberlain or LiftMaster. Amazon has a lookup tool available on its site so you can check if your existing garage door is compatible. If you don’t, then Amazon will sell you a myQ Smart Garage Hub to retrofit your existing garage door opener for an introductory price of $50 (regular price $80). Along with the hardware, you’ll also need an Amazon Prime subscription to use the service.

Once the subscription and hardware is in place, you can then select “In-Garage delivery” at checkout to have your driver leave your package in your garage. You can remotely control access to your garage using the Key by Amazon app or monitor the space using an Amazon Cloud Cam, which is available as a bundle with the Smart Garage Hub for an introductory price of $125 (regular price $200).

As of today, Key by Amazon now covers a total of 50 cities across the US, thanks to 13 new additions that include Las Vegas, Fresno, and Rochester. Key for Garage is available in every city where Key by Amazon is available.

Prince Louis’s First Birthday Portraits

Prince Louis is celebrating a very special milestone: his first birthday! The tiny tot turns 1 on April 23, and Kensington Palace released three adorable new portraits ahead of his birthday on Monday. "The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are delighted to share three new photographs of Prince Louis ahead of his first birthday tomorrow 🎈" the statement read. "The photographs were taken earlier this month by The Duchess at their home in Norfolk." In the precious shots, Louis is shown flashing his baby teeth for the first time ever. He's also pictured wearing a red sweater with buttons in two of the snaps, while in another, he has on a bright blue sweater with a dog on it. So cute! The last time we got a glimpse of Louis was in Prince William and Kate Middleton's 2018 Christmas card, so these new portraits are certainly a treat!

Ali Landry on Being a ‘Happy Mom’

Do you consider yourself a “happy mom?” And, what does it take to really be happy as a mother?

For celeb mom-of-three Ali Landry, it has a lot to do with balance — and pursing your personal passions alongside other supportive women. Which is exactly what she’ll be talking about at the Happy Mom Conference in Pasadena, Cali. on May 4, 2019.

We recently had the chance to pick Ali’s brain about her upcoming keynote at the conference and her site Re/Shape — along with all things motherhood. Here’s that interview!

How did you get involved in the Happy Mom Conference — and what really resonated with you about its mission?

Ali Landry: The founder of the Happy Mom Conference, El Abad, and I have mutual friends, and I’ve been aware of the conference since it started last year. I love that the Happy Mom Conference is a place where moms can find connection and community because I think those are some of the most fundamental keys to living a healthy and happy life as a mom. It really all starts with sharing your experiences with other moms, so we can support and learn from each other.

Do you consider yourself to be a “happy mom?”

AL: I do, yes — some days are more challenging than others, of course, but I think being a “happy mom” is something we do for ourselves, as much as our families. That’s why I love that the Happy Mom Conference encourages moms to make space in their lives to pursue their passions beyond motherhood — to start a new career, open a shop, grow their businesses to new heights, and live their happiest life. All of those aspects go into us being truly happy as moms as well.

Can you share a little about what you’ll be speaking about at the conference — and why it’s so important?

AL: One of the big things I’ll be talking about is finding balance, and what that really means, because it can change day to day. Part of that is taking time to check in with yourself — so you can slow down and really look at the bigger picture of your life and what’s happening with you that day as a wife, as a friend or as a professional, beyond being a mom. It’s also about recognizing that there are positive aspects of being out of balance sometimes too — what that can actually teach us and help us achieve.

What’s the biggest lesson you’ve learned as a working mom, and what’s the best advice you can give to other working moms?

AL: The importance of sleep! Sleep is interconnected to everything about our bodies — physically, emotionally, and mentally. It affects our metabolism, mood, immunity, and so many other things. My husband and I each use a digital sleep tracker, and we’re always comparing to see who got the best night’s sleep! Understanding the quality of sleep I was getting at night really helped me realize how much it affects every area of your life, and we have to do everything we can to give our bodies time to re-set with sleep.

What does Re/Shape mean to you — and why did you create the site?

AL: After I became a mom for the first time, and especially after my third, I started talking with my friends about being tired all the time, having brain fog, sleepless nights, thinning hair, fine lines and wrinkles, digestion problems, and we were all having really similar experiences. I didn’t want to just accept that this was my life now. I decided to commit to cracking the code on how we can all live big, full lives by finding the very best resources to support our health as moms.

How has running Re/Shape changed your life?

AL: Starting Re/Shape has helped me learn that this is all a journey — it will always be a journey, but it’s a journey that we as moms can go on together, so that we have the support of other moms who are trying to figure it out, too. My goal with Re/Shape is to feature the best information and resources that I’ve learned by talking to top researchers and specialists and doctors — information that has changed my life and that can help other moms who’ve been facing the same challenges.

Women — and especially moms — are under a lot of pressure to do it all / have it all / and look a certain way. What are your thoughts on this?

AL: One of the greatest things we can do as moms is come together and share our experiences. It shows us that we’re not alone in this. I think the more we can have conversations about these expectations, the more we can change the narrative to one that’s more healthy and balanced. Happy Mom Conference and Re/Shape share this mission of wanting to give moms tangible and empowering tools to make a real difference in our day to day lives.

Anything else you’d like to add?

AL: There’s a quote by Maya Angelou that I love: “When you know better, you do better,” and I think that’s what Happy Mom Conference is really about; it’s about all of us learning from each other, so that we can improve our lives and be the happiest, healthiest and most fulfilled moms we can be.

Hey, that’s one of our favorite quotes, too! Do you consider yourself a “Happy Mom” — and do you have other moms in your life? I don’t know what I’d do without my mom friends! You can get tickets to the Happy Mom Conference here. Jenn

Move More, Eat More? New Study Suggests People Do Eat More When They’re More Active, But Not Much

One of the possible reasons that in freely living humans exercise doesn't seem to add up to weight loss as math might predict is that freely living humans might eat back their burned calories. Some may do so consequent to increased hunger. Others to a sense of virtue and the inclination to reward themselves for their hard work. Others still because marketing has convinced them that they must refuel, recover, replenish, etc..

A new study,Activity energy expenditure is an independent predictor of energy intake in humans, published this year in the International Journal of Obesity, set out to look at this phenomenon.

Now to be clear, the study certainly wasn't designed to explain exercise's impact on weight. It was just 7 days long and it involved the retrospective analysis of data from 5 prior studies and did not directly measure energy expenditure or energy intake. Instead researchers utilized estimated energy expenditure by way of heart rate and indirect calorimetry data, and energy intake by way of known to be problematic food diaries.

My stats skills are nowhere near good enough to comment on the various treatments of the data, but here's the scatter plot of the impact of energy expenditure on energy intake.

The increase in energy intake the authors attributed to energy expenditure wasn't high, roughly 3% of total daily calories (around 70 in this sample), an amount too small to explain away exercise's often uninspiring impact on weight loss.

Truth be told, I'd have predicted the difference to be larger as eating more consequent to exercise is something I know many people do for one or more of the various reasons mentioned above.

Of course none of this changes the fact that exercise has tremendous health benefits at any weight and that weight shouldn't be your driver for upping yours if you're able.

Sign Up for Xbox Game Pass and Help Support Red Nose Day

Microsoft is proud to announce its support for Red Nose Day, a charitable campaign from Comic Relief USA to end child poverty, one nose at a time.

Originating in the United Kingdom, Red Nose Day launched in the United States in 2015 and to-date has raised nearly $150 million, and positively impacting the lives of over 16 million children across the nation and around the world. Through the power of entertainment, Red Nose Day raises money and awareness to keep children in need safe, healthy and educated.

Red Nose Day In-line Image

From now till June 1, you can also help support Red Nose Day and its efforts to end child poverty with a purchase of a Red Nose and Red Nose Day branded products at Walgreens stores nationwide, including certain Xbox Game Pass and Xbox Live Gold memberships. In support of these efforts, there will be a donation of $100,000 to Red Nose Day.

In addition, from May 16-23, for every new sign up for a paid one or three month Xbox Game Pass membership through the Xbox Dashboard in the US, we will donate $1 to Red Nose Day – up to $150,000. More details, as well as a reminder of this offer, will be available on the Xbox Dashboard and on @Xbox (terms and conditions do apply).

Red Nose Day Game Pass Cards

Red Nose Day takes place Thursday, May 23 culminating with a special night of prime-time programming on NBC at 8/7c. This Red Nose Day, millions of Americans, celebrities and businesses will be come together, wearing their Red Noses, and fundraising and donating to help end child poverty.

We’ll have our Noses On and hope you’ll join us in supporting this amazing cause.

GV-backed KeepTruckin nabs $149M at $1.25B valuation – TechCrunch

KeepTruckin, a developer of hardware and software that helps truck drivers manage their vehicles and cargo, has raised $149 million in Series D funding. Greenoaks Capital has led the round, with participation from existing backers GV, IVP, Index Ventures and Scale Venture Partners.

The round values the business at $1.25 billion, according to KeepTruckin co-founder and chief executive officer Shoaib Makani.

Since it was founded in 2013, KeepTruckin has accumulated 55,000 unique customers, deploying its software in hundreds of thousands of vehicles. The San Francisco-headquartered company will use the latest investment to double its employee headcount to 2,000 in the next 12 to 18 months.

“Our technology really improves the life of the driver,” Makani told TechCrunch. “These are real people doing work that keeps our economy moving. Trucking is really the foundation of the American economy. More than 70 percent of all freight is moved over the road in a truck. This is how we eat, consume and produce; without it, our economy wouldn’t thrive.”

The Series D financing brings KeepTruckin’s total raised to $228 million, including a $50 million Series C that closed in March 2018.

KeepTruckin’s software is intended to bring the antiquated trucking industry into the digital age. Its platform provides electronic logs and fleet management tools, including GPS tracking and driver performance monitoring for fleet managers and dispatchers to track and communicate with their drivers.

“We are competing against paper and pencil,” Makani explained.

Makani left Khosla Ventures, where he had been an investor in early-stage consumer and enterprise companies since 2011, in 2013 to build KeepTruckin. At the time, the beginnings of a new sector focused on tech-enabled logistics was beginning to emerge. Since then, several companies have launched and scaled with similar focuses.

There’s Convoy in Seattle, for example, which also operates a network of connected-trucks. Uber Freight, the logistics and supply chain management business inside Uber. And Huochebang, a Chinese mobile app dubbed the “Uber-for-Trucks.”

“Trucking is forecasted to be a $1 trillion industry by 2024 and is the backbone of the global economy, yet has been underserved by technology but change is coming and KeepTruckin is at the leading edge,” Greenoaks managing partner Neil Mehta said in a statement. “KeepTruckin is building the technology that trucking companies need to compete in the modern economy. The network that KeepTruckin has built will enable it to change the way freight is moved on our roads.”

iOS 13 to let apps like Lightroom directly access external storage, report claims

With iOS 13, Apple will let third-party apps import photos directly from external storage, reports 9to5Mac. If true, this would bring an end one of our key frustrations with iOS on the iPad Pro which requires importing images into the system’s camera roll before you can move them into an app like Lightroom CC. Apple previously released a Siri Shortcut to automate the process, but the new feature will make this unnecessary on the USB-C tablet aimed at professionals.

Apple also reportedly plans to announce improvements to Marzipan apps, Siri, and ARKit — Apple’s augmented reality developer kit. The iOS and macOS changes, first reported by 9to5Mac, were compiled by Guilherme Rambo with an assist from Steve Troughton-Smith.

  • Marzipan, which is a framework for allowing iOS developers to port their apps to the Mac, will gain support for more Mac-specific features like the Touch Bar and menu bar. UIKit apps will be able to open multiple windows, and Split View apps will gain better resizing support.
  • Siri will get access to a host of new “Intents,” which are spoken commands that third-party apps can integrate with. 9to5Mac says that these new Intents will include media playback, search, and voice calling.
  • Augmented reality apps will be able to detect human poses thanks to improvements to ARKit, and will benefit from a new companion app for developers that will let them visually create AR experiences. Controller and headset support for AR is also set to expand with touch controllers and stereo headsets respectively.
  • Other miscellaneous improvements include giving developers more control over the iPhone’s Taptic Engine, broader NFC tag support, and letting developers update their machine learning models on the device itself rather than needing them to be pre-trained.

All these new features are due to be announced at Apple’s Worldwide Developer’s Conference in June, where the company is expected to unveil iOS 13, tvOS 13, macOS 10.15, and watchOS 6.

Avengers Cast “We Didn’t Start the Fire” Tonight Show Video

Monday, April 22, 2019

Get Over Here! Mortal Kombat 11 Available Now on Xbox One

Mortal Kombat 11 battles its way to Xbox One today culminating in nearly 25 years’ worth of lore, combat, and brutality. NetherRealm Studios (Mortal Kombat X, Injustice 2) returns once again as the award-winning developer for Mortal Kombat 11, bringing with them decades of fighting game creation experience to this newest entry of this historic franchise.

Mortal Kombat 11

All your favorite characters return like Scorpion, Sub-Zero, Baraka, Sonya Blade, Raiden, in addition to new characters making their mark on the series, like Geras, a powerful and loyal servant of Kronika who can manipulate time. Each fighter also comes with her or his own unique abilities and series-signature fatalities to deliver perhaps the largest and most diverse cast of combatants in the game’s rich history.

Mortal Kombat 11

And if these characters don’t happen to be to your liking, the robust and all-new character variation system gives you nearly infinite customization options. You’ll be able to change everything from skins to gear to special abilities as well as your intro, taunts, and brutalities – all of which can be unlocked through Mortal Kombat 11 gameplay.

Mortal Kombat 11

Wrapping all of these features and fighters together is a new cinematic story mode that continues the events of Mortal Kombat X, featuring characters both past and present in a time-bending adventure that sets Raiden against Kronika, the Keeper of Time who created existence at the dawn of history.

Mortal Kombat 11

With a slew of new character customization features, a new cinematic story mode, and featuring vicious one-on-one fighting gameplay the series has come to be known for, Mortal Kombat 11 is one of the biggest Xbox One games of the year and is not to be missed. Get it today on the Microsoft Store.

Mortal Kombat 11 is available now on Xbox One via the Microsoft Store and is enhanced for Xbox One X. Click here for purchase details.

Smartcar accuses $50M-funded rival Otonomo of API plagiarism – TechCrunch

Ruthless copying is common in tech. Just ask Snapchat. However, it’s typically more conceptual than literal. But car API startup Smartcar claims that its competitor Otonomo copy-and-pasted Smartcar’s API documentation, allegedly plagiarizing it extensively to the point of including the original’s typos and randomly generated strings of code. It’s published a series of side-by-side screenshots detailing the supposed theft of its intellectual property.

Smartcar CEO Sahas Katta says “We do have evidence of several of their employees systemically using our product with behavior indicating they wanted to copy our product in both form and function.” Now a spokesperson for the startup tells me “We’ve filed a cease-and-desist letter, delivered to Otonomo this morning, that contains documented aspects of different breaches and violations.”

The accusations are troubling given Otonomo is not some inconsequential upstart. The Israel-based company has raised over $50 million since its founding in 2015, and its investors include auto parts giant Aptiv (formerly Delphi) and prestigious VC firm Bessemer Ventures Partners. Otonomo CMO Lisa Joy provided this statement in response to the allegations, noting it will investigate but is confident it acted with integrity:

Otonomo prides itself on providing a completely unique offering backed by our own intellectual property and patents. We take Smartcar’s questions seriously and are conducting an investigation, but we remain confident that our rigorous standards of integrity remain uncompromised. If our investigation reveals any issues, we will immediately take the necessary steps to address them.

Both startups are trying to build an API layer that connects data from cars with app developers so they can build products that can locate, unlock, or harness data from vehicles. The 20-person Mountain View-based Smartcar has raised $12 million from Andreessen Horowitz and NEA. A major deciding factor in who’ll win this market is which platform offers the best documentation that makes it easiest for developers to integrate the APIs. 

“A few days ago, we came across Otonomo’s publicly available API documentation. As we read through it, we quickly realized that something was off. It looked familiar. Oddly familiar. That’s because we wrote it” Smartcar explains in its blog post. “We didn’t just find a few vague similarities to Smartcar’s documentation. Otonomo’s docs are a systematically written rip-off of ours – from the overall structure, right down to code samples and even typos.”

The screenshot above comparing API documentation from Smartcar on the left and Otonomo on the right appears to show Otonomo used nearly identical formatting and the exact same randomly generated sample identifier (highlighted) as Smartcar. Further examples flag seemingly identical code strings and snippets.

Smartcar founder and CEO Sahas Katta

Otonomo has pulled down their docs.otonomo.io documentation website, but TechCrunch has reviewed an Archive.org Wayback Machine showing this Otonomo site as of April 5, 2019 featured sections that are identical to the documentation Smartcar published in August 2018. That includes Smartcar’s typo “it will returned here”, and its randomly generated sample code placeholder “”4a1b01e5-0497-417c-a30e-6df6ba33ba46” which both appear in the Wayback Machine copy of Otonomo’s docs. The typo was fixed in this version of Otonomo’s docs that’s still publicly available, but that code string remains.

“It would be a one in a quintillion chance of them happening to land on the same randomly generated string” Smartcar’s Katta tells TechCrunch.

Yet curiously, Otonomo’s CMO told TechCrunch that “The materials that [Smartcar] put on their post are all publicly accessible documentation, It’s all public domain content.” But that’s not true, Katta argues, given the definition of ‘public domain’ is content belonging to the public that’s uncopyrightable. “I would sure hope not, considering . . . we have proper copyright notices at the bottom. Our product is our intellectual property. Just like Twilio’s API documentation or Stripe’s, it is published and publicly available — and it is proprietary.”

Otonomo’s Lisa Joy noted that her startup is currently fundraising for its Series C, which reportedly already includes $10 million from South Korean energy and telecom holdings giant SK. “We’re in the middle of raising a round right now. That round is not done” she told me. But if Otonomo gets a reputation for allegedly copying its API docs, that could hurt its standing with developers and potentially endanger that funding round.

AT&T’s 5G E marketing ploy is turning out to be a disaster

Prince William and Kate Middleton’s Wedding Vows

Archbishop: "William Arthur Philip Louis, wilt thou have this woman to thy wedded wife, to live together according to God's law in the holy estate of matrimony? Wilt thou love her, comfort her, honor and keep her, in sickness and in health; and, forsaking all other, keep thee only unto her, so long as ye both shall live?"

Prince William: "I will."

Archbishop to Catherine: "Catherine Elizabeth, wilt thou have this man to thy wedded husband, to live together according to God's law in the holy estate of matrimony? Wilt thou love him, comfort him, honor and keep him, in sickness and in health; and, forsaking all other, keep thee only unto him, so long as ye both shall live?"

Kate Middleton: "I will."

Archbishop: "Who giveth this woman to be married to this man?"

PW: "I, William Arthur Philip Louis, take thee, Catherine Elizabeth to my wedded wife, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better, for worse; for richer, for poorer; in sickness and in health; to love and to cherish, till death us do part, according to God's holy law; and thereto I give thee my troth."

KM: "I, Catherine Elizabeth, take thee, William Arthur Philip Louis, to my wedded husband, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better, for worse; for richer, for poorer; in sickness and in health; to love and to cherish, till death us do part, according to God's holy law; and thereto I give thee my troth."

Archbishop: "Bless, O Lord, this ring, and grant that he who gives it and she who shall wear it may remain faithful to each other, and abide in thy peace and favor, and live together in love until their lives' end. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen."

PW: "With this ring I thee wed; with my body I thee honor; and all my worldly goods with thee I share: in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen."

Archbishop: "Let us pray. O Eternal God, Creator, and Preserver of all mankind, giver of all spiritual grace, the author of everlasting life: send thy blessing upon these thy servants, this man and this woman, whom we bless in thy name; that, living faithfully together, they may surely perform and keep the vow and covenant betwixt them made, whereof this ring given and received is a token and pledge; and may ever remain in perfect love and peace together, and live according to thy laws; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. Those whom God hath joined together let no man put asunder.For as much as William and Catherine have consented together in holy wedlock, and have witnessed the same before God and this company, and thereto have given and pledged their troth either to other, and have declared the same by giving and receiving of a ring, and by joining of hands; I pronounce that they be man and wife together, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen. God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Ghost, bless, preserve, and keep you; the Lord mercifully with his favor look upon you; and so fill you with all spiritual benediction and grace, that ye may so live together in this life, that in the world to come ye may have life everlasting. Amen."

April 22nd : New Preview Alpha Skip Ahead 1910 Update (1910.190418-1920)

Vine reboot Byte begins beta testing – TechCrunch

Twitter shut down Dom Hoffman’s app Vine, giving away the short-form video goldmine to China’s TikTok. Now a year and half since Hoffman announced he’d reimagine the app as V2 then scrapped that name, his follow-up to Vine called Byte has finally sent out the first 100 invites to its closed beta. Byte will let users record or upload short, looped vertical videos to what’s currently a reverse-chronological feed.

It will be a long uphill climb for Byte given TikTok’s massive popularity. But if it differentiates by focusing less on lip syncing and teen non-sense so it’s less alienating to an older audience, there might be room for a homegrown competitor in short-form video entertainment.

Hoffman tells TechCrunch that he’s emboldened by the off-the-cuff nature of the beta community, which he believes proves the app is compelling even before lots of creative and funny video makers join. He says his top priority is doing right by creators so they’ll be lined up to give Byte a shot when it officially launches even if they could get more views elsewhere.

For now, Hoffman plans to keep running beta tests, adding and subtracting features for a trial by fire to see what works and what’s unnecessary. The current version is just camera recordings with no uploads, and just a feed with Likes and comments but no account following. Upcoming iterations from his seven-person team will test video uploads and profiles.

One reassuring point is that Hoffman is well aware that TikTok’s epic rise has changed the landscape. He admits that Byte can’t win with the exact same playbook Vine did when it faced an open field, and it must bring something unique. Hoffman tells me he’s a big fan of TikTok, and sees it as one evolutionary step past Vine, but not in the same direction as his new app

Does the world need Vine back if TikTok already has over 500 million active users? We’ll soon find out of Hoffman can take a Byte of that market.

Here are Elon Musk’s wildest predictions about Tesla’s self-driving cars

Songs Written by Tayla Parx

Tayla Parx is the utterly impressive writer behind a ton of your favorite pop songs, and recently released her own impressive album, We Need to Talk. The 25-year-old Dallas native first gained fame for her role as Little Inez in 2007's Hairspray, and has also appeared on the small screen in Bones, Gilmore Girls, and on the Nickelodeon series True Jackson, VP. At just 19 years old, she was signed to Warner/Chappell Publishing and wasted no time churning out pop hits for major artists like Mariah Carey, Nicki Minaj, Jennifer Lopez, and Christina Aguilera — and, most recently, she contributed her talents to close pal Ariana Grande's Thank U, Next album.

Her catalog of writing credits might have you a little shook, to be honest. It's incredible to see how many massive hits she's helped create, and at such a young age. Scroll through to find out which songs you've been humming along to, thanks to Tayla Parx.

April 22nd: New Preview Alpha 1905 Update (1910.190419-1940)

Blueland launches with a suite of eco-friendly cleaning supplies designed to reduce plastic waste – TechCrunch

Sarah Paiji had the idea to launch the eco-friendly refillable cleaning supply retailer Blueland after hearing about the abundance of microplastics in the water she was using to dilute her child’s baby formula.

Paiji wanted to cut back on her plastic consumption, and reduce her contribution to the overabundance of plastic waste in the environment, but felt that as a consumer she didn’t have a choice. So the former venture capital investor from the consumer startup brand studio Launch set out to create one.

The answer she came up with is Blueland, a new line of cleaning products that launches today. Blueland’s cleaners — a bathroom cleaner, glass cleaner, and multi-purpose cleaner —  are sold as tablets that customers add to the cleaning containers the company provides.

“These cleaners are mostly water,” says Paiji. “I’m paying for a plastic bottle that I don’t really need and water which I have at home for free.”

By adding water to the company’s cleaning formulation in refillable containers the company sells, Blueland thinks its customers over time can eliminate the need for 100 billion single-use plastic bottles in the U.S.

Blueland cleaning products/Image courtesy of Blueland

To provide the initial marketing push and continue its product development and sales efforts, the company has raised $3 million in a new round of funding from Global Founders Capital, Comcast Ventures, Cross Culture Ventures, BAM Ventures, along with individual investors like Justin Timberlake and the founder of the Los Angeles-based sustainable fast food chain, Sweetgreen, Nicholas Jammet; and sustainable online food retailer, Thrive Market, Nick Green.

After coming up with the idea Paiji had to find a manufacturer, who’d be willing to help reinvent an entire product category for a startup retailer.

Blueland also wasn’t Paiji’s first choice for a new startup idea. That would have been a botox bar that would sell cosmetic treatments to folks who wanted treatments, but didn’t want to pay high prices for them.

After putting the brakes on the botox business, Paiji reached out on LinkedIn to Syed Naqzi, the director of research and development at Method with her pitch for the cleaning product business.

With Naqzi on board, the company began filing patents for its unique process and the products it’s bringing to market, says Paiji. “Everything is proprietary everything is backed by patents,” she says.

While Paiji won’t disclose who the manufacturing partner is for the cleaning supplies, she did note that the company was in an adjacent consumables category to cleaners.

Within a year of reaching out to Naqzi last April, Paiji had a product supplier and the $3 million she needed to go to market.

Blueland refills/Image courtesy of Blueland

Joining Paiji and Naqzi in setting up the business was John Moscari, a fellow Harvard Business School classmate of Paiji’s who’d launched a company called Bundle Organics.

The company’s refills cost $2 and the initial cleanup kits clock in at $30. “With the refills it’s unequivocally cheaper than buying a full bottle on the market,” says Paiji.

The refills are 300 times lighter and 200 times smaller than traditional packaging for cleaning supplies and the company has plans to develop new products with similar packaging footprints across adjacent categories each quarter.

Just from a shipping perspective alone we cut out 90% because one to one we’re that much smaller,” says Paiji. 

Other, far larger, companies are thinking about their waste streams and end of life issues around their products — an issue which is becoming more important since China tightened the regulations around the scrap materials it would collect — and the amount of contamination those pallets of scrap could contain.

Last year, a coalition of major manufacturers of consumer packaged goods and foods formed Loop — an ambitious project to create zero-waste supply chains for their products with consumers who’d opt in.

Taking their cues from the milkman models of years long passed, companies like Procter & Gamble, Nestle, PepsiCo, Unilever, worked with the company TerraCycle to develop an updated version of the plan.

Consumers get refillable containers and as they use up the items, they can call a Loop pick up driver to take their containers away to be refilled or send them off at a UPS store.

Paiji argues that Blueland does something different — with lower carbon emissions coming from the process and a greater impact on reuse.

“We’ve completely invented a new form factor for this,” she says. “And we’re providing a more convenient way for people to reuse and refill.”

Blueland box/Image courtesy of Blueland

 

Samsung officially delays the Galaxy Fold

Samsung has confirmed reports from earlier today that it is postponing the release of its $2,000 Galaxy Fold foldable phone only days before it was originally scheduled to go on sale. “We plan to announce the [new] release date in the coming weeks,” Samsung said in a statement.

The Galaxy Fold’s durability has come into question after several review units failed in quick succession due to issues with its display. Some units broke after the confusing “protective layer” was mistakenly pulled off. But in other cases (such as with ou, the Fold catastrophically failed after just a day or two of normal use. Debris seemingly made its way into the hinge and underneath the inside, folding screen in Dieter’s case, and CNBC’s review device also failed for no obvious reason.

“Initial findings from the inspection of reported issues on the display showed that they could be associated with impact on the top and bottom exposed areas of the hinge. There was also an instance where substances found inside the device affected the display performance,” Samsung’s statement reads. “We will take measures to strengthen the display protection. We will also enhance the guidance on care and use of the display including the protective layer so that our customers get the most out of their Galaxy Fold.”

Developing...

The Hustle Movie Trailer | POPSUGAR Entertainment

Get Your Leg Day in at Home

Fun news here! We’re partnering up with the good peeps at PaleoHacks to bring you some new recipes (like this immunity-boosting soup), workouts, tips, and more! PaleoHacks is a top source for amazing Paleo recipes, fitness tips, and wellness advice to help you live life to the fullest. Read on for a leg workout that you can do at home — and stay tuned for more healthy content from them in the coming weeks. 

Some would say that nothing feels better than a good leg day. You feel a little sore, but sweaty and strong, like you can take on anything!

Strong legs carry you through life. They allow you to hike up a mountain, ride a bike on the boardwalk, run through a park, and jump into a lake. While this may sound a bit romanticized, it’s true. Part of practicing self love is making sure that you are strong enough to do all of the things that you want to do in life, and having a good workout routine can ensure that.

The good news is that you don’t have to pay for an expensive gym membership or buy special equipment to get these benefits. In fact, all you really need is your bodyweight and set of dumbbells to get leg day in right at home. You can even alternate it with your at-home cardio day using these 10 high-intensity interval training moves!

So get ready to build some strong legs from the comfort of your home with this leg workout. We recommend doing it one to two times per week and always starting with a 5-minute warm-up, like walking or jogging. Perform the routine like a circuit, doing each exercise back-to-back and then resting at the end. Repeat the circuit two to three times. You’ll need an exercise mat, a chair, and two light-to-moderate weight dumbbells.

Bird Dog: 12 reps

This exercise will warm up your legs and core, and get your butt muscles firing.

  1. Start in a tabletop position on your hands and knees on your mat. Spread your fingers wide and engage your abs.
  2. Inhale to reach your right arm forward and your left leg straight back behind you. Pause and feel your glutes, back, and rear delts engage.
  3. Return to tabletop position, then switch by lifting your left arm and right leg.
  4. Continue alternating for 12 reps.

Sumo Squats: 15 reps

These specialty squats will give you a strong booty, quads, and outer thighs. If you are new to working out, you can do this exercise without the dumbbell.

  1. Start standing with your feet a little wider than your hips, toes pointed out at 45 degrees. Hold one dumbbell out in front of your chest.
  2. Engage your abs and squeeze your shoulder blades together as you inhale and bend your knees, sitting your hips back and down into a squat. Make sure that your weight stays slightly back in your heels.
  3. Exhale to stand back up, squeezing your glutes at the top. Repeat for 15 reps.

Chair Pistol Squat: 5 reps per side

This exercise will challenge your glutes, thighs, and core to create strength in your entire lower half.

  1. Sit on the edge of a chair with your feet together. Reach your arms straight out in front of you and engage your abs. Pick your left foot up and straighten the leg out in front of you.
  2. Press into your right foot and exhale to stand all the way up, keeping the left leg lifted.
  3. Then inhale to slowly lower yourself back down to a seat.
  4. Repeat for 5 reps, then switch sides.

Note: As you become stronger, play with just tapping your hips down between each rep, rather than sitting all the way back down.

Single-Leg Deadlift: 10 reps per side

This stability exercise will give you strong hips, glutes, hamstrings, and calves.

  1. Begin standing with your hands holding the ends of a single dumbbell. Engage your abs and squeeze your shoulder blades together.
  2. Point your left toes back behind you on the ground. With your weight on your right foot, inhale to lift your left leg up and back while you simultaneously lower your torso forward and down. Keep your back straight and shoulders back the entire time.
  3. Exhale to return to a standing position and squeeze your glutes.
  4. Repeat for 10 reps, then switch legs.

Straight-Leg Deadlifts: 15 reps

This exercise builds a strong booty, core, and hamstrings.

  1. Stand with your feet hip-width distance apart and hold a dumbbell in each hand. Bring the dumbbells in front of your thighs. Engage your abs and bring a small bend into both knees.
  2. Inhale to hinge at the hips and slide the dumbbells down your thighs towards your knees until you feel a stretch through the hamstrings. Make sure to keep your back straight the whole time.
  3. Then, exhale and squeeze your glutes as you stand back up. Repeat for 15 reps.

Curtsey Lunges: 8 reps per side

This exercise incorporates lateral movement to strengthen your hips, inner thighs, and core.

  1. Start standing with your feet hip-width distance apart. Use both hands to hold a dumbbell in front of your chest.
  2. Shift your weight into your right foot. Pick up your left foot and step it back and behind your right leg, then bend both knees to come into a curtsy. Make sure your right knee is stacked right over the ankle.
  3. Exhale to step your left foot back up to meet your right. Switch legs, then continue alternating for a total of 16 reps.

Burpee Step Backs: 10 reps

This exercise will not only strengthen your legs and core, but it will also give you a heart-strengthening cardio pump!

  1. Begin standing with your hands down by your sides.
  2. Bend at the knees and place your hands on the ground under your shoulders. Step your right foot back and then your left to come into a high plank position. Feel your abs strengthening.
  3. Step your right foot behind your right wrist and then your left foot behind your left wrist.
  4. Press into your feet and jump up, reaching your arms towards the sky.
  5. Repeat for 5 reps leading with your right foot, then do 5 reps leading with your left foot.

Note: If you have any knee issues, skip the jump at the end of your burpee.

Feel stronger already? If you liked this article, you might also enjoy these nine easy stretches that release lower back and hip pain! –Kelly Collins