Sunday, October 18, 2020

If recycling plastics isn’t making sense, remake the plastics

Image of a forklift surrounded by plastic bottles.

Enlarge / Workers sort plastic waste as a forklift transports plastic waste at Yongin Recycling Center in Yongin, South Korea. (credit: Bloomberg/Getty Images)

A few years back, it looked like plastic recycling was set to become a key part of a sustainable future. Then, the price of fossil fuels plunged, making it cheaper to manufacture new plastics. Then China essentially stopped importing recycled plastics for use in manufacturing. With that, the bottom dropped out of plastic recycling, and the best thing you could say for most plastics is that they sequestered the carbon they were made of.

The absence of a market for recycled plastics, however, has also inspired researchers to look at other ways of using them. Two papers this week have looked into processes that enable "upcycling," or converting the plastics into materials that can be more valuable than the freshly made plastics themselves.

Make me some nanotubes

The first paper, done by an international collaboration, actually obtained the plastics it tested from a supermarket chain, so we know it works on relevant materials. The upcycling it describes also has the advantage of working with very cheap, iron-based catalysts. Normally, to break down plastics, catalysts and the plastics are heated together. But in this case, the researchers simply mixed the catalyst and ground up plastics and heated the iron using microwaves.

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https://arstechnica.com

The preexisting conditions of the coronavirus pandemic

The preexisting conditions of the coronavirus pandemic

Enlarge (credit: Nancybelle Gonzaga Villarroya)

A massive new accounting of the health of humans on Earth, collating and inferring stats on hundreds of diseases and injuries across 204 nations, has mostly good news. People are healthier, and they stay that way for longer. The bad news: That’s not true if those people are poor, are people of color, live in the United States, and there’s a pandemic.

Then they’re screwed.

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https://arstechnica.com

Virtual studios, where the filmmaking takes place in front of a halo of flat screen displays connected to PCs, are offering a real alternative to green screens (Daniel Cooper/Engadget)

Daniel Cooper / Engadget:
Virtual studios, where the filmmaking takes place in front of a halo of flat screen displays connected to PCs, are offering a real alternative to green screens  —  For as long as filmmaking has existed, there has been a need to build fantastic worlds in front of cameras.



Amazon sale: Smart washing machine, TV, AC and refrigerator from LG, Samsung and others at up to 75% discount

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Locus in Focus: One Scientist's Story About Navigating in the Wild

Researchers commonly use the Locus Map app for marking important locations like that of camera trap deployments, animal den sites, a river source, or in more general, a particular remote village site. https://ift.tt/3kayldJ

Amazon Great Indian Festival sale: 12 phones from Apple, Xiaomi, Samsung and others available at 'lowest-ever' price

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Amazon Great Indian Festival sale: 6 fitness bands you can buy under Rs 5,000

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Best mobile deals on Amazon during the Great India Festival Sale

Amazon’s Great India Festival has kicked off and will continue throughout the month during the festive season. The sale started from October 17 offering a wide range of electronics, mobiles, and other items on attractive discounts along with exchange and no-cost EMI offers. So if you are in the market for a new smartphone, this is the best time to get one on discount —    OnePlus 8    List Price: Rs 41,999   Deal Price: Rs 39,999 + 10% Discount on HDFC cards   The OnePlus 8 got a price cut recently after the OnePlus 8T launch, and now there's an additional discount bringing the price down to effectively Rs 35,999. With the Snapdragon 865 under the hood, the OnePlus 8 performs like a flagship smartphone and a curved AMOLED display and a 48MP triple camera stack completes the overall package.   iPhone 11   List Price: Rs 61,990   Deal Price: Rs 47,999   The 64GB iPhone 11 is available at its lowest ever! The other storage variants are also on a similar discount, and we’d recommend getting at least the 128GB variant of the smartphone.     Xiaomi Redmi Note 9 Pro Max   List Price: Rs 16,999   Deal Price: Rs 15,999   The Redmi Note 9 Pro Max is available at a Rs 1,000 discount along with additional bank and exchange offers. With a Snapdragon 720G under the hood, and a large LCD display, the Note 9 Pro Max is for those who want a large screen for gaming and watching movies on the go. The 64MP quad camera setup perfoms quite well to bring out rich, vibrant and detailed shots in the day.   Xiaomi Mi 10 (8+128GB)   List Price: Rs 49,999   Deal Price: Rs 44,999   The Xiaomi Mi 10 is now more affordable after the launch of the Mi 10T and the Mi 10T Pro. Both variants are on a Rs 5,000 discount. The Xiaomi Mi 10 is the company's most premium offering sporting a 90Hz AMOLED display, a 108MP triple camera setup and 30W fast wired and wireless charging.   Samsung Galaxy M31s    List Price: Rs 19,999   Deal Price: Rs 18,499   The Samsung Galaxy M31s is available at a small discount officially, and you can club a couple of bank and exchange offers to get the price even lower. With a 64MP quad camera setup, an AMOLED display and a massive 6,000mAh battery makes the M31s the most practical mid-range smartphone to buy.   Samsung Galaxy S10   List Price: Rs 49,999   Deal Price: Rs 39,999   The Samsung Galaxy S10 is available at an attractive Rs 10,000 discount during the Great India Festival sale on Amazon. Even after being a year old, the Galaxy S10 continues to offer a premium experience in a compact form factor. With a curved AMOLED display and a triple camera stack, the Galaxy S10 is both luxurious and reliable. https://ift.tt/31i4Ajs

Amazon, Flipkart Festive Sales Are Live: Top Offers on Electronics

Amazon Great Indian Festival 2020 and Flipkart Big Billion Days sales feature hundreds of deals on electronics. We've handpicked the best offers available on laptops, TVs, smart speakers, and other... https://ift.tt/3lXUOLv

Saturday, October 17, 2020

A look at "neurosymbolic AI", which combines techniques of deep neural networks and "good old-fashioned AI", with comments from its proponents and critics (Anil Ananthaswamy/Knowable Magazine)

Anil Ananthaswamy / Knowable Magazine:
A look at “neurosymbolic AI”, which combines techniques of deep neural networks and “good old-fashioned AI”, with comments from its proponents and critics  —  The unlikely marriage of two major artificial intelligence approaches has given rise to a new hybrid called neurosymbolic AI.



Skillsoft, which makes training software for businesses, is going public through a SPAC merger at a $1.3B valuation after emerging from bankruptcy in August (Dave Sebastian/Wall Street Journal)

Dave Sebastian / Wall Street Journal:
Skillsoft, which makes training software for businesses, is going public through a SPAC merger at a $1.3B valuation after emerging from bankruptcy in August  —  Educational-technology company emerged from chapter 11 in August  —  Educational-technology company Skillsoft is going public through …



Amazon sale Day 2: 5 gaming laptops with up to 40% off in Deal of the Day

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VCs reload ahead of the election as unicorns power ahead

This is The TechCrunch Exchange, a newsletter that goes out on Saturdays, based on the column of the same name. You can sign up for the email here.

It was an active week in the technology world broadly, with big news from Facebook and Twitter and Apple. But past the headline-grabbing noise, there was a steady drumbeat of bullish news for unicorns, or private companies worth $1 billion or more.

A bullish week for unicorns

The Exchange spent a good chunk of the week looking into different stories from unicorns, or companies that will soon fit the bill, and it’s surprising to see how much positive financial news there was on tap even past what we got to write about.

Databricks, for example, disclosed a grip of financial data to TechCrunch ahead of regular publication, including the fact that it grew its annual run rate (not ARR) to $350 million by the end of Q3 2020, up from $200 million in Q2 2019. It’s essentially IPO ready, but is not hurrying to the public markets.

Sticking to our theme, Calm wants more money for a huge new valuation, perhaps as high as $2.2 billion which is not a surprise. That’s more good unicorn news. As was the report that “India’s Razorpay [became a] unicorn after its new $100 million funding round” that came out this week.

Razorpay is only one of a number of Indian startups that have become unicorns during COVID-19. (And here’s another digest out this week concerning a half-dozen startups that became unicorns “amidst the pandemic.”)

There was enough good unicorn news lately that we’ve lost track of it all. Things like Seismic raising $92 million, pushing its valuation up to $1.6 billion from a few weeks ago. How did that get lost in the mix?

All this matters because while the IPO market has captured much attention in the last quarter or so, the unicorn world has not sat still. Indeed, it feels that unicorn VC activity is the highest we’ve seen since 2019.

And, as we’ll see in just a moment, the grist for the unicorn mill is getting refilled as we speak. So, expect more of the same until something material breaks our current investing and exit pattern.

Market Notes

What do unicorns eat? Cash. And many, many VCs raised cash in the last seven days.

A partial list follows. It could be that investors are looking to lock in new funds before the election and whatever chaos may ensue. So, in no particular order, here’s who is newly flush:

All that capital needs to go to work, which means lots more rounds for many, many startups. The Exchange also caught up with a somewhat new firm this week: Race Capital. Helmed by Alfred Chuang, formerly or BEA who is an angel investor now in charge of his own fund, the firm has $50 million to invest.

Sticking to private investments into startups for the moment, quite a lot happened this week that we need to know more about. Like API-powered Argyle raising $20 million from Bain Capital Ventures for what FinLedger calls “unlocking and democratizing access to employment records.” TechCrunch is currently tracking the progress of API-led startups.

On the fintech side of things, M1 Finance raised $45 million for its consumer fintech platform in a Series C, while another roboadvisor, Wealthsimple, raised $87 million, becoming a unicorn at the same time. And while we’re in the fintech bucket, Stripe dropped $200 million this week for Nigerian startup Paystack. We need to pay more attention to the African startup scene. On the smaller end of fintech, Alpaca raised $10 million more to help other companies become Robinhood.

A few other notes before we change tack. Kahoot raised $215 million due to a boom in remote education, another trend that is inescapable in 2020 as part of the larger edtech boom (our own Natasha Mascarenhas has more).

Turning from the private market to the public, we have to touch on SPACs for just a moment. The Exchange got on the phone this week with Toby Russell from Shift, which is now a public company, trading after it merged with a SPAC, namely Insurance Acquisition Corp. Early trading is only going so well, but the CEO outlined for us precisely why he pursued a SPAC, which was actually interesting:

  • Shift could have gone public via an IPO, Russell said, but prioritized a SPAC-led debut because his firm wanted to optimize for a capital raise to keep the company growing.
  • How so? The private investment in public equity (PIPE) that the SPAC option came with ensured that Shift would have hundreds of millions in cash.
  • Shift also wanted to minimize what the CEO described as market risk. A SPAC deal could happen regardless of what the broader markets were up to. And as the company made the choice to debut via a SPAC in April, some caution, we reckon, may have made some sense.

So now Shift is public and newly capitalized. Let’s see what happens to its shares as it gets into the groove of reporting quarterly. (Obviously, if it flounders, it’s a bad mark for SPACs, but, conversely, successful trading could lead to a bit more momentum to SPAC-mageddon.)

A few more things and we’re done. Unicorn exits had a good week. First, Datto’s IPO continues to move forward. It set an initial price this week, which could value it above $4 billion. Also this week, Roblox announced that it has filed to go public, albeit privately. It’s worth billions as well. And finally, DoubleVerify is looking to go public for as much as $5 billion early next year.

Not all liquidity comes via the public markets, as we saw this week’s Twilio purchase of Segment, a deal that The Exchange dug into to find out if it was well-priced or not.

Various and Sundry

We’re running long naturally, so here are just a few quick things to add to your weekend mental tea-and-coffee reading!

Next week we are digging more deeply into Q3 venture capital data, a foretaste of which you can find here, regarding female founders, a topic that we returned to Friday in more depth.

Alex

Yandex and TCS Group Holding, the parent company of Russia's top online bank Tinkoff, have terminated talks on Yandex's proposed $5.48B deal to buy Tinkoff (Reuters)

Reuters:
Yandex and TCS Group Holding, the parent company of Russia's top online bank Tinkoff, have terminated talks on Yandex's proposed $5.48B deal to buy Tinkoff  —  MOSCOW (Reuters) - Plans for Russia's biggest corporate deal of 2020 collapsed on Friday after talks over a $5.48 billion cash …



Chiper, a Colombia-based e-commerce platform for corner stores in Latin America, raises $12M Series A from WIND Ventures, Monashees, and Kaszek Ventures (Christine Hall/Crunchbase News)

Christine Hall / Crunchbase News:
Chiper, a Colombia-based e-commerce platform for corner stores in Latin America, raises $12M Series A from WIND Ventures, Monashees, and Kaszek Ventures  —  Chiper has been amassing a network of digitized corner stores in Latin America for the past two years.



Disney, Fox, and WBD say they have agreed to discontinue their Venu Sports streaming joint venture and will focus on existing products and distribution channels (Alex Weprin/The Hollywood Reporter)

Alex Weprin / The Hollywood Reporter : Disney, Fox, and WBD say they have agreed to discontinue their Venu Sports streaming joint venture...