New iPad mini and entry-level iPad are around the corner

Apple has registered new iPad models in the Eurasian Economic Commission reference database. The Moscow-based commission keeps a product database pretty much like the FCC in the U.S. And it sounds like Apple is about to launch a new iPad mini 5 and an updated entry-level iPad.

That database has shown information on new Apple products in the pastMySmartPrice first discovered today’s new filings. There are two different filings that both mention new tablets that run iOS 12.

The first filing mentions five different models while the second one mention two different models. Usually, each configuration gets a different model number depending on storage and LTE capabilities.

It lines up with previous rumors that mentioned a new iPad mini and a new cheap iPad for early 2019. Ming-Chi Kuo expects an updated iPad mini with a 7.9-inch display. The device hasn’t been updated for years and many believed that Apple would stop updating it. But if you still like that form factor, Apple may have something new for you.

When it comes to the normal size iPad, Apple last updated the 9.7-inch iPad in March 2018. While all eyes are on the iPad Pro, many people are still looking for the cheapest iPad they can get. And the $329 9.7-inch iPad is a good deal. Apple usually update that model every year.

Today’s filings don’t say what those devices will look like unfortunately. It’s unclear if Apple is going to reduce the bezels of those devices, add a Face ID sensor and switch to USB-C.


Source: Tech Crunch

Daily Crunch: Facebook is shutting down Moments

The Daily Crunch is TechCrunch’s roundup of our biggest and most important stories. If you’d like to get this delivered to your inbox every day at around 9am Pacific, you can subscribe here:

1. Facebook is shutting down Moments; here’s how to save all your photos

Facebook Moments, the standalone mobile app designed to let users privately share photos and videos, is shutting down next month. The reason is simple: Not many people used it.

For those who did use it, there are two export options. One will create a private album on their Facebook account; the other option downloads everything to their device.

2. StarCraft II-playing AI AlphaStar takes out pros undefeated

AlphaStar is different from the traditional StarCraft AI. It learned from watching humans play at first, but soon honed its skills by playing against facets of itself.

3. Theranos documentary review: The Inventor’s horrifying optimism

The documentary that premiered yesterday at the Sundance Film Festival explores how the move-fast-and-break-things ethos of Silicon Valley is “really dangerous when people’s lives are in the balance,” as former employee and whistleblower Tyler Shultz says in the film.

4. Facebook to encrypt Instagram messages ahead of integration with WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger

As first reported by The New York Times, the social media giant said it’s reworking the underlying infrastructure of its three messaging apps to allow users to talk to each other more easily.

5. Smartphones are about to get more interesting, but is it enough to drive growth?

The mobile industry is at a crossroads.

6. Microsoft acquires Citus Data

Citus Data is focused on making PostgreSQL databases faster and more scalable. Microsoft says it will work with the team to “accelerate the delivery of key, enterprise-ready features from Azure to PostgreSQL and enable critical PostgreSQL workloads to run on Azure with confidence.”

7. Ultima Thule shows its lumps in latest images from New Horizons flyby

The latest image from the New Horizons probe shows the rocky world of Ultima Thule in considerably greater detail.


Source: Tech Crunch

Airbnb acquires Denmark’s Gaest to expand in bookings for meetings and offsites

Airbnb, now valued upwards of $30 billion and inching toward an IPO possibly as early as this year, has made an acquisition to continue to diversify its revenues beyond basic booking services for overnight accommodations in private homes. It has acquired Gaest, a startup out of Aarhus, Denmark that provides a marketplace-style platform for people to post and book venues in hourly or daily increments for meetings and other work-related events like off-sites in Europe and elsewhere.

Gaest’s team — it was founded in 2015 by Anders Boelskifte Mogensen (the CEO), Chris Kjær Sørensen, Christian Schwarz Lausten and Jonas Grau Sigtenbjerggaard — will be joining Airbnb and will report to president of Homes Greg Greeley. Airbnb says the service — which currently has listings for some 3,000 venues from hotels to co-working spaces and other rooms — will remain operational on its own platform “for the foreseeable future.” It’s not clear if the Gaest brand will remain as a part of that.

“We’re thrilled to join one of the world’s most innovative companies and become an integral part of their mission to make it easier for professionals to feel a sense of belonging at work,” said Mogensen in a statement. “Our dream from day one has been to make it easier, faster, and more cost-effective to list, discover, and book unique spaces that spark creativity, motivate interaction and encourage knowledge sharing.”

Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but we are trying to find out. According to Crunchbase, Gaest had raised $3.5 million.

The acquisition points to two strategic developments at Airbnb, both aimed at helping the company diversity and grow its revenues.

The first is that it will build on Airbnb’s expansion into services for the business market.

This is an area where Airbnb has already been building inroads: It’s had a program in place since last year called Airbnb for Work, aimed at the business travel market and booking accommodations for business travelers, and it says that to date some 700,000 companies have seen employees sign up and book accommodation through the program.

Even before that, Airbnb had inked partnerships with corporate travel apps like Concur that are standard tools in large enterprises, so that its listings can also be discoverable alongside more classic hotels. That’s before you consider the number of people who may be booking on Airbnb for work trips but using their personal accounts to do so.

The idea of Airbnb for Work also taps into the trend of “consumerization” and how it has played out in the world of business travel. While some people will prefer to stay in business hotels and the amenities that come with that, others will opt for more individualized options that tap into local life.

That’s before you consider the average price differences between the two, where business hotels tend to reach into premium price points and Airbnb homes tend to come at a wider range of prices. To be sure, Airbnb is not the only one eyeing up ways of serving business users with their travel and meeting needs. A number of startups, like 2nd Address and Homelike, have sprung up to address the growth of business travelers looking for Airbnb-style options instead of business hotels for longer-term work trips.

And you can’t not consider the competitive threat here also from We (FKA WeWork), which had its start in co-working and meeting spaces, but now has ambitions to extend into providing space to companies and business types to cover other needs like sleeping and more. Like Airbnb, it’s also going to be working hard to expand and diversify its business to capture more revenues from existing and new customers.

And this leads to the second area where Gaest will help Airbnb: providing more value to existing and future hosts on the platform.

Today, the mainstay of making money on Airbnb if you’re a host is to offer your house for overnight stays. But Airbnb has been adding options beyond that, for example by giving hosts the chance to offer paid experiences to visitors, to help them increase their options for monetizing guests.

Homes head Greeley, Airbnb notes, is “leading a robust and aggressive plan to both support the hosts who have always powered Airbnb and expand our accommodation and service offerings into new areas.”

Airbnb noted in September 2018 that informally, some business users had already started to use Airbnb for work to book homes for off-sites. This Gaest acquisition could help formalize some of that by providing a platform for Airbnb hosts to list their homes specifically for this use case, and of course a pool of potential customers to make bookings.

“We imagine a world where anyone can share their space for professional events and, in the longer term, for celebrations,” said David Holyoke, Global Head of Airbnb for Work, in a statement. “Bringing in a leadership team with strong domain knowledge allows us to accelerate our work in this area, and more importantly Gaest.com and Airbnb share a vision of helping every space owner become entrepreneurs through sharing their spaces with those who need it.”


Source: Tech Crunch

Metroid Prime 4 development was going so badly, Nintendo is starting over

For all those wondering why we haven’t heard much out of the Metroid Prime 4 camp since the title was announced at E3 2017 (with an admittedly underwhelming trailer), Nintendo just offered a surprisingly frank answer. Senior Managing Executive Officer Shinya Takahashi appeared in a video to explain that game development thus far has failed to live up to the company’s standards.

As such, the company is changing studios, returning Retro, which developed earlier entries in the Prime franchise. Retro producer Kensuke Tanabe will essentially be starting things over from scratch.

“This change will essentially mean restarting development from the beginning,” Takahashi explained, addressing the camera in a somber, apologetic tone, “so the completion of the game will be delayed from our initial internal plan. We strongly recognize that this delay will come as a disappointment to the many fans who have been looking forward to the launch of Metroid Prime 4.”

It’s a blow for one of Nintendo’s best-loved franchises — especially considering how long the game has been in the works. The move is also a highly unusual one for the company, including a very public apology. But in spite of a bit of a black eye in all of this, there’s something to be said for the exacting standards that would lead Nintendo to make such a difficult decision.


Source: Tech Crunch

Facebook to encrypt Instagram messages ahead of integration with WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger

Facebook is planning to roll out end-to-end encryption for Instagram messages, as part of a broader integration effort across the company’s messaging platforms, including WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger.

First reported by The New York Times, the social media giant said reworking the underlying infrastructure of its three messaging apps will allow users to talk to each other more easily. The apps will reportedly remain independent of one another — with Instagram and WhatsApp bringing in 1 billion and 1.5 billion users, respectively.

In doing so, Facebook is adding end-to-end encryption to Instagram messages. That will bring a new level of security and privacy to Instagram users for the first time. Facebook will also begin encrypting Facebook Messenger by default, which has, to date, required users to manually switch on the feature.

So far, only WhatsApp messages are end-to-end encrypted by default.

The plans are part of the company’s effort to keep people on the platform for longer, the Times reported, at a time when the company has 2.2 billion users but user trust has declined following a string of privacy scandals and security incidents. End-to-end encrypted messages can’t be read beyond the sender and the recipient — not even Facebook. In shutting itself out of the loop, it reduces the amount of data it can access — and can be theoretically stolen by hackers.

“We want to build the best messaging experiences we can; and people want messaging to be fast, simple, reliable and private,” a Facebook spokesperson told TechCrunch. “We’re working on making more of our messaging products end-to-end encrypted and considering ways to make it easier to reach friends and family across networks.”

“As you would expect, there is a lot of discussion and debate as we begin the long process of figuring out all the details of how this will work,” the spokesperson said, without providing a timeline on the planned unification.

But how the integration will be met by European regulators is anybody’s guess.

Two years ago, Facebook rolled back its plans to begin sharing WhatsApp user data with the social network for advertising at the request of U.K. data protection authorities, putting the plan on ice across the European continent. Under the proposed changes to its terms and conditions, WhatsApp would have shared the user’s phone number that was used to verify their account, and the last time they used the service. That led to concerns about privacy, given that a real-world identity isn’t needed for WhatsApp, unlike Facebook, which requires users display their real names.

Facebook acknowledged that it didn’t have answers just yet about how it plans to navigate the issue, citing the early stages of its planned integration.

The app integrations are said to be a priority for 2019, with an eye for a 2020 release, the Times said.


Source: Tech Crunch

Facebook is shutting down Moments. Here’s how to save all your photos

Facebook Moments, the standalone mobile app designed to let users privately share photos and videos, is shutting down next month.

Facebook confirmed that app’s services will end February 25. Facebook decided to end support for app, which hasn’t been updated in some time, because people weren’t using it.

“We’re ending support for the Moments app, which we originally launched as a place for people to save their photos. We know the photos people share are important to them so we will continue offering ways to save memories within the Facebook app,” Rushabh Doshi, dorector of product management said in a statement.

Moments users should see a message warning them of the imminent end of the app. Below the message is an option to export photos and videos. 

There are two export options for users, which people can access on the website version of the Moments app. One will create a private album on their Facebook account; the other option downloads everything to their device. People can export their photos and videos from the Moments website through May 2019, according to Facebook.

Users can start their export from any device. If the user creates private Facebook albums, they’ll see a link next to each moment below that’s ready to view as an album on Facebook.

For folks who opt to download the file, they’ll need to enter their Facebook password when prompted. The files will be shown along with the file size and users will be able to select the quality — high, medium, or low — of the files. The Moments app will email a link and notify the user on Facebook when it’s ready to be downloaded.

Moments, which first launched in 2015, has seen some competition from other Facebook products recently, which might have led to its demise. For instance, Facebook built out its Stories feature, which includes a direct sharing option. That option, while designed for one-offs and not whole albums, did allow users to bypass the Moments app entirely in order to privately send photos with a select friend or friends.

Users also have the option to share any of their photos from the app as Albums on Facebook. If someone downloads the app to an Album, the privacy setting will default to “Only Me” but a user always have the option to share it with friends.

Facebook says it will continue to incorporate options for saving memories within the Facebook app as well. For instance, as the Stories format grows in popularity, the company is working on more ways for people to save their photos and videos they shared through Stories. Some of these launched features include Save Photos, highlights and Stories Archive on Facebook.


Source: Tech Crunch

Vangst just raised $10 million to plug more people into the fast-growing cannabis industry

People are increasingly interested in finding a way to participate in the cannabis industry, and for good reason. It’s growing like a weed (yes, we said it). According to a San Francisco-based research company, Grand View Research, the global legal marijuana market is expected to reach $146.4 billion by the end of 2025.

Still, it isn’t easy for potential recruits to know where to look for both temporary and permanent jobs, and it’s just as challenging for companies to find candidates who understand their business. Enter Vangst, a now three-year-old,  Denver-based startup that just raised $10 million in Series A funding from earlier backers Casa Verde Capital and Lerer Hippeau to become the go-to recruiting platform for the industry, even while going up against several older entrants, including Seattle-based Viridian Staffing and Ganjapreneur, in Bellingham, Wa.

Yesterday, with chatted with the CEO and founder of the now 70-person company, Karson Humiston, about launching the platform in college, and why she isn’t so worried about the competition. She also shared some interesting stats around how much cannabis jobs pay.

TC: Some people launch startups in college. Not many of them grow them into sustainable companies. How did Vangst get going?

KH: I went to St. Lawrence [University] and while there, I’d started a student travel company and compiled a database of students and recent grads — people who’d gone on trips through the startup or expressed an interest in going on trips. The spring of my senior year, in 2015, I sent an email to all of them asking what jobs they were interested in, and more than 70 percent said the cannabis industry.

TC: Wow, interesting.

KH: That was my reaction, but living in upstate New York where recreational cannabis isn’t yet legal, I didn’t know a lot about it. So I took a weekend off from school to go to a trade show in Colorado, where I saw everything from cultivation to extraction to retail to ancillary businesses. And when I asked what jobs they were looking to fill, they said, essentially, everything: a director of cultivation, retail dispensary store managers, HR, marketing. They all said it was their top pain point because if they posted on a traditional jobs board — and remember, this was 2015 — the listing would often get taken down. Meanwhile, there was no industry-specific resource because [marijuana] is federally illegal.

TC: So you dropped the travel startup idea and pursued this. Where did you start?

KH: First, I rushed back to St. Lawrence and made an inexpensive site on Wix and starting connecting people in my database with summer internships. I’d told the companies I’d met with that I could find them employees for $500 and I called this new company Graduana, [with the tagline] green jobs for grads. My thought was, I’ll go to Colorado and do Graduana for six months and see where the industry really is.

By the spring of 2016, I realized that demand far exceeded interns and recent grads and the we needed to find recruiters who know what they’re doing, so we brought on recruiters who was just focused on cultivation, for example, and who know the difference between someone who can grow cannabis in the garage and someone who has done large-scale agricultural growing. They they started pulling in people from the tomato and tulip and big commerical ag who’ve grown [plants] in big state-of-the-art greenhouses and could bring important skills to the table. We also brought in recruiters to just focus on the retail side of things.

It became this profitable, 25-person, boutique staffing agency. But we also saw an opportunity for on-demand labor, because of the seasonality of the industry. Cannabis grows, then it needs to be trimmed and packaged. . .

TC: So it was time for venture capital?

KH: When you’re talking about temporary staffing, it’s been done really manually in this industry so we wanted to build a platform that would notify candidates that a . certain company needs 20 trimmers and is willing to pay $12 an hour and where, meanwhile, employers could see that someone has trimmed for 2,000 hours, and each could rate each other. So we needed to hire engineering and a customer success team and legal, and our revenue wasn’t going to cover those costs.

Thankfully, a founder friend in the space, Ryan Smith of LeafLink, introduced us to Lerer Hippeau when he heard were raising a seed round. We received a warm intro to Casa Verde, too, and both have been amazingly helpful to us.

TC: Are you still doing high-end hiring, too?

KH: We are. Revenue from that piece of our business, where we’re helping companies find COOs or a director fo cultivation or extraction, more than doubled last year and continues to be profitable. We get 1,000 resumes some days. We now have 200,000 job candidates on the p latform.

TC: Obviously you’re charging employers different amounts depending on the the type of role you’re filling. Can you share some specifics?

KH: Right On the direct hire side, we take a percentage of their first year’s salary. On the gig side, a company tells us how much they’d like to pay for gig workers, and there’s a mark-up on that that we keep.

TC: No matter how long that person works for your client?

KH: It’s usually for a matter of weeks. If it’s longer than that, we charge the a buyout fee [to step out of the relationship].

TC: I take it you’re marketing the service to college students largely.

KH: We market the service through career fairs that we throw in different states, and at trade shows in and out of the industry.  We also spent time going to college campuses. But our acquisition costs have been relatively low. Everyone who gets placed with us is known as an original Vangster and we do Vangster nights, where anyone in our network can bring a friend and we can help turn them into employees, too.

TC: More states are legalizing recreational cannabis; how are you drumming up workforces in different places?

KH: We have a team now in Denver, in Santa Monica, and a small team in Oakland, and as we launch additional cities for Vangst gigs, we’re hiring managers and people who can do client outreach and candidate vetting and onboarding. We just hired an early employee of Uber, Will Zinsmeister, who helped oversee the launch of cities in Texas for Uber, so we’re excited to have Will and others thinking through supply and demand issues as we launch more widely.

TC: Out of curiosity, how much do cannabis jobs pay, and how many people work in the industry right now – – do you have any idea?

KH: I think there’s more than 160,000 employees across the cannabis industry right now, and by 2022, the industry is expected to grow to around 340,000 full-time employees.

We did survey 1,500 people to put together a salary guide and one of the questions we asked what how much of their labor needs are seasonable versus otherwise and they said about 30 percent.

As for the salaries, the on-demand jobs are very in line with other industries. When it comes to full time jobs, outside sales jobs pay on average a salary of $73,000, which is in line with other outside sales jobs. On the higher end, a compliance manager can make $149,000, a director of extraction makes on average $191,000 and a director of cultivation on the high end . can make $250,000.

TC: I think that’s more than people might have imagined. Who is landing these higher-end jobs other than people with backgrounds in traditional large-scale farming?

KH: You’re seeing people graduating with a degree in botany who’ve maybe worked for a cannabis company for six years and are seen as having very unique experience. We’re seeing a lot of clients in Maryland and other places saying they want candidates from Colorado.


Source: Tech Crunch

Tradeshift says it’s seen a ‘huge drop’ in UK transactions amid Brexit uncertainty

The UK is experiencing a significant and drastic fall in the volume of business-to-business transactions, according to the CEO of one of the world’s largest B2B payments and supply chain logistics platforms.
In an exclusive interview with TechCrunch at the World Economic Forum in Davos Switzerland, Tradeshift CEO and co-founder Christian Lanng said: “We see the numbers. There has been a huge drop in the purchase orders in the UK in December last year. Especially in retail. But it’s cross-sector. It’s manufacturing, retail, logistics.”
Tradeshift is a cloud platform for supply chain payments, marketplaces and apps which is one of Europe’s tech unicorns and has raised over $432M to date.
He said Tradeshift works with a “major manufacturer” in the UK which has “one hour of inventory” feeding its production line. He declined to name the firm.
Speaking about the effects of Brexit on supply chains, he said: “If you add 10 minutes of custom checks to every truck feeding that production line you create a traffic jam that cannot be resolved. It would last a week before it would get sorted out. They literally cannot operate the factory,” he said.
“Forget about the politics. This is just a very technical thing that’s going to happen. People don’t understand the facts. You can discuss it in a very abstract level but literally, it’s just like that.”
“People forget about the practices or realities of the supply chains across the channel and nobody is engaging really in any serious way with the people who know how that stuff works, because [Brexit] is like a circus, right?”
Speaking about Tradeshift’s recent acquisition of Bableway, a cloud integration technology platform, Lanng said the combined companies will process “more than trillion dollars of payments.” “That’s twice as large as PayPal and three times as large as Amazon in just payment volumes,” he said. “Between us we’ll have a bigger chunk of the world economy in terms of B2B, not B2C.”
Does Laang think there will be a global slowdown, as some are predicting?
“Our view is pretty simple. China freaked everybody out about how fast they moved with technology such as on health care, renewable energy, electric cars, AI, and financial services. And they’re now starting to push “Made in China” by 2025.”
“So [the West] is losing the global leadership. We have been slow to adapt to electric, or renewable energy. It was described as a hippie thing, but now it’s the future of the world. Countries using tariffs [to slow down China] it’s not going to work. We’re very bullish on Asia and any country in the world that’s ‘leaning in’ to technology.”


Source: Tech Crunch

Rory Stirling, ex-BGF Ventures, has joined London seed VC Connect Ventures

When BGF Ventures, the London-based early-stage venture fund of BGF, had a change in “strategy” in early 2018, seeing partners Harry Briggs, Rory Stirling and Wendy Tan White step down, it was always going to be interesting to see where the VC trio would land.

Earlier this week, this publication broke news that Tan White — who previously co-founded and exited SaaS website builder Moonfruit, and was also a General Partner at Entrepreneur First — has joined Alphabet’s X (formerly Google X) as Vice President.

Now TechCrunch can reveal that Rory Stirling has joined London seed-stage firm Connect Ventures as Partner. Connect’s existing investment team includes Pietro Bezza, Bill Earner, and Sitar Teli.

Before joining BGF Ventures in 2015, where he was a founding partner at the £200 million fund, Stirling was a Partner at MMC Ventures, spanning a 10 year career in venture capital. During his time at BGF Ventures, the firm backed a range of tech startups, including Gousto, Streetbees, Triptease, Paddle, and Roli. At MMC, Stirling led investments across consumer, marketplace and software sectors.

His software investments include NewVoiceMedia (recently acquired by Vonage for $350 million), Triptease, Marvel, Masabi, Reevoo, Somo, Brightpearl, and Base79 (acquired by Rightster). His marketplace investments are Appear Hear, and LoveHomeSwap (acquired by Wyndham). Consumer companies Stirling backed for MMC include Gousto, AlexandAlexa (acquired by The Luxury Kids Group), Wool and the Gang (acquired by Crafts Group Holdings), Pact, Tyres on the Drive, and PayasUgym.

Confirming his latest career move, Stirling provided TechCrunch with the following statement:

“I’m thrilled to be joining the team at Connect. I’m lucky enough to have worked with all three of the Connect partners on previous investments. Since founding in 2012 they’ve established themselves as one of the most focused and ambitious seed funds in Europe. Connect recognised the importance of building a differentiated approach from the beginning and are now well-known for their product-led thesis. As a result they’ve backed some of the most iconic product companies in Europe, including Citymapper and Typeform.”

Meanwhile, I understand that BGF Ventures’ third alumni, Harry Briggs, has also found a new gig. According to my sources, he’s quietly joined OMERS Ventures, the venture capital arm of the Canadian pension fund of the same name. I understand he is helping to set up the founding team of OMERS Ventures Europe. The VC fund has previously talked about its ambitions to expand to Europe, and that appears to be happening, even it is believed to still be in the formative stages.

Briggs couldn’t be reached for comment at the time of publication.


Source: Tech Crunch

MoviePass says it’s bringing back an unlimited movie plan

It may be hard to remember, but MoviePass once offered a relatively straightforward value proposition — for a monthly subscription fee, you could watch as many movies as you want. Now it sounds like a version of that plan is coming back.

The news was shared in an interview that Executive Vice President Khalid Itum gave to Variety. Apparently, Itum didn’t offer any details beyond saying that some version of the unlimited plan — allowing subscribers to watch as many movies as they want each month — will be launching next week.

It’s barely been a month since MoviePass announced new pricing plans for 2019. (In the same announcement, MoviePass said Itum would be taking over day-to-day operations, although Mitch Lowe would remain as CEO.) But even the most expensive plan — which costs between $19.95 and $24.95, depending on where you live — was limited to three movie tickets per month.

It’s probably safe to guess the revamped unlimited plan won’t have the old price of $9.99. After all,, the company says it’s looking to break even on the tickets it’s selling — which seems like an obvious business necessity, but the company had previously been in growth-at-all-costs mode.

Itum said MoviePass is no longer pursuing other business models where it makes money by taking a cut of concessions or getting a discount on tickets. It is, however, still working on a “red label” solution where theaters can create their own subscription plans.

In addition, Itum said efforts to rehabilitate MoviePass’ image are starting to pay off, as the company is starting to regain subscribers.

“I feel like we’re turning a corner,” he said.


Source: Tech Crunch