Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

From Svedka to Anthropic, Brands Are Making Bold Plays With AI in Super Bowl Ads

Accel doubles down on Fibr AI as agents turn static websites into one-to-one experiences

SNAK Venture Partners raises $50 million in capital to support vertical acquisitions

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    Benchmark raises $225 million in dedicated funds to double Cerebras

    7 February 2026

    How artificial intelligence is helping to solve the labor issue in treating rare diseases

    6 February 2026

    Amazon and Google are winning the AI ​​capital race — but what’s the prize?

    6 February 2026

    AWS revenue continues to grow as cloud demand remains high

    5 February 2026

    Sam Altman tested Claude’s Super Bowl commercials brilliantly

    5 February 2026
  • Apps

    EU says TikTok must disable ‘addictive’ features like infinite scrolling, fix recommendation engine

    7 February 2026

    Here’s how Roblox’s age controls work

    6 February 2026

    Meta is testing a standalone app for its AI-generated ‘Vibes’ videos

    6 February 2026

    Reddit sees AI search as the next big opportunity

    5 February 2026

    Tinder looks to AI to help fight dating app ‘fatigue’ and burnout

    5 February 2026
  • Crypto

    Hackers stole over $2.7 billion in crypto in 2025, data shows

    23 December 2025

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025

    Why Benchmark Made a Rare Crypto Bet on Trading App Fomo, with $17M Series A

    6 November 2025

    Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko is a big fan of agentic coding

    30 October 2025

    MoviePass opens Mogul fantasy league game to the public

    29 October 2025
  • Fintech

    Stripe Alumni Raise €30M Series A for Duna, Backed by Stripe and Adyen Executives

    5 February 2026

    Fintech CEO and Forbes 30 Under 30 alum indicted for alleged fraud

    3 February 2026

    How Sequoia-backed Ethos went public while rivals lagged behind

    30 January 2026

    5 days left for TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 +1 pass with 50%

    26 January 2026

    50% off +1 ends | TechCrunch

    23 January 2026
  • Hardware

    Kindle Scribe Colorsoft is an expensive but beautiful color e-ink tablet with AI features

    6 February 2026

    Ring brings “Search Party” feature for finding lost dogs to non-Ring camera owners

    2 February 2026

    India offers zero taxes till 2047 to attract global AI workloads

    1 February 2026

    Microsoft won’t stop buying AI chips from Nvidia, AMD even after its own is released, says Nadella

    30 January 2026

    The iPhone just had its best quarter ever

    30 January 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    From Svedka to Anthropic, Brands Are Making Bold Plays With AI in Super Bowl Ads

    7 February 2026

    “Industry” Season 4 captures tech fraud better than any show on TV right now

    7 February 2026

    Spotify’s new feature lets you explore the story behind the song you’re listening to

    6 February 2026

    The Washington Post retreats from Silicon Valley when it matters most

    6 February 2026

    Spotify is in the business of selling books and adding new audiobook features

    5 February 2026
  • Security

    Senator, who has repeatedly warned of secret US government surveillance, raises new alarm over ‘CIA activities’

    7 February 2026

    Substack confirms that the data breach affects users’ email addresses and phone numbers

    6 February 2026

    One of Europe’s biggest universities was offline for days after the cyber attack

    6 February 2026

    Cyber ​​tech giant Conduent’s hot air balloon data breach affects millions more Americans

    5 February 2026

    Hackers Release Personal Information Stolen During Harvard, UPenn Data Breach

    5 February 2026
  • Startups

    Accel doubles down on Fibr AI as agents turn static websites into one-to-one experiences

    7 February 2026

    ElevenLabs Raises $500M From Sequoia At $11B Valuation

    7 February 2026

    Fundamental raises $255 million in Series A with a new approach to big data analytics

    6 February 2026

    a16z VC wants founders to stop stressing about crazy ARR numbers

    6 February 2026

    Lunar Energy raises $232 million to develop home batteries that support the grid

    5 February 2026
  • Transportation

    Prince Andrew’s adviser suggested Jeffrey Epstein invest in EV startups like Lucid Motors

    7 February 2026

    Apeiron Labs Takes $9.5M to Flood Oceans with Autonomous Underwater Robots

    5 February 2026

    Uber appoints new CFO as its AV plans accelerate

    5 February 2026

    Skyryse lands another $300 million to make flying, even helicopters, simple and safe

    4 February 2026

    China is leading the fight against hidden car door handles

    3 February 2026
  • Venture

    SNAK Venture Partners raises $50 million in capital to support vertical acquisitions

    7 February 2026

    Reddit says it’s looking for more acquisitions in adtech and elsewhere

    7 February 2026

    Secondary sales are shifting from founders’ windfalls to employee retention tools

    6 February 2026

    Sapiom Raises $15M to Help AI Agents Buy Their Own Tech Tools

    6 February 2026

    What a16z actually funds (and what it ignores) when it comes to AI infra

    5 February 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Startups»The era of face-worn computers
Startups

The era of face-worn computers

techtost.comBy techtost.com10 February 202408 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
The Era Of Face Worn Computers
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Welcome to Startups Weekly — your weekly roundup of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Sign up here to receive it in your inbox every Friday.

Holy hell, how is it Friday again? It feels like just yesterday I wrote one of these newsletters. There’s been a ton of exciting moves in the startup world, though: Some highs, some lows, some drama, and some fun new trends.

My big contribution this week was a deep dive into the world of crowdfunding — and whether you should use it to raise money for your startup.

Ok, so what else happened this week. . .

The most interesting startup story

Image Credits: Cory Green/Yahoo

Okay, so my newsletter is called Startups Weekly, but I want to dedicate a piece of it to Apple. Why; Because, as I wrote last year, I think Apple’s Vision Pro will be a huge game changer for startups.

We finally got our hands on Apple’s face-worn computer. And, what can we say, it’s pretty amazing.

Brian spent an hour with the Apple Vision Pro in January, then blogged his heart out as the Vision Pro finally arrived at his home, in a fascinating (and often hilarious) series of posts covering the first and second days in in-depth review that concludes it’s the best consumer headset out there, where it hopes the current experience will feel dated a generation or two down the road. Although, there is a strong use case right now, in the form of immersive attention.

However, there is an opportunity here, especially in business.

600 apps at your fingertips: Developers are rapidly preparing more than 600 new apps and games, joining more than 1 million apps compatible with iOS and iPadOS. This surge in app development comes in the face of concerns about developer interest due to Apple’s controversial compliance with the EU’s digital markets law.

Without YouTube app: With the launch of the Apple Vision Pro headphones, a third-party developer is taking on the YouTube app void with Juno, a $5 one-time purchase app that leverages YouTube’s built-in API for a native experience. The app offers features such as resizable windows and playback controls, with plans for further improvements.

Reasons to be excited: Lauren and Ivan have rounded up some of the visionOS apps from smaller developers that users can try out when their headsets arrive.

The most interesting fundraisers this week

Utility worker repairing power lines under a blue sky

Image Credits: Getty Images/pkfawcett

In a world where throwing food into landfills seems as American as apple pie, startups are mushrooming to address the absurdity of food waste. Enter ProducePay, which decided enough was enough. With a mission that honestly sounds more like a superhero vow than a business plan, ProducePay aims to wrestle with the chaos of the fresh produce supply chain. Armed with $38 million from its latest round of funding, it’s about to take its global crusade. Because, really, in the face of a planet where throwing food is a hobby, what’s a few million dollars between friends? Let’s hope their plan doesn’t rot on the vine.

Oh, how the mighty rivers of VC cash have dried up for cybersecurity startups. After a deluge of 2021 that saw $23 billion accidentally drop into the sector, 2023 saw these startups cover less than a third of that. Going against the grain of the financial drought, NinjaOne takes $230 million in Series C funding like it’s no big deal. Apparently, they weren’t even trying – investors just couldn’t resist throwing money at them. With this round, NinjaOne’s valuation reached $1.9 billion. In a world where cash is king, NinjaOne is grinning all the way to the bank, planning to splash some of that VC gold to expand its empire and make IT headaches a thing of the past.

A handful more:

It is electrified: Armed with a new $20 million and a dream to make fusion power much simpler, Thea Energy is betting big on software that will do the heavy lifting. Forget the expensive manufacturing of magnets. Thea’s plan is to play puppeteer creature with some clever coding.

Transformation, er, transformers: On the power grid, transformers have been dutifully plying their trade on ponies since the 1800s. Enter Amperesand, rocking a $12.5 million ring, ready to drag these guardians of the grid into the 21st century with solid-state technology.

Bitcoin on the exchange: We asked TechCrunch readers if they intended to buy bitcoin through one of the new spot ETFs, if they held bitcoin elsewhere, and what impact they expected these new investment vehicles to have on its value and on crypto.

This week’s big trend: It’s all social, all the time

Snap Pixy Drone

Image Credits: Snap Inc.

I enjoyed Sarah’s breakdown this week of what’s happening on Twitter. In the wake of Twitter’s identity crisis under Elon Musk, the social media landscape is blooming with alternatives like Mastodon, Bluesky and Meta’s Threads, creating a buffet of short-post platforms. It’s a golden age for X (formerly Twitter) leavers, but a headache for early adopters using half a dozen apps. Amid this chaos, Tapestry and other aggregators aim to become the Marie Kondo of social media, promising to tidy up our digital mess with a unified app. Good luck with that in a world where even concentrators need concentration.

There has been a lot of activity in the social media startup world over the past couple of weeks. Perhaps most notably, Bluesky reaches for the sky. After nearly a year as an invite-only app, Bluesky, funded by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, has opened up to the public, positioning itself as a promising microblogging platform. Bluesky is differentiated by its decentralized infrastructure, the AT Protocol, which is open source, allowing transparency and the opportunity for developers to build on it. As the platform opens up to the public, its CEO faces its biggest challenge yet as the platform gained nearly a million new users overnight.

As Bluesky opens, Meta’s Facebook goes the other way. Meta’s announcement to end its Facebook Groups API has sent shockwaves through businesses and social media marketers, marking a major shift in its operating philosophy. The shutdown is bad news for many startups building API tools. It’s another reminder to build a company, not a feature.

X, the Twitter genus, got a huge boost this week after Tucker Carlson’s announcement of his interview with Vladimir Putin sent the X app to the top of the US App Store, surpassing Instagram threads. The interview, Putin’s first with a Western media outlet since the invasion of Ukraine, is seen as a strategic move by Putin to reach a wider, potentially sympathetic audience through Carlson, known for his controversial positions.

Other tweet-sized social media news from this week:

Oh snapshot: Snap is doing the corporate shuffle again, shedding 10% of its workforce to “support growth,” which appears to be a corporate “we’re not making enough money.” This follow-up to last year’s layoff saga features a tab of $55 million to $75 million in layoffs and a side of downsizing. Meanwhile, Snap’s hardware adventures are falling harder than a Pixy drone in a recall.

Leave it: Meta is stepping up its anti-campaign game with new updates and a global awareness campaign. The company is promoting the Take It Down tool, which helps teens remove non-consensual personal images from the internet. This initiative allows users to create a digital fingerprint of the image without sharing the actual content.

TikTok on the rise: The Pew Research Center has once again shared its two-year look at America’s social media closet, revealing—to no one’s surprise—that platforms rise and fall like the tides. This year, they found the shocking news that TikTok exists, BeReal is almost unexpected, and Facebook somehow still clings to relevance like a cat on a screen door.

Other TechCrunch stories not to be missed. . .

Each week, there are always a few stories I want to share with you that don’t fit into the above categories. It would be a shame if you missed them, so here’s a random goodie bag for you:

Baby Rivian: Rivian is set to launch the R2, an affordable electric SUV, at a spectacular Laguna Beach event. Despite their current financial hemorrhaging, they are betting big on this cheaper route to eventually turn a profit. Just don’t hold your breath. it won’t hit the streets until 2026.

New phone that has: Okta is playing the layoff game again, axing 400 souls (7% of its crew) in an attempt to transform itself into a profitable unicorn. Despite earning cash on 21% revenue growth, they’re still on a cost-cutting spree. Global employees are biting their nails, waiting for the dreaded email. Meanwhile, Proofpoint is also entering the layoff league. Hard times in the tech city continue. . .

Thank God, browsing yourself is so tiring: Arc Browser is on a mission to dethrone Google by creating an AI that retrieves web content directly, bypassing the middleman of the search engine. With new tools like “browse for me” and “instant links”, it streamlines the search process, aiming to serve the internet on a silver platter.

This worked perfectly last time: Adam Neumann, the controversial former CEO of WeWork, is eyeing a dramatic comeback by attempting to buy the bankrupt co-working space giant.

Water good idea: Water filtration titan Brita has acquired Larq, the Bay Area innovator behind smart water bottles. Larq’s journey from a niche online brand to a key player in Brita’s global strategy highlights the evolving landscape of consumer goods in the digital age.

apple computers era faceworn newsletter Redundancies startups Startups Weekly vision pro
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleWhy a B2B startup is betting on a $7 million Super Bowl ad
Next Article The “World’s Biggest Casino” app exposed customers’ personal data
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Accel doubles down on Fibr AI as agents turn static websites into one-to-one experiences

7 February 2026

SNAK Venture Partners raises $50 million in capital to support vertical acquisitions

7 February 2026

ElevenLabs Raises $500M From Sequoia At $11B Valuation

7 February 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

From Svedka to Anthropic, Brands Are Making Bold Plays With AI in Super Bowl Ads

7 February 2026

Accel doubles down on Fibr AI as agents turn static websites into one-to-one experiences

7 February 2026

SNAK Venture Partners raises $50 million in capital to support vertical acquisitions

7 February 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

Stripe Alumni Raise €30M Series A for Duna, Backed by Stripe and Adyen Executives

5 February 2026

Fintech CEO and Forbes 30 Under 30 alum indicted for alleged fraud

3 February 2026

How Sequoia-backed Ethos went public while rivals lagged behind

30 January 2026
Startups

Accel doubles down on Fibr AI as agents turn static websites into one-to-one experiences

ElevenLabs Raises $500M From Sequoia At $11B Valuation

Fundamental raises $255 million in Series A with a new approach to big data analytics

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.