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Apple says the coronavirus outbreak will hurt its manufacturing and sales, Jeff Bezos makes a big commitment to fighting climate change and SpaceX launches more Starlink satellites. Here’s your Daily Crunch for February 18, 2020. | | | |
In a letter to investors, Apple said that it "do[es] not expect to meet the revenue guidance we provided for the March quarter" due to impacts stemming from the coronavirus that has shuttered large parts of China, and is reverberating through the global economy. As China's return to work has proved halting, and the coronavirus itself more intractable than some anticipated, the company's change in guidance is almost unsurprising — but that hasn’t stopped Apple’s stock price from falling this morning. Read more | | Image Credits: Getty Images | | |
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Jeff Bezos announced on Instagram that he's creating a $10 billion fund to combat climate change. He said the Bezos Earth Fund will finance "scientists, activists, NGOs — any effort that offers a real possibility to help preserve and protect the natural world." Read more | | | |
SpaceX has launched a batch of 60 Starlink satellites into orbit, marking its fifth overall launch of a group of 60 of the small spacecraft, and its third this year alone. This launch brings the total Starlink constellation to 300 satellites in orbit, extending SpaceX's lead as the largest commercial satellite operator in the world. Read more | | | | |
Oddly, Redbox Free Live TV isn’t live at all — at least, not in the way that you’d get with a TV streaming service like YouTube TV or Hulu with Live TV. Instead, it offers a curated set of ad-supported movies and TV shows, similar to The Roku Channel, IMDb TV or TiVo Plus. Read more | | | |
The co-founders of video startup Trash take a deep dive into the TikTok ecosystem, particularly its extensive content moderation. (Extra Crunch membership required.) Read more | | Image Credits: SOPA Images / Getty Images | | |
The London-headquartered VC firm's previous fund closed at $765 million, so this is an increase over three years ago. However, the remit remains largely the same. Atomico says it plans to double down on its strategy of backing "mission-driven" European founders at Series A, but with the ability to invest in what it calls "breakout" companies at the Series B and C stage. Read more | | | |
At its most basic level, it's like Drybar — with a menu of styles — but for women of color. On the tech side, Naza's software functions as a booking and payments platform, which also learns the styles of each customer and then makes product recommendations. Read more | | | |
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