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Good morning, you glorious souls. Have you stretched today? As you're settling in for the newsletter and the top stories from TechCrunch for today, can you grab yourself a glass of water? We care about you, and we want you to be happy! Know any extraordinary early-stage founders? Refer them to Startup Battlefield 200 at Disrupt, and make Neesha very happy in the process. Neesha is rad, and deserves to be happy, so get to referrin' already! — Christine and Haje | | Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch | | |
The TechCrunch Top 3 - Bird, bird, bird is the word: Lots of Twitter news today, so sit back and take it all in. First, Elon Musk confirms what we basically all knew — he bought Twitter because he thought he'd be forced to. Darrell has more on that. Also, Ivan writes that the legacy check mark you have is set to expire on 4/20…we think. We've heard that before, but now some colleagues are seeing them go. And in case you missed it, Amanda reports that NPR leaves Twitter and that Twitter, Inc., has a new name.
- Who's there?: Truecaller is bringing live caller ID to iPhone to its premium tier subscribers, but there's a little bit of work involved on the part of the user. Jagmeet has more.
- Gimme a beat: Music makes everything better, and a new integration with Spotify gives Strava users a soundtrack to their activities, reports Aisha.
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Dear Sophie, I'm trying to figure out how long I have to wait for a green card. I have two questions for you: How many employment green cards in each category are available every year? How do I make sense of the Visa Bulletin? — Standing By in San Jose Three more from the TC+ team: TechCrunch+ is our membership program that helps founders and startup teams get ahead of the pack. You can sign up here. Use code "DC" for a 15% discount on an annual subscription! Read More | | Image Credits: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch | | |
Big Tech Inc. Are we alone in assuming all of you have at least two LinkedIn notifications to connect from someone who hasn't figured out how to add a photo to their profile? Or they could be shielding their identity for other reasons, of course. Either way, you probably want to keep it strictly business on LinkedIn. Well, Aisha writes that LinkedIn rolled out a free feature to verify your identity and employment so that you can tell if it is the actual person. Now, whether or not you want to provide a government ID and phone number to a social media site is your call. Meanwhile, Kyle tells you all about Databricks' new open source model that has a super-cute name, but also some flaws. And we have five more for you: | | | |
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