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Thursday, 5 March 2020
How to watch UFC 248: Israel Adesanya vs. Yoel Romero with ESPN+ pay-per-view
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Easily haul your winter gear with the best ski racks and snowboard carriers
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The best cheap gaming chair deals for March 2020: Corsair and GT Omega
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How to record your computer screen
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When Voyager 2 Calls Home, Earth Soon Won’t Be Able to Answer
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Apple reportedly warns stores of iPhone replacement shortages
IBM stops all domestic travel for internal meetings due to coronavirus
IBM announced Wednesday that it’s halting all domestic travel for internal meetings and cutting down on international travel because of the ongoing coronavirus outbreak. The company is also banning employee participation in external events with more than 1,000 attendees. IBM says those restrictions apply through the end of March.
IBM is also changing its IBM Think 2020 developer conference into a “digital-first” event, though the conference will still place from May 5th to May 7th. Domestic travel for work with clients is still allowed, but the company is encouraging employees to hold meetings virtually when possible.
Canceling conferences, or making them virtual,...
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Australian House committee recommends age verification for porn and loot box access
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Samsung to supply 5G network solutions to Spark New Zealand
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Browsers to block access to HTTPS sites using TLS 1.0 and 1.1 starting this month
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TPG reports steady revenue for first half
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Former NSW Liberal Premier Mike Baird leaves customer chief role at NAB
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Boosted lays off ‘a significant portion’ of team as it looks for a buyer
Boosted, the startup behind the Boosted Boards and, more recently, the Boosted Rev electric scooter, has laid off “a significant portion” of its team, the company announced today. The company is now actively seeking a buyer.
Boosted attributes the layoffs to the costs of developing, producing and maintaining electric vehicles and the “unplanned challenge with the high expense of the US-China tariff war,” Boosted CEO Jeff Russakow and CTO John Ulmen wrote in a blog post.
“The Boosted brand will continue to pursue strategic options under new ownership,” they wrote.
Boosted, which got its start back in 2012, made its first foray outside of electric skateboards last year with the launch of an electric scooter. Boosted says more than 100,000 riders have traveled tens of millions of miles on the company’s vehicles.
“We are extremely proud of what our company has accomplished, and gratified to see so many happy customers riding their Boosted vehicles every day,” Russakow and Ulmen wrote.
This perhaps should not come as a surprise. For starters, micromobility is a hard business — one that no company can confidently say it has cracked. Meanwhile, The Verge reported earlier this month that the company was at risk of running out of money. On top of that, Boosted reportedly struggled to pay its vendors for the electric scooter.
“To Boosted’s customers and community, we’d like to thank you for your passionate support and encouragement over the last nine years,” Ulmen and Russakow wrote. “It’s been the thrill of our lives to spend time with you and help shape the future of mobility together. To the Boosted team, you made this company a special place, created multiple generations of incredibly innovative products, and created a compelling global brand; thank you so much for your hard work and dedication over the years.”
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5 best standing desk converters for 2020 - CNET
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iPhone replacement parts are in short supply and Apple's partly to blame
NASA will reveal the name of its Mars 2020 rover live on Thursday - CNET
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Nokia and Ericsson pitch themselves as Huawei 5G alternative - CNET
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Apple stores have a shortage of replacement parts due to coronavirus
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Take advantage of Amazon's Pantry delivery service to order household staples to your door - CNET
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Google Stadia review: The revolution isn’t now
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Audible will create the only audio version of Neil Gaiman's 'The Sandman'
Quibi has raised close to $2 billion, and it hasn’t even launched yet
Video streaming service Quibi, which will debut next month, has raised another $750 million in funding, according to the Wall Street Journal. That brings the total investment in an app hardly anyone’s seen to $1.75 billion.
The company didn’t name the recent investors. And $400 million of that $750 million was raised at the end of 2019, the Journal reports. It’s a sign that investors are feeling confident about Quibi’s chances of succeeding in a quickly-growing space — and that confidence may have to do with founder Jeffrey Katzenberg. As Fox Corporation CEO Lachlan Murdoch told The Hollywood Reporter in October 2019, “If anyone can make it work, it’s Jeffrey.”
(Disclosure: Vox Media, which owns The Verge, has a deal with Quibi to...
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