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Rebecca Heilweil / Vox:
UK startup Exscientia and a Japanese pharmaceutical firm claim to have created the first human trial-ready drug using AI, which took under a year to develop — An OCD drug created via AI will be tested on humans. — The British startup Exscientia claims it has developed …
Peter Eavis / New York Times:
WeWork names commercial real estate veteran Sandeep Mathrani as its new CEO; SoftBank's Marcelo Claure will continue as WeWork's executive chairman — Sandeep Mathrani, a senior real estate executive, will take over the operator of shared office space, which was on the brink of financial collapse last year.
If WeWork wanted to cement the impression that it no longer strives to be viewed as a tech company but rather as a real estate giant focused on leasing space to millennials and enterprise customers, it would probably choose a veteran from the real estate world.
That’s just what it has done, too, according to a new story from the WSJ that say the company, which was famously forced to pull its initial public offering last fall, has settled on Sandeep Mathrani as its new top banana.
Mathrani, has spent the last 1.5 years as the CEO of Brookfield Properties’ retail group and as a vice chairman of Brookfield Properties. Before joining the Chicago-based company, he spent eight years as the CEO of General Growth Properties. It was one of the largest mall operators in the U.S. until Brookfield acquired it for $9.25 billion in cash in 2018.
Mathrani also spent eight years as an executive vice president with Vornado Realty Trust, a publicly traded real estate company with a market cap of $12.5 billion. (Brookfield is slightly smaller, with a market cap of roughly $8 billion.)
Mathrani will reportedly relocate to New York from Miami, where according to public records, he owns at least one high-rise apartment that he acquired last year.
He’ll be reporting to Marcelo Claure, the SoftBank operating chief who was appointed executive chairman of WeWork in October in order to help salvage what Claure has himself said is at least an $18.5 billion bet on WeWork at this point by SoftBank.
Specifically, Claure told nervous employees at an all-hands meeting shortly after his appointment, “The size of the commitment that SoftBank has made to this company in the past and now is $18.5 billion. To put the things in context, that is bigger than the GDP of my country where I came from [Bolivia]. That’s a country where there’s 11 million people.”
Claure — who earlier spent four years as the CEO of SoftBank-backed Sprint — was reportedly trying to hire T-Mobile CEO John Legere for the CEO’s post. Legere later communicated through sources that he had no plans to leave T-Mobile, yet just days later, in mid-November, Legere, who joined T-Mobile in 2012, announced that he’s stepping down as CEO after all, though he will remain chairman of the company. (According to the Verge, his contract is up April 30.)
Sprint and T-Mobile were expected to merge, though 13 states, led by the attorneys general of New York and California, are suing to block the deal.
Either way, Mathrani is a stark contrast to WeWork’s cofounder and longtime CEO Adam Neumann, who was pressure to resign from the company after his sweeping vision for it as a tech company that would enable customers to seamlessly shift from one WeWork location to another — paying for ever increasing software and services as monthly or yearly subscribers — was met with extreme skepticism by public market investors.
Indeed, though SoftBank marked up the company’s value over a number of private funding rounds to a brow-raising $47 billion, public investors began raising questions about its real value — and WeWork’s governance — as soon as WeWork publicly released the paperwork for its initial public offering.
Between the in-depth look its S-1 provided into the company’s spiraling losses, the degree of control held by Neumann (not fully understood previously), and a series of unflattering reports about his leadership style, including beginning with the WSJ, it didn’t take long before the company was forced to abandon its IPO dreams.
No doubt it’s now Mathrani’s job to eventually resuscitate those.
According to the WSJ, SoftBank has already established a five-year business plan that it expects will get the company to profitability and allow it to be cash-flow positive by some time next year. Part of that plan clearly involved layoffs; it cut 2,400 employees in late November, shortly before the Thanksgiving holiday in the U.S. It has also been selling off companies that were acquired at Neumann’s direction but are seen as non-core assets. What WeWork does not intend to curtail, reportedly, are its efforts to open new locations, even if it acquires them at a slower pace than in previous years.
Kevin Collier / NBC News:
West Virginia governor to sign a bill that would allow voters with physical disabilities to vote via smartphone in 2020, becoming the first US state to do so — Cybersecurity experts have long railed against voting apps, saying that any kind of online voting unnecessarily increases security risks.
Ilya Khrennikov / Bloomberg:
Yandex launches a new online service in Moscow called Lavka, which delivers orders in 15 minutes using bike couriers and small warehouses spread across the city — In Moscow, online orders delivered in just 15 minutes by bicycle signal what the future of shopping may hold.
Manish Singh / TechCrunch:
India-based InterviewBit, which offers an online computer science program and lets its students pay part of the fee after getting a job, raises $20M Series A — InterviewBit, a Bangalore-based startup that runs an advanced online computer science program for college graduates …
If Microsoft Edge is one of the browsers you rely on for surfing on Windows, we recommend adding a few Edge keyboard shortcuts to your workflow. You can discover them all with our cheat sheet below!
The cheat sheet includes shortcuts for navigation, window and tab management, and search. For those of you who use Edge as an eBook and PDF reader, we’ve added shortcuts for navigating pages, switching layouts, and for toggling various toolbars. Plus, there’s a dedicated section covering shortcuts for Developer Tools.
FREE DOWNLOAD: This cheat sheet is available as a downloadable PDF from our distribution partner, TradePub. You will have to complete a short form to access it for the first time only. Download Microsoft Edge Keyboard Shortcuts for Windows.
Shortcut | Action |
---|---|
Search | |
Ctrl + L OR F4 OR Alt + D |
Jump to the address bar |
Ctrl + Shift + L | Start a Bing search, using current clipboard content |
Ctrl + E | Highlight a search query in the address bar |
Ctrl + F OR F3 |
Find on page |
Navigation | |
Alt + Home | Open home page |
Backspace OR Alt + Arrow Left |
Go back |
Alt + Arrow Right | Go forward |
Page Up OR Shift + Space |
Scroll page up |
Page Down OR Space |
Scroll page down |
Ctrl + Home | Scroll to top of page |
Ctrl + End | Scroll to bottom of page |
Ctrl + Tab | Switch to the next tab |
Ctrl + Shift + Tab | Switch to previous tab |
Ctrl + 1,2,3,...,8 | Switch to a specific tab number |
Ctrl + 9 | Switch to last tab |
Ctrl + I | Open Favorites pane |
Ctrl + M | Open Reading List pane |
Ctrl + H | Open History pane |
Ctrl + J | Open Downloads pane |
F7 | Toggle caret browsing |
Click ¹MMB OR ²MMW | Open link in new tab |
Shift + Click ¹MMB OR ²MMW |
Open link in new window |
Windows and Tabs | |
Ctrl + N | Open new window |
Ctrl + Shift + P | Open new InPrivate browsing window |
Ctrl + T | Open new tab |
Ctrl + K | Replicate tab and switch to newly created tab |
Ctrl + Shift + K | Replicate tab and keep current tab active |
Ctrl + click | Open link in new tab |
Ctrl + Shift + click | Open link in new tab and switch to the tab |
Alt + Shift + click | Open link in new window |
Ctrl + Shift + N | Move current tab to new window |
³Ctrl + W | Close current tab |
Ctrl + Shift + T | Open a previously closed tab |
Alt + Spacebar + M | Move Edge window with arrow keys/mouse/touchpad |
Alt + Spacebar + S | Resize window with arrow keys/mouse/touchpad |
Bookmarks | |
Ctrl + D | Add current site to Favorites or Reading List |
Ctrl + Shift + B | Toggle visibility of Favorites Bar |
View/Print | |
Esc | Stop loading the page OR Close sidebar (if open; e.g.: Bookmarks) |
Ctrl + R OR F5 |
Refresh page |
Ctrl + Shift + R | Toggle reading view |
Ctrl + Plus | Zoom in (25%) |
Ctrl + Minus | Zoom out (25%) |
Ctrl + 0 | Reset zoom level |
Ctrl + P | Print current page |
General Shortcuts | |
³Alt + F4 | Quit application |
Alt + X | Open More pane |
F12 OR Ctrl + Shift + I |
Open Developer Tools pane |
F1 | Help |
Using Edge as an eBook Reader | |
Alt + T | Toggle table of contents |
Ctrl + B | Toggle list of bookmarks |
Ctrl + Shift + D | Add or remove bookmark |
Ctrl + Shift + O | Toggle Options |
Ctrl + Shift + Y | Toggle reading bar |
Ctrl + Shift + U | Open Books in the Hub |
Ctrl + Shift + G | Start read aloud |
F11 | Enter or exit full-screen reading |
Left Arrow OR Up Arrow OR Page Up |
Go to next page |
Right Arrow OR Down Arrow OR Page Down |
Go to previous page |
Home | Go to beginning of book |
End | Go to end of book |
Ctrl + F | Search book |
Ctrl + Shift + S | Save book locally (for books not purchased in the Microsoft Store) |
Ctrl + G | Go to page (when the book supports page lists) |
Alt + A | Open Notes panel |
Reading Fixed Layout Books | |
Ctrl + Shift + A | Toggle between "fit to width" and "fit to page" layout |
F8 | Toggle between one-page and two-page layouts |
Reading PDF Documents | |
Ctrl + G | Go to specific page number |
Alt + T | Toggle table of contents |
Ctrl + F | Search document |
Ctrl + Plus (+) OR Ctrl + Minus (-) |
Zoom in/zoom out |
Ctrl + Shift + A | Toggle between "fit to width" and "fit to page" layout |
F8 | Toggle between one-page and two-page layouts |
F9 | Rotate PDF |
F11 | Enter or exit full-screen reading |
Ctrl + Shift + G | Start Read Aloud |
Ctrl + Shift + M | Add notes to PDF books |
Ctrl + Shift + S | Save a copy of the PDF document |
⁴Developer Tools | |
Ctrl + B | Select element (on DOM Explorer tab) |
Ctrl + K | Color picker (on DOM Explorer tab) |
Ctrl + J | Debug just my code (on Debugger tab) |
Ctrl + E | Start/stop profiling to begin a performance session (on Performance, Network, and Memory tabs) |
Ctrl + S | Export as HAR (on Network tab) |
Ctrl + O | Import profiling session (on Performance and Memory tabs) |
Ctrl + S | Export profiling session (on Performance and Memory tabs) |
Ctrl + L | Clear errors, warnings, information (on Performance tab) |
F5 or F8 | Continue (on Debugger tab) |
Hold F5/F8 | Fast Continue (on Debugger tab) |
F11 | Step into (on Debugger tab) |
F12 | Step over (on Debugger tab) |
Shift + F11 | Step out (on Debugger tab) |
Ctrl + Shift + F5 | Continue and refresh (on Debugger tab) |
Ctrl + Shift + I | DOM element highlighting (on DOM Explorer tab) |
Ctrl + Shift + W | Break on new worker (on Debugger tab) |
Ctrl + Shift + E | Change exception behavior (on Debugger tab) |
Ctrl + Shift + T | Take heap snapshot (On Memory tab) |
Ctrl + Shift + L | Reset Emulation settings (On Emulation tab) |
¹Middle Mouse Button ²Middle Mouse Wheel ³Closing last remaining tab quits application. ⁴Associated shortcuts work only in tabs of Developer Tools. |
Not happy with the performance of Microsoft Edge but have to use it anyway? Here’s something you can look forward to—a new Chromium-based version of Edge that promises to be a definite improvement over the current version!
Image Credit: Tadas Sar on Unsplash
Read the full article: Microsoft Edge Keyboard Shortcuts for Windows
Back in 2016, Nutanix decided to take the big step of going public. Part of that process was creating a pitch deck and presenting it during its roadshow, a coming-out party when a company goes on tour prior to its IPO and pitches itself to investors of all stripes.
It’s a huge moment in the life of any company, and after talking to CEO Dheeraj Pandey and CFO Duston Williams, one we better understood. They spoke about how every detail helped define their company and demonstrate its long-term investment value to investors who might not have been entirely familiar with the startup or its technology.
Pandey and Williams reported going through more than 100 versions of the deck before they finished the one they took on the road. Pandey said they had a data room checking every fact, every number — which they then checked yet again.
In a separate Extra Crunch post, we looked at the process of building that deck. Today, we’re looking more closely at the content of the deck itself, especially the numbers Nutanix presented to the world. We want to see what investors did more than three years ago and what’s happened since — did the company live up to its promises?
Welcome back to This Week in Apps, the Extra Crunch series that recaps the latest OS news, the applications they support and the money that flows through it all.
The app industry is as hot as ever with a record 204 billion downloads in 2019 and $120 billion in consumer spending in 2019, according to App Annie’s recently released “State of Mobile” annual report. People are now spending 3 hours and 40 minutes per day using apps, rivaling TV. Apps aren’t just a way to pass idle hours — they’re a big business. In 2019, mobile-first companies had a combined $544 billion valuation, 6.5x higher than those without a mobile focus.
In this Extra Crunch series, we help you keep up with the latest news from the world of apps, delivered on a weekly basis.
This week, Apple released earnings and gave us hints about the power of its wearables market. Congress as begun investigating top dating apps. Google’s App Maker announced a shutdown is coming. The iPad turned 10 and people discussed where it’s going wrong.
We also take a look at Byte, the so-called Vine reboot. I’m not impressed. Not only did Byte launch with a comment spam problem, including pornbots, it’s also heavily filled with adult and sometimes dark humor. This includes videos featuring dick jokes, sex toys, drugs and jokes about child abuse, despite a 12+ age rating and many users who appear to be children.
Tom Simonite / Wired:
A look at a secretive team of quantum researchers at Alphabet's X, who are focused on creating new algorithms and applications to run on quantum computers — Google's parent touted its quantum supremacy achievement last year. It doesn't talk about a group at X working on software.
Doubtnut, a Gurgaon-based startup that operates an app to help students learn and master concepts from math and science using short videos, has raised $15 million in a new financing round as it looks to serve more people in small cities and towns of the country.
The financing round, Series A, was led by Chinese giant Tencent. Existing investors Omidyar Network India, AET, Japan and Ankit Nagori (founder of fitness startup Cure.Fit), and Sequoia Capital India also participated in the round, the two-year-old startup said.
Doubtnut, part of Sequoia Capital India’s Surge accelerator, has raised $18.5 million to date, and its new financing round valued it at about $50 million, a person familiar with the matter said.
The app allows students from sixth grade to high-school solve and understand math and science problems in local languages. Doubtnut app allows them to take a picture of the problem, and uses machine learning and image recognition to deliver their answers through short-videos.
A student can take a picture of the problem, and share it with Doubtnut through its app, website, or WhatsApp and get a short video that shows the answer and walks them through the procedure to tackle it.
Doubtnut said it has amassed over 13 million monthly active users across its website, app, YouTube, and WhatsApp. More than 85% of Doubtnut users today come from outside of the top 10 cities in India, said Tanushree Nagori, co-founder of Doubtnut. She said that more than half of these students have come online in the last one year.
“Doubtnut is truly democratizing education across India. Our user base reflects the entire demography of India, something which no other education app in the country has come close to achieving,” she said.
The growth of Doubtnut represents the emergence of a wave of startups in India that are tackling local challenges. In the education space alone, a number of players including Byju’s, which is now valued at $8 billion, Unacademy, Vedanutu, and GradeUp have shown impressive growth.
Gaurav Munjal, founder and chief executive of Unacademy, said on Saturday that his startup’s one-year-old premium offering had clocked $30 million in revenue.
Josh Constine / TechCrunch:
Behind the revival of Dubsmash, an app that lets users post lip sync and dance videos that now has 27% of the US short-form video market share by installs — The loud app that quietly hit 1 billion monthly views — Lip-syncing app Dubsmash was on the brink of death.
Jason Snell / Six Colors:
Apple's performance in 2019 across hardware, software, and services is rated and critiqued by a 65-person panel, including writers, developers, and podcasters — It's time for our annual look back on Apple's performance during the past year, as seen through the eyes of writers, editors …
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