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Generating TC news with GPT-2

Aug 18th, 2019
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  1. (If you don't understand this: GPT-2 prompts for a phrase and tries to continue it.)
  2.  
  3. [Prompt: "funding"]
  4. s’ 26/“Fitz Frames is planning on giving away pairs of goggles as an homage to the brand, 27/ Stella Brands has revealed it has had an ownership stake in Fitz Frames since 2012 Rex 28/ with Marco Benevento is the birth name of the latest wave of millennial investors Y Combinator 39/ Star Wars Celebration Star Wars Celebration
  5.  
  6. Fitz Frames is currently active on Y Combinator’s fundraising page, raising $15 million in seed funding and several more round funding rounds. Its fourth round is set to be its last, in early 2017, bringing its valuation to between $50 and $100 million, as it attempts to resuscitate the increasingly popular glasses.
  7. Fitz Frames hopes to become a more durable, lightweight option for travel, and is pursuing businesses that share its technology with bring the option of attaching sunglasses to people's feet.
  8. It stems from a game where two friends play jack-of-all-trades, attempting to become the first to have their glasses replaced. While other players in the jack-of-all-trades game have tried to make it to the final round, in which the winner is determined by best results from the next round.
  9. Players toss duct tape over their faces to make room for new glasses, and drop them somewhere cool for future decorating. The game is currently in its fourth season, and said fourth round will be its biggest to date, with all-new glasses added by the day.
  10. A new website is hoping to get around this by giving players a more standardized format for making their purchases. It’s called Lux, and it’s set to’ inspiration’be”ite consumers.
  11. “The way we think about technology is related to 1) what we are able to buy and 2) what we are able to want from the experience. If you have me walk you through the steps of making a new pair of glasses, I promise you that that’s it.” Making new glasses is kind of like making your first pair of shoes, but you can’t replace the pair you got from the size chart on the website. 2) That’s the problem.”
  12. You can probably make the case for creating greater accessibility in the least,” Kiss 101 founder and CEO Gabrielle Esposito tells me.
  13. “There are tons of opportunities out there. From helping you find a bus stop to helping make your child’s doctor
  14.  
  15. [Prompt: "virtual reality"]
  16. “From a physical standpoint I think the physical world is actually kind of the only guide”sarasin” about’ 14 
  17. ” with “little'� to none guidances,” added Binks.
  18. Most of us, by now, are aware that virtual reality (VR) can be a bit heavy for a country like India, where the current model focuses on physically reaching and leaving virtual walls. The problem is that there isn’t much physical speed at which a user can experience a place ‘‘.” That “b’alls of a city are a walk in the park right now, but they often aren’t possible in South Asia, where walking and running are the norm.
  19. Sri Lanka is an alternate model for India, focusing on smaller, backpack-accessible cities that don’t rely on long lines to get by, and are often hard for Asian cities like Japan and the U.S. to get their cities out of the city.
  20. In’hibited by the physical and economic advantages of the Indian subcontinent, Binks is’t seeking funding — and in this day and age of artificial intelligence and artificial deadlines, it’s crucial that governments prioritize proven methods of achieving long-term solutions.
  21. “We need to be able to rely on the cards and the the thesles,’ pondering pal Jain Cheung, co-founder and CEO of DeepMind.
  22. “We need to be able to rely on our bank and have it tell us what’s happening online,’ Cheung said.
  23. In addition to launching treating surroundings as if they were holograms, the founders’ latest approach is also use virtual reality as an alternative to the human brain for assessing long-distance travel. For now, though, the focus is on using virtual reality to help make smarter batteries — and connect-and-disconnect sensors — that our bodies have built into our’ brains.
  24. “The amount of power we have is going to have an effect on the way we do it.” said FitzGerald. “But from a health and security perspective,” said Cheung.
  25. The goal is for the technology to be applied across all healthcare services,” said Feridranco. “Any healthcare organization would like to have accurate healthcare data,” he said. “The problem is that
  26.  
  27. [Prompt: "YC" (YC or Y Combinator is a startup funding company)]
  28. s) latest flagship is also built around a smartphone. In this new space, it’s never been possible to build a functional smartwatch before.
  29. What’s making it difficult for regular people to find their feet in the world of VR — and, ultimately, for jobs in the health and fitness space.
  30. Khan co-founders posted today in The New York Times about their plans for resuming business, they didn’t want to be the first to admit it, but they had a hard time believing what’re up.
  31. “There was a girl we knew who needed a doctor, and she was Asian.” Sheve told TechCrunch. “She received a lot of inquiries about what kind of doctor she should become, and she thought helping’ize” brought to Ireland to meet with­hold a Chinese doctor. Then in 2017, they had a kid, and quickly pared their team to just her one month in a row. Then in June of that year, they had shot a threesome, and it’s only been four months.”
  32. Well, with help from aon Reddit’s Fysh, Justin Wong and Austin Auken as well as Holy Grail, a team led by Binks researchers, they’re building a software language that’s similar to the InAural’s main content delivery system Binks is made of. The team is led by Auken, who returned to the design space after spending two years tinkering with the system at Texas Instruments,” Auken said.
  33. Binks uses two things to the team’s:
  34. A) Framing-bot accuracy — which the Shiru team reports as highly variable, from roughly 50% at launch to below%.”
  35. B) Social media analytics,’ Auken said.”
  36. Binks uses data from more than 100 million users to make estimates on how often a user posts a new post, visits their gallery to download a data model, determines what percentage of a user's interactions are indicative of a link, and decides on a personalized notification.
  37. Binks spends weeks analyzing user video and audio data to make sure that the designs on the walls of the cities it tests are 100% digital depictions of real people.”
  38. From there, Binks sends the results to a JavaScript engine that compiles them into a HTML5-acclaimed virtual city — and delivers it
  39.  
  40. [Prompt: "AI"]
  41. IDV-UVC-4B4A4-9028-952914B2828x/
  42. “There’s a pattern to it. If you’re a young women's studies major, you may have noticed that the studies that were conducted on the ways in and the ‘bodily‍ social  approaches tended to be quite unconventional. In some ways, that’s understandable given the concern raised by “bullying'­ generation’s children that engaging in behavior that might suggest to the contrary was harmful.
  43. That sentiment was first articulated by Y Combinator’s Dalia Sui in a June 2017 article, when she and co-founder Gabriel Sloan “made highly specific “bolded “italia”:
  44. That led directly to Dalia’s thought pill: ClearMind, a new analytic tool that helps business professionals identify and reduce the burden of B2C by providing a checklist that allows them to prioritize efforts that are beneficial for all stakeholders.
  45. Founded in co-founders Istra 's OurActions team in June, ClearMind’s main task is to categorize major B2C disruptions by how often they’re affecting the flow of transactions. The tool’s primary use is to’trick organizations to implement robust anti-money laundering mechanisms,”” Istra tells TechCrunch.
  46. B2B’md” is a network of “10 “department”s’ branches in the U.K., Canada, Germany, Iceland, India, Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, the Philippines, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Hong Kong, and Vietnam. Facing off with industry giants like Coinbase and Trademark Ventures,” Istra says “companies are taking a pragmatic approach to B2B’lation.”
  47. “They’re trying to decide between bringing a mix of middleware that’s effective in your industry and better suited for your startup, and bringing the best features of the best B2B clients.”
  48. While Iwa plans on introducing the”wider scanning infrastructure metering functionality that we’ve been waiting for,” the platform will be able to make money doing unexpected things with a person’s transactions traceable to their birth certificate. The goal, according to the co-founder, is to turn ordinary person’
  49.  
  50. [Prompt: "iOS"]
  51. ’s flagship subscription service. You get $10 off first and a $20 gift card to NVIDIA. Read more
  52.  
  53. ‏Delivery’s stability review is expected to be ready in three weeks.
  54.  
  55. Amazon is nailing some serious functionality to the bad boy before it gets to determining what its optimal delivery network looks like, with the company moving quickly to get that out there.
  56. With delivery afoot, there’s no denying the power of AI in the currentlyvital business of shopping, but the real question isn’t whether AI will be at the center of all of this. The company that founded Cardboard says it has plenty of customers’ in all walks of the consumer electronics and mechanicals business, and they’re willing to sacrifice a little something for something more efficient.
  57. “If you want to reduce the energy use, you have to reduce the labor.” said Star. “That’s it. You can’t do all of the above with one brand of manufacturing and nothing new. But if you want to make the difference between comfort in the bedroom and control your phone the way it is, you need to do something different.”
  58. Cardboard is a new computer vision startup created after itwasmadeloosier thanks to its AI partner. The startup, which was founded after it was discovered that helping AI to more efficiently usefully executes certain AI algorithm’s results wasentiallyrics.me meaning its investors can’t not be inspired.
  59. With market capitalizations aboutinystartecats.com being moved up toaggyearhot.com in an unrelated transaction, for its success, it also received a $10M Series A from Kleiner Perkins.
  60. A landline telemarkyne fromurena also got a raise.
  61. Aurora is a co-working startup that’s launched out of Y Combinator that happens to fall heavily onthe co-working scene. The co-working startup follows a model that firstled to the izzarro success ofnow’s earningway back in 2012. The startup’s technology is based onsupermarket’s only, giving itscenisitation-related legitimacy. In other words,without a doubtisSpecialOrderable for a change, HirvingHimmer co-founded thatwhich vows to サークトレンジャータショール toマスタージアードを同代化 and
  62.  
  63. [Prompt: "big data"]
  64. ’s (or at least its founders') best bets are a mixed bag.
  65. Here’s how it works:
  66.  
  67. You can read more about Blue Origin’s business model here and their commitment to customer value proposition here.
  68.  
  69. [Y Combinator-backed Holy Grail is using machine learning to build better batteries]
  70. For a long, long time, renewable energy proponents have considered advancements in battery technology to be the Holy Grail of the industry.
  71. Advancements in energy storage has been among the hardest to achieve economically, thanks to the incredibly tricky chemistry that’s involved in storing power.
  72. Now, one company that’s launching from Y Combinator believes it has found the key to making batteries better. The company is called Holy Grail and it’s launching in the accelerator’s latest cohort.
  73. With an executive team that initially included Nuno Pereira, David Pervan and Martin Hansen, Holy Grail is trying to bring the techniques of the fabless semiconductor industry to the world of batteries.
  74. The company’s founders believe that the only way to improve battery functionality is to take a systems approach to understanding how different anodes and cathodes will work together. It sounds simple, but Pereira says the computational power hadn’t existed to take into account all of the variables that go along with introducing a new chemical to the battery mix.
  75. “You can’t fix a battery with just a component,” Pereira says. “All of the batteries that were created and failed in the past. They create an anode, but they don’t have a chemical that works with the cathode or the electrolyte.”
  76. For Pereira, the creation of Holy Grail is the latest step on a long road of experimentation with mechanical and chemical engineering. “As a kid I was more interested in mechanical engineering and building stuff,” he says. But as he began tinkering with cars and became fascinated with mobility, he realized that batteries were the innovation that gave the world its charge.
  77. In 2017 Pereira founded a company called 10Xbattery, which was making high-density lithium batteries. That company, launching with what Pereira saw as a better chemistry, encapsulated the industry’s problem at large — the lack of a holistic approach to development.
  78. So, with the help of a now-departed co-founder, Pereira founded Holy Grail. “He essentially
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