Friday 31 December 2021

5 things in tech you need to know today

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10 THINGS IN TECH YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

Welcome back! We're changing things up as we close out the year. This week, some of Insider's tech editors are sharing five of their top stories of 2021. We'll be back in action on Monday. Happy New Year!


Hello! I'm Tekendra Parmar, Insider's tech editor for freelancers and contributors. I work with some of the most dogged freelancers and thought-provoking columnists in the tech world to enhance the incredible reporting of our tech team here at Insider. 

While I'm one of the newest members of our growing team (I've officially been here since August), I'm excited to share with you some of the most riveting tech reporting this team has done during this past year. 


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Jin Pak, right, a 3D data specialist, celebrates a table tennis win at Google's Boulder offices on Tuesday afternoon. After working all day at their computers, Google employees can unwind with a climbing wall, video games, table tennis, and massage.

1. The golden age of Silicon Valley's iconic perks is over — but that may not be a bad thing. For years, Silicon Valley's offices have been decked out with rock climbing walls, on-site laundry services, and gourmet cafeterias, perks that were used to increase worker productivity. But with many companies working remotely indefinitely, the loss of these perks is shifting tech worker's perspectives on work-life balance and job satisfaction.

2. Lambda School promised a fast and cheap path to a lucrative tech career. Leaked documents and former students cast doubt on that claim. Coding bootcamps pitch themselves as a low-cost way to break into a lucrative job in tech — but the leaked documents suggest this popular coding bootcamp was being disingenuous about its 74% job placement rate. Everything we learned from the leak. 

3. Mark Zuckerberg's oceanfront KauaŹ»i estate has reignited anger over two centuries of Native Hawaiians being forced off their land. Tech billionaire Mark Zuckerberg's 1,380-acre property in Hawaii is reigniting old tensions over indigenous land rights on the island. We examined how he used a series of shell companies and lawsuits to amass his private paradise. Check it out here.

4. The biggest coding bootcamps may exaggerate their success rates — here's how to choose one that will actually get you a job. While many big bootcamps might be exaggerating their student's success records, a coding bootcamp may still be a worthwhile educational opportunity if you can find the right one. We spoke with industry and educational experts about how to choose one that will actually get you a job.

5. Documents reveal how the Peter Thiel-backed startup Anduril is building a virtual border wall for the Biden administration. The Biden administration is relying on AI, machine-learning, and an army of data labelers under NDAs to surveil the United States border with Mexico. What we know about Anduril's role in a virtual border wall. 


Written by Tekendra Parmar. Follow @TekendraParmar on Twitter or email him at tparmar@insider.com. Edited by Jordan Parker Erb.

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Wednesday 29 December 2021

5 things in tech you need to know today

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10 THINGS IN TECH YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

Welcome back! We're changing things up as we close out the year. This week, some of Insider's tech editors are sharing five of their top stories of 2021. We'll be back in regular action next week. 


Hi! I'm Julie Bort, a deputy editor overseeing a team of reporters that covers startups and the venture capital industry. It's a world filled with everything from inspirational stories of people achieving success against all odds to wrongdoing to the delightful silliness that could only happen in a place like Silicon Valley.

2021 was a record-breaking year for venture capital, so it was painful to have to shave my favorite big stories of the year down to just a few — but I braved it to come up with this list. 


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hair on the deal term sheet 4x3

1. Startup founders, VCs, and lawyers open up about the dark world of dirty term sheets. Underneath the headlines about huge sums of money obtained by unicorn startups is a world where founders fall trap to shady practices and shrewd investors screw them over. Our investigation uncovered what some investors don't want founders to know.

2. We named the 100 best early-stage VCs. There are thousands of seed investors. So our Seed 100 list used exclusive research from firm Tribe Capital to determine the most effective ones over time. Here's how we adapted its model for our exclusive Seed 100 inaugural list.

3. Mailchimp employees told us how angry they were when their company was sold for a whopping $12 billion. Unlike a typical startup, Mailchimp employees didn't get equity as part of their pay — in part because the founders told them they would never sell. Employees described how they fumed while the founders pocketed billions.

4. Black angel investors are changing the tech industry. Black tech founders and execs aren't trying to change traditional venture firms to be more inclusive. Instead, they are creating their own investing ecosystem —  not just in Silicon Valley, but nationwide. Our exclusive report details the rise of Black angel investors.

5. Spring Health's founder led a fast-paced culture that caused employee panic. Employees at the mental health startup, run by a 29-year-old founder CEO, said they began questioning if they really needed to subject themselves to the grind of startup hustle culture. Here, employees describe their experiences at Spring Health.


Written by Julie Bort. Follow Julie Bort on Twitter @Julie188, or email her at jbort@insider.com. Edited by Jordan Parker Erb.

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Thursday 23 December 2021

10 things in tech you need to know today

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10 THINGS IN TECH YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

A packing station inside an Amazon warehouse in Germany.

Happy Thursday, readers! There will be no newsletter tomorrow morning, as we take a break for the holidays. But we'll be back in your inboxes on Monday with a week of special editions.

Now, let's dive in.


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1. Amazon is putting a cap on its take-home COVID-19 tests. The online retailer started limiting the number of at-home COVID tests shoppers can purchase as the Omicron surge spurred shortages. Walgreens and CVS previously limited purchases, too. 


In other news:

Tik Tok app

2. TikTok got more traffic than Google in 2021. The short-form video app jumped from the eighth most popular website in 2020 to the top spot this year, surpassing even Google. More on TikTok's meteoric rise.

3. Shopify is rolling out "Gift Shop," a new curated marketplace. The quiet new release pushes Shopify into Amazon's turf, as both sport many similar features. Users can browse through hand-picked collections and send items as gifts. The custom gift link feature is intended to be one of the main selling points.

4. OnlyFans has a new CEO. The company's founder Tim Stokely unexpectedly stepped down this week. He'll be replaced by Amrapali Gan, the company's chief marketing and communications officer, whose first job was marketing the "first cannabis restaurant in the US." Meet OnlyFans' new CEO.

5. Waze's chief product officer has left the Google-owned company after multiple employees accused the executive of sexual misconduct. He had announced his resignation from the company in September, but Google terminated his employment early after conducting an investigation. Read our full report here.

6. The government is investigating Tesla letting people play video games while driving. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration opened a probe into Tesla's "Passenger Play" feature, which allows drivers to play video games on the cars' touchscreens while in motion. What we know about the investigation so far. 

7. We kept track of Google's biggest hires and departures of 2021. A total of 15 top executives left Google — including its health chief, a top Cloud VP, and the CEO of Waymo — while 11 more joined. Meet the most important people who joined and left Google this year. 

8. The mysterious winning bidder of a $28 million seat on a Blue Origin rocket just revealed himself. Tech and crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun said on Twitter he was the winning bidder for Blue Origin's auction for its first space tourism flight. He plans to go to space with Jeff Bezos next year. Here's what we know about Sun.

9. Instacart is testing a robotic "warehouse on wheels" as it looks to challenge ultrafast delivery players. Insider reviewed leaked documents and discovered new sidewalk robots meant to save on real-estate costs and complete rapid grocery deliveries. See how these so-called floating warehouses on wheels work.

10. Elon Musk has reportedly been staying in a $12 million Austin estate. While Musk boasts of living in a $50,000 home near his SpaceX site, the Wall Street Journal reported he's been staying at a waterfront property, owned by a "PayPal Mafia" member, for about a year. What we know about the property.


Curated by Jordan Parker Erb and Phil Rosen in New York. Edited by Michael Cogley in London.

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Wednesday 22 December 2021

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Tuesday 21 December 2021

10 things in tech you need to know today

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10 THINGS IN TECH YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

Hi there. Oracle is buying medical-records giant Cerner, and SpaceX is launching human muscle cells into space. 

Let's get to it.


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Larry Ellison, Oracle's founder.

1. Oracle is buying medical-records giant Cerner. The $28 billion deal — which is nearly twice as big as Microsoft's $16 billion bid for Nuance Communications — dwarfs a lot of the work tech giants have done in the healthcare industry.

  • Oracle has been leaning into cloud as a major growth strategy, and buying the country's second-largest electronic medical record company gives Oracle a foothold into a mostly new market.
  • But some investors have been seeing red flags, including that Cerner isn't growing very quickly and healthcare isn't rapidly migrating to the cloud.
  • We spoke with analysts, consultants, a former Cerner employee, venture capitalists, doctors, and health system administrators, who said it's unclear whether the deal will transform healthcare. 

Here's what else experts told us.


In other news:

Google logo on a building

2. Google is under investigation in California for the way it treats Black women workers. Emails reviewed by Reuters showed the Department of Fair Employment and Housing is probing alleged harassment and discrimination of Black women. What we know so far.

3. What happens when billionaires die? We examined the fortunes of America's 12 richest people to determine who will benefit when they pass — and the disputes that could erupt between them — as well as the impact their deaths will have on their empires. From Warren Buffett to Jeff Bezos to Elon Musk, here's what'll happen when they die.

4. Elon Musk said he will pay more than $11 billion in taxes this year. The Tesla CEO, who in the past has legally paid very little compared to his wealth, has been exercising a large number of Tesla share options this year and must pay tax on them. We explain how much he could owe and why.

5. America wants to make its own chips again. Politicians and businesses say the solution to the ongoing microchip shortage is to make them in the United States, but the factories are eye-poppingly expensive and come with a hefty environmental cost. We dive into whether or not US chip production is actually sensible.

6. We mapped out how an Amazon package gets from the factory to your front door. With Amazon in the midst of its peak delivery season, we explain how your packages get to you — whether it be by truck, train, or barge. See the journey an Amazon package takes to arrive on your doorstep.

7. A laid-off administrative assistant got her first tech job through an Amazon training program. The former MIT employee took part in a boot-camp-style cloud training from Amazon Web Services, which is targeted to underrepresented or unemployed people — and that wants to train 29 million more cloud experts by 2025. Here's how the free training works.

8. Better CEO Vishal Garg wanted to give laid-off employees only one week of severance pay. Current and former employees told us that other Better execs pushed for periods of two months or 10 weeks, and even walked out of the discussion over the size of Garg's proposed package. What we know about Better's severance packages.

9. SpaceX is launching human muscle cells into space. The mission is part of a study by UK researchers who want to understand why muscles get weaker as people age. How this could help us understand the effects of aging.

10. Instagram wants to bring NFTs to its social platform. As its parent company, Meta, goes all-in on the metaverse, Instagram is looking for a way to bring NFTs to a wider audience. Here's what the company's CEO said about the endeavor.


What we're watching today:

  • Vodafone is auctioning the first text message ever as an NFT. Sent in 1992, the text reads "MERRY CHRISTMAS."
  • SpaceX is launching its 24th commercial resupply mission to the International Space Station.

Curated by Jordan Parker Erb in New York. (Feedback or tips? Email jerb@insider.com or tweet @jordanparkererb.) Edited by Michael Cogley in London.

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