Today’s Deals – Zipline raises $25 million to deliver medical supplies by drone

zipline8 Zipline International Inc. has raised $25 million in a Series B funding round to expand its humanitarian delivery drone business in Rwanda, the U.S. and beyond.
The startup builds drones and runs delivery services, dropping crucial medical supplies, like blood, vaccines, or antibiotics to clinics in areas that aren’t accessible by land.
Recently, TechCrunch visited… Read More

from TechCrunch

Today’s Deals – SentiOne raises $3.5 million to monitor social media

screen-shot-2016-11-09-at-5-16-53-pm While it’s not exactly sentient, SentiOne sure sounds like it should be. This Polish company watches social media for brands allowing you to create an instant monitor for any topic. Founded by Bartek Baziński, Michael Brzezicki and Kamil Bargiel, the company raised $3.5 million from Venture TFI and Trigon TFI Group to build out their platform internationally. The company has been working… Read More

from TechCrunch

Today’s Deals – OneLogIn acquires Sphere Secure Workspace to gain mobile management foothold

iPhone 7 OneLogIn, a company that provides identity management in the cloud, has become rather acquisitive over the last year buying CafeSoft last December and Portadi in June. Today it announced it was acquiring Sphere Secure Workspace to add mobile device management to their identity-driven security model.
“We are getting the hang of acquiring companies and propelling our roadmap very… Read More

from TechCrunch

Today’s Deals – Wurk raises $1 million to help cannabis companies manage their people

Cannabis A “pottech” company called Wurk has raised $1 million in seed funding to help cannabis businesses such as dispensaries or growers comply with all the different regulations coming into play around the burgeoning legal cannabis industry. The seed deal closed before various ballots issues were voted on today in the U.S., which could make the sale and use of marijuana legal… Read More

from TechCrunch

Today’s Deals – Digital wedding planner Joy says ‘I do’ to $4.5 million in seed funding

joy-tc-cover-option-a-realphoto Joy, a startup aiming to help brides-to-be plan their weddings in the digital age, has pulled in $4.5 million in seed capital. Joy launched out of Y Combinator this summer with aims to take on what some might think of as a crowded industry. There are plenty of wedding websites in existence but many more popular sites like MyWedding.com, WeddingWire and TheKnot.com popped up years ago… Read More

from TechCrunch

Today’s Deals – Tend.ai raises $2M for robot arms that operate multiple 3D printers and workshop machines

tendai Back in June, Tend.ai came out of stealth with its versatile system allowing a robot arm to tend to a dozen or more printers, laser cutters, and other modern workshop tools. Now the company has raised $2 million to continue its work, courtesy of True Ventures. Read More

from TechCrunch

Today’s Deals – Twitter still might save Vine by selling it

twitter-sell-vine Vine may survive after all. Twitter is currently vetting multiple term sheets from companies offering to buy Vine, and hopes to make a deal soon, multiple sources tell TechCrunch. After announcing its plan to shut down Vine last month, Twitter received a large number of bids, including several from Asia. It’s now working to decide who should run the short-form video app. While… Read More

from TechCrunch

Today’s Deals – Confirmed: Periscope Data raises $25 million from Bessemer Venture Partners

pasted-image-at-2016_11_07-12_44-pm Periscope Data, the company that helps data scientists quickly turn their findings into easily digestible visualizations, has confirmed the raise of $25 million in Series B funding.
We originally reported on this funding news last week, and mistakenly named the wrong lead investor. Bessemer led the round, with participation from existing investors, including DFJ, Susa Ventures, Innovation… Read More

from TechCrunch

Today’s Deals – Tailor Brands raises $4M to have robots design logos for you

product-biz-card For the most part, apps like Prisma depend on curated training sets to impersonate style and apply it to a new context. While this may signal that machine creativity is dead on arrival, we shouldn’t forget that even Picasso needed to attend a showing of African masks before he could push cubism into the popular lexicon. Yali Saar, CEO of Tailor Brands, believes much the same about… Read More

from TechCrunch

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