Apple announces keyboard improvements, TransferWise gets a new valuation and ARM halts its relationship with Huawei. Here's your Daily Crunch for May 22, 2019. 1. Apple announces new MacBook Pros with a keyboard fix, oh, and more powerful processors Apple says it's taking three steps to remedy the keyboard situation: It will be making a materials change to the MacBook Pro keyboard mechanism, it's covering all butterfly keyboards across its notebook line in its Keyboard Service program and it's improving the repair process in Apple Stores to make things faster. The new laptops have more to offer than improved keyboards: Apple says the 15-inch MacBook Pro will run at double the speed of the previous quad-core models. 2. TransferWise now valued at $3.5B following a new $292M secondary round While this is a secondary round (so no new cash is entering the TransferWise balance sheet), previous investors aren't exiting — in fact, Andreessen Horowitz and Baillie Gifford are actually doubling down. 3. ARM halts Huawei relationship following US ban The dominoes continue to fall for Huawei in the wake of a Trump-led U.S. trade ban. 4. Google says some G Suite user passwords were stored in plaintext since 2005 The search giant disclosed the exposure Tuesday but declined to say exactly how many enterprise customers were affected. 5. London's Tube network to switch on Wi-Fi tracking by default in July Transport for London writes that "secure, privacy-protected data collection will begin on July 8" — while touting additional services, such as improved alerts about delays and congestion, which it frames as "customer benefits," as expected to launch "later in the year." 6. Apple has a plan to make online ads more private By taking the identifiable person out of the equation, Apple says its new technology can help preserve user privacy without reducing the effectiveness on ad campaigns. 7. The Exit: Getaround's $300M roadtrip Last month, Getaround acquired Parisian peer-to-peer car rental service Drivy. For more details about what lies ahead for Drivy and the Paris startup scene, we spoke to Alven Capital partner Jeremy Uzan, who first invested in Drivy's seed round in 2013. (Extra Crunch membership required.) |
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