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    YC-backed Brave Care raises $5 million for pediatric urgent care clinics

    September 9, 2019

    Brave Care, the YC-backed urgent care clinic for kids, has today announced the close of a $5 million seed round of funding.

    The company graduated out of the recent batch of Y Combinator companies but sat out of demo day because this round was already oversubscribed, according to co-founder Darius Monsef .

    Investors that participated in the round include Sesame Street (via their partnership with VC Collaborative Fund), Greycroft, Refactor, Fifty Years, Indicator Ventures, and Founder’s Co-op.

    Portland-based Brave Care launched in July with the goal of creating a pediatric-focused urgent care clinic that could both serve companies and save them from spending thousands of dollars on visits to the emergency room.

    In 2015, there were approximately 30 million pediatric emergency room visits in the United States — 96.7% of them were treat-and-release visits.

    Brave Care wants to be there for parents and kids when the situation calls for something in-between their regular doctor and the emergency room.

    The facility was built specifically for children. The waiting rooms are kid-friendly, the instruments in the patient rooms are kid-sized and the general philosophy behind Brave Care focuses on taking extra time to clarify the diagnosis and the treatment options clearly and patiently to parents.

    The company also has plans to introduce a triage tool that walks parents through symptoms and helps them decide if they should head to an urgent care clinic or straight to the emergency room.

    The funding will allow Brave Care to build out a new electronic health records system that would streamline check-in, foster communication with parents during and after a visit and help physicians and nurses spend more time focused on the patient and less time typing notes on their computers.

    “We can’t build a tech-enabled health care business on someone else’s platform,” said Monsef.

    Moreover, Brave Care will use the funding to open new, more lightweight facilities in the Portland area that can act as spokes to the main hub facility, where the company has expensive but not oft-used equipment like an X-ray machine or a full-service lab.


    Source: Tech Crunch Startups | YC-backed Brave Care raises million for pediatric urgent care clinics

    Startups

    Drivetime nabs $11M from Makers Fund, Amazon and Google to build voice-based games for drivers

    September 9, 2019

    Fully autonomous cars may (or may not) be just around the corner, but in the meantime, a startup that’s building in-car apps to help human drivers pass the time when behind the wheel has raised a round of funding.

    Drivetime — which makes voice-based trivia quizzes, games and interactive stories that people can play while driving — has raised $11 million in funding led by Makers Fund (a prolific investor in gaming startups), with participation from Amazon (via the Alexa Fund) and Google (via its Assistant investment program).

    The startup today has eight “channels” on its platform consisting of games and stories that you can access either within a limited free-to-play tier or via a paid subscription ($9.99 a month or $99.99 a year). The plan is to use the funding to continue expanding that catalog, as well as investing in deeper integrations with its new big-name strategic investors, who themselves have longstanding and deep interests in bringing more voice services and content to the in-car experience.

    Co-founder and CEO Niko Vuori told TechCrunch that his ultimate ambition is for Drivetime to become “the Sirius XM of interactive content” for cars, with hundreds of different channels of content.

    In keeping with those plans, along with the funding, Drivetime is today announcing a key content deal.

    It has teamed up with the long-running, popular game show Jeopardy to build a trivia channel for the platform, which lets drivers test their own skills and also play against other drivers and people they know. The Jeopardy channel will source content from the TV show’s trove of IP and come with another familiar detail: it will be narrated by Alex Trebek, with a new quiz getting published every weekday for premium users.

    That social element of the Jeopardy game is not a coincidence. The San Francisco-based startup is founded by Zynga alums, with Vuori and his co-founders Justin Cooper and Cory Johnson also working together at another startup called Rocket Games since leaving the social games giant and exiting that to gaming giant Penn National for up to $170 million. That track record goes some way to explaining the strong list of investors in the new startup.

    “Social and interactive formats are the next frontier in audio entertainment,” said Makers Fund founding partner Jay Chi, in a statement. “Niko, Justin Cooper and Cory Johnson, with a decade-long history of working together and a proven track record in building new platforms, is the best team to bring this idea to life.”

    “Gaming and entertainment are among customers’ favorite use cases for Alexa, and we think those categories will only grow in popularity as Alexa is integrated into more vehicles,” said Paul Bernard, director of the Alexa Fund at Amazon, in a separate statement. “Drivetime stands out for its focus on voice-first games in the car, and we’re excited to work with them to broaden the Alexa Auto experience and help customers make the most of their time behind the wheel.”

    In addition to the three investors in this latest round, prior to this Drivetime had raised about $4 million from backers that include Felicis Ventures, Fuel Capital, Webb Investment Network (Maynard Webb’s fund) and Access Ventures.

    Vuori declined to say how many installs or active users the app has today — although from the looks of it on AppAnnie, it’s seeing decent if not blockbuster success on iOS and Android so far.

    Instead, the company prefers to focus on another stat, its addressable market, which it says is 110 million drivers in North America alone.

    Meanwhile, adding a Jeopardy channel is building on what has worked best so far. The most popular category at the moment is trivia, with Tunetime (a “name that tune” game) coming in second and storytelling a third.

    Drivetime’s premise is an interesting one. Drivers are a captive audience, but one that has up to now had a relatively limited amount of entertainment created for it, focusing mainly on music and spoken word.

    However, the rise of voice-based interfaces and interactivity using natural language — spurred by the rise of personal assistant apps and in-home hubs like Amazon’s Echo — have opened a new opportunity, developing interactive, voice-based content for drivers to engage with more proactively.

    You might think that this sounds like a recipe for a car accident. Won’t a driver get too distracted trying to remember the fourth president of the United States, or who was known as the father of the Constitution? (Hint: It’s the same guy.)

    Vuori claims it’s actually the reverse: Having an interactive game that requires the driver to speak out loud can focus him or her and keep the driver more alert.

    “We are double-dipping in safety,” he said. “On the one hand, we embody the safety aspects of Alertness Maintaining Tasks (AMTs). But we also act as a preventative, meaning that while players engage with Drivetime, they are not engaging with anything else.”

    While the content today may serve as a way of keeping drivers from doing things they shouldn’t be doing while in a car, there is another obvious opportunity that might come as drivers become less necessary and will need other things to occupy themselves.

    Longer term, the Jeopardy deal could usher in other channels based on popular game shows. Sony Pictures Television Games, which owns the rights to it, also owns Wheel of Fortune and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire.

    “We are thrilled to work with Sony Pictures Television Games to bring Jeopardy, the greatest game show on the planet, to an underserved audience that desperately needs interactive entertainment the most – the 110 million commuters in North America driving to and from work by themselves every day,” said Vuori said in a statement.

    Interestingly, despite the growth of “skills” for Alexa or apps for Google Home and other home hubs, and the overall popularity of these as a way of interacting with apps and sourcing information, Vuori says that he hasn’t seen any competition emerge yet from other app developers to build voice-based entertainment for drivers in the way that Drivetime has.

    That gives the company ample opportunity to continue picking up new users — and more deals with publishers and content companies looking for more mileage (sorry) for their legacy IP and new business.

    “Drivetime is one of the early pioneers in creating safe, stimulating entertainment for drivers in the car,” Ilya Gelfenbeyn, founding lead of the Google Assistant Investments Program, noted in a statement. “More and more people are using their voice to stay productive on the road, asking the Google Assistant on Android and iOS phones to help send text messages, make calls and access entertainment hands free. We share Drivetime’s vision, and look forward to working with their team to make the daily commute more enjoyable.”


    Source: Tech Crunch Startups | Drivetime nabs M from Makers Fund, Amazon and Google to build voice-based games for drivers

    Startups

    AppZen nabs $50M to build AI tools for expenses and other finance team work

    September 9, 2019

    AI now touches every aspect of how a company operates — from forming the core of the service itself, through to customer interactions, building new things and helping with mundane paperwork and other back-office tasks. Today, one of the faster-growing startups in the latter category is announcing a round of funding as it continues on its own path: AppZen, which builds AI-powered tools to automate functions within the finance department, has raised another $50 million in funding led by Coatue Management, with previous investors Redpoint Ventures and Lightspeed Venture Partners also participating.

    We understand from sources that this funding has been raised at a $500 million valuation, which is a huge hike. For some context, the company in October of last year raised a $35 million round led by Lightspeed that put it at a post-money valuation of $175 million.

    The Series C — which brings the total raised by the company to just over $100 million — will be used to continue expanding the platform and its capabilities, CEO Anant Kale said in an interview (Kale co-founded the company with Kunal Verma, who is its CTO).

    To date, AppZen’s biggest product has been a service that automatically audits expenses — comparing, for example, an employee’s charges with travel that person has undertaken (along with many other data points) to see if the charges match up; as well as making sure the expenses are compliant with company policies and raising flags when they are not.

    This is the product that has won the company a ton of business from huge businesses, which now number 1,500 (another point of comparison: this is more than double the 650 customers it had last October). AppZen users include Amazon, Nvidia, Salesforce, three of the top 10 banks in the U.S., four of the top 10 media companies, three of the top 10 pharmaceutical manufacturers, two of the top five aerospace companies, a number of other software providers and Verizon (which happens to own us).

    Going forward, while the company continues to see a lot of traction with its existing products in auditing how a company pays out money, the plan will be to build that out to other functions of the finance department, covering, for example, other areas where the finance department makes evaluations to determine spend and money collection (billing) across the business.

    “There have been so many decades where nothing new was developed for finance departments,” Kale said of the opportunity.

    That’s an opportunity that is so big — enterprise IT overall is forecast by Gartner to be a $1 trillion market this year — that AppZen will be facing a large range of competitors, not just those applying automation and AI to auditing expenses but those coming from other angles like robotic process automation (RPA) that are looking to expand from their computer-vision-based tasks into a deeper set of tools addressing other back-office needs. And that’s before you consider the number of other giant businesses (such as SAP) that provide expense management software, the very tools that AppZen is helping to be used in a better way by their clients.

    For now, though, AppZen is growing fast, and has secured a formidable place as a reliable partner for its customers.

    “AppZen allows enterprises to do something they’ve never been able to do – audit 100 percent of their spend at scale and with the team they have, all before payments go out the door. AI lets these enterprises dramatically reduce spend, comply with policy and streamline process,” said Thomas Laffont, senior managing director for Coatue Management, in a statement. “When we met Anant, Kunal and the team, we were struck by their AI expertise and finance transformation vision, not to mention the company’s clear and rapid execution in the market. ”

    At the end of the day, however, even with all the strides that artificial intelligence has helped us make, there is always a catch. In this case, automating more repetitive tasks and calculations that had been the domain of humans doubtless must reduce operational costs in an organization, and generally speed up the process, but AI is not always perfect, and sometimes replacing people with those systems makes it very hard to query results if there is a hiccup.

    “Our goal is to make sure employees don’t get too frustrated,” Kale said of the learning process, words that apply not just to the companies building these services, but those organizations buying them, too.


    Source: Tech Crunch Startups | AppZen nabs M to build AI tools for expenses and other finance team work

    World News

    Apple in trade war 'nightmare' and iPhones in limbo – Fox Business

    September 9, 2019
    1. Apple in trade war ‘nightmare’ and iPhones in limbo  Fox Business
    2. Apple Bets More Cameras Can Keep iPhone Humming  The Wall Street Journal
    3. Apple Watch Series 5: where to go next?  Circuit Breaker
    4. Apple tipped to reopen its flagship NYC store when the iPhone 11 goes on sale  TechRadar
    5. iPhone 11: What to expect from Apple’s latest phones and why you may decide to wait  USA TODAY
    6. View full coverage on Google News

    Source: Google News | Apple in trade war 'nightmare' and iPhones in limbo – Fox Business

    World News

    British Airways' cargo operations grounded as strike goes ahead – Air Cargo News

    September 9, 2019
    1. British Airways’ cargo operations grounded as strike goes ahead  Air Cargo News
    2. Nearly all British Airways flights canceled as pilots go on strike  CNN
    3. British Airways cancels 1,700 flights as pilots strike  Reuters
    4. British Airways pilots to walk off job in biggest strike in airline’s history  Sky News Australia
    5. British Airways pilots go on strike for higher pay  FRANCE 24 English
    6. View full coverage on Google News

    Source: Google News | British Airways' cargo operations grounded as strike goes ahead – Air Cargo News

    World News

    'Someone's Gotta Tell the Freakin' Truth': Jerry Falwell's Aides Break Their Silence – POLITICO

    September 9, 2019

    ‘Someone’s Gotta Tell the Freakin’ Truth’: Jerry Falwell’s Aides Break Their Silence  POLITICO

    At Liberty University, all anyone can talk about is Jerry Falwell Jr. Just not in public. “When he does stupid stuff, people will mention it to others they consider …

    Source: Google News | 'Someone's Gotta Tell the Freakin' Truth': Jerry Falwell's Aides Break Their Silence – POLITICO

    World News

    Sacklers Reject Demand They Surrender Personal Wealth To Settle Opioid Claims – NPR

    September 9, 2019
    1. Sacklers Reject Demand They Surrender Personal Wealth To Settle Opioid Claims  NPR
    2. Purdue Pharma says settlement talks in opioid cases not over  Washington Post
    3. Purdue Pharma to file for bankruptcy ‘imminently’: state attorneys general  New York Post
    4. A Purdue bankruptcy would make opioids cases even messier  cleveland.com
    5. The Latest: Purdue Pharma says settlement negations continue  Washington Post
    6. View full coverage on Google News

    Source: Google News | Sacklers Reject Demand They Surrender Personal Wealth To Settle Opioid Claims – NPR