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Neue Alchemy is a new venture studio from ex-AWS exec Isaiah Steinfeld, designed to turn emerging tech ideas into real products — fast. The team combines deep operator experience with AI tools to help founders go from zero to launch in weeks, not months.
Neue Alchemy isn’t a think tank — it’s a hands-on studio creating real companies in AI, mobility, commerce, and culture. Their model blends startup execution with corporate innovation systems.
Their first project, ALCHMY Coffee, went from idea to live DTC brand in under 2 weeks. Every part — beans, roasting, design, fulfillment, marketing — was automated or AI-driven. It’s now nominated for Fast Company’s 2025 Innovation by Design Awards.
Founded by Steinfeld (AWS, Nike Valiant Labs), the team includes builders from Lyft, Fiverr, Upwork, Agility Robotics, and Michael Kors. Together, they’ve worked across AI, robotics, fashion, and tech infrastructure.
Neue Alchemy is launching a Fellowship and Learning Platform to bring in more founders, creatives, and operators who want to build AI-native startups. Their Alchemist Network connects startups with a vetted ecosystem of builders, freelancers, and capital.
Neue Alchemy’s bet: in the post-AI world, speed wins — and good execution is the real differentiator.
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Kia has unveiled the 2026 EV4, a compact electric sedan aimed at making EV ownership more accessible — with an estimated $35K price tag and 330 miles of range. First stop: South Korea and Europe. U.S. launch is slated for early 2026.
While most EVs aim high-end, Kia’s EV4 is designed to bring electric driving to the masses. The design borrows premium tech and styling from its EV6 and EV9 siblings — but keeps it lean, nimble, and (relatively) cheap.
• Two battery options: 58.3 kWh (235 mi) and 81.4 kWh (330 mi)
• Fast charging: ~30 mins with DC charger
• V2L4 enabled: Power your gear straight from the car
• NACS port, OTA updates, ADAS included
Dual 12.3-inch screens, 64-color ambient lighting, i-Pedal 3.0 for energy regen, and an AI assistant that talks back.
Trump-era tariff risks could raise the U.S. price by 25%. Kia’s open to U.S. production down the line, but it’s not locked in yet.
With the EV4, Kia is testing whether a sleek sedan, smart software, and a sub-$40K price can still win in a crossover-obsessed, regulation-heavy market.
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Cambridge-based Nyobolt is expanding its ultra-fast battery tech beyond warehouse robots into EVs, industrial systems, and AI-powered data centers — all powered by a proprietary anode chemistry that enables 10–80% charging in under 5 minutes.
Nyobolt isn’t chasing range — it’s chasing uptime. The startup builds batteries that prioritize speed, stability, and density over bulk energy capacity, targeting use cases where downtime kills value.
Originally focused on autonomous logistics, Nyobolt is now talking to 8 major carmakers about integrating its fast-charge systems into next-gen EVs. Real-world track tests have already validated the speed claims.
CEO Sai Shivareddy says Nyobolt is prepping solutions for GPU-intensive data centers and transport sectors that face 10x power demands and $9K/minute outage risks.
Nyobolt won’t manufacture batteries itself. Instead, it’s going IP-first, licensing its vertically integrated tech stack to OEMs and infrastructure providers.
Nyobolt’s pitch: 5-minute charge, zero compromise — for every sector that can’t afford to slow down.
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MIT-born Foundation EGI is building the world’s first domain-specific agentic AI platform for engineers—automating messy, manual design-to-manufacture workflows with precision, speed, and scale.
Transforms natural language inputs into structured, machine-executable engineering code, integrated with standard industry tools.
Engineering still runs on inconsistent instructions and outdated processes, creating $8T in global inefficiencies. EGI helps Fortune 500 companies reduce cycle time and errors by embedding AI agents into existing workflows.
🧬 Deep-tech DNA:
Founded by MIT scientists and serial builders, EGI stems from 2024 research on LLMs for design and manufacturing. Its custom model understands engineering language better than any general-purpose AI.
EGI isn’t just launching software—it’s creating a new category of industrial AI built to reshape how engineers work, from first sketch to factory floor.
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Dutch medtech startup AMT Medical is building a new standard in coronary surgery — a minimally invasive, sutureless bypass system that replaces open-heart procedures with robot-assisted keyhole surgery.
A proprietary system called ELANA®, which enables bypass procedures without opening the chest or stopping the heart.
The tech uses laser-assisted, sutureless anastomosis to connect vessels — cutting surgery time, costs, and patient trauma.
With $25M in Series B funding led by Bender Analytical Holding and Invest-NL, AMT is:
• Completing human trials in Europe (CABG procedures)
• Preparing for CE Marking by 2026
• Launching clinical trials in the U.S. — including robotic setups
Over 1M bypass surgeries are performed annually, mostly via open-chest operations. AMT’s approach promises 50% cost reduction in robotic settings and same-day patient discharge — a major leap for cardiovascular care.
By targeting both traditional and robotic surgery markets, AMT Medical is on a mission to modernize the $2.5B+ CABG landscape with safer, faster, and scalable heart procedures.
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Autonomous cars were supposed to be the future of mobility — but in LA, they’re also becoming tools of surveillance. Footage from a Waymo robotaxi was recently used by police in a hit-and-run case, officially opening a new front in automated street-level monitoring.
• LAPD used footage from a Waymo vehicle as part of an investigation
• The footage was labeled “Waymo Confidential Commercial Information”
• Police have also tapped Tesla, Cruise, and Ring cameras in past cases
Cameras in robotaxis aren’t just for self-driving — they record everything. As Waymo expands in SF, LA, and Phoenix, your daily movements may already be passively recorded and subject to subpoenas or warrants.
The company says it only complies with “legally valid” requests and pushes back on overbroad demands. But critics warn this sets a precedent where surveillance becomes a feature of everyday infrastructure.
From Teslas catching vandals to Rings catching burglars, we’re entering a world where every smart device doubles as a security camera. That might help solve crimes — but it also means privacy is increasingly conditional.
Welcome to the age of passive policing — brought to you by autonomous fleets.
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Strava is finally filling a long-standing gap in its platform by acquiring UK-based Runna — a fast-growing running coaching app with dynamic training plans and deep device integration.
• Runna offers AI-personalized race training plans
• Syncs with Garmin, Apple Watch, Fitbit, COROS, Suunto
• Gained 90K members and Apple “App of the Year” nod in under 3 years
Strava will:
• Keep Runna as a standalone app “for now”
• Invest in team and product expansion
• Explore subscription bundling as user demand grows
Strava has 150M users but lacked true coaching tools. Runna fills that gap — and fast. As more users chase race goals and demand structured guidance, this move puts Strava in direct competition with Nike Run Club, Fitbit, and MyFitnessPal.
With coaching + tracking now under one roof, Strava is quietly becoming the full-stack runner’s platform.
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Franco-Dutch deeptech startup Thorizon is developing a next-gen molten salt reactor that safely reuses nuclear waste — aiming to deliver carbon-free energy while solving one of nuclear’s biggest problems.
A modular molten salt reactor called Thorizon One, designed to:
• Run on long-lived radioactive waste
• Use a cartridge-based fuel system that improves safety and lowers costs
• Generate 100 MWe of electricity or 250 MWt of industrial heat
Backed by €20M in new funding, Thorizon is:
• Prototyping its cartridge system
• Finalizing the reactor design
• Advancing licensing with Dutch and French regulators
• Targeting a 2030 construction start and 2032 deployment
Most reactors still create more waste than they solve. Thorizon’s “walk-away safe” MSR tech turns that waste into fuel — offering a circular, stable energy source just as Europe looks to reduce fossil dependence.
With 50+ engineers across Amsterdam and Lyon and support from EU programs and industry giants like Orano and Tractebel, Thorizon is positioning itself as a clean energy frontrunner in the nuclear revival.
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Dutch quantum startup QuantWare is scaling superconducting quantum processors with a new 3D chip architecture — unlocking error correction and practical compute at a fraction of the cost.
A next-gen QPU platform based on proprietary VIO (Vertical I/O) tech, enabling:
• 1M+ qubit scalability
• 176 signal lines per chip
• Modular error correction via new “Contralto-A” processor
• Foundry and packaging services for third-party customers
Backed by €20M Series A funding, QuantWare is:
• Expanding fabrication capacity
• Meeting surging demand from 20+ countries
• Positioning VIO as the industry standard for hyperscale quantum systems
Today’s quantum processors max out around 1,000 qubits. QuantWare’s architecture removes that ceiling — offering a roadmap to real-world quantum utility and drastically lowering costs for builders.
With growing interest from hyperscalers and the first pre-orders of its scalable, error-correcting chips, QuantWare is emerging as one of Europe’s most important quantum enablers.
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Founded by former OpenAI chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, Safe Superintelligence (SSI) is taking a radically different approach to AI development: no product launches, no public demos — just a singular focus on building safe superintelligence, from the ground up.
SSI just raised a massive $2B round at a $32B valuation, with backing from Greenoaks, Google (Alphabet), NVIDIA, a16z, Lightspeed, and others. The round includes deep infrastructure deals — like access to Google Cloud’s TPUs — and puts SSI at the heart of the AI safety race.
Unlike OpenAI or Anthropic, SSI isn’t launching consumer products or chasing chatbots. Its only goal is to build “safe superintelligence” — a system more powerful than current LLMs but aligned and controllable. Their research focuses on alignment, safety protocols, and novel reasoning methods.
SSI operates out of Palo Alto and Tel Aviv — hubs for top-tier AI and cybersecurity talent. The team is small, elite, and mission-aligned. Founders include ex-OpenAI researchers and Apple vets, and they’re hiring globally for long-term fundamental research.
While most AI labs push fast releases, SSI is doubling down on risk mitigation. Its bet: safety-first AGI could become the gold standard. With $3B total raised and zero public products, SSI reflects a shift in how Silicon Valley thinks about power, governance, and the future of AI.
By staying quiet and focused, SSI could be building the most important AI system you’ve never seen — yet.
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From chatbots to cutting-edge humanoids, Hugging Face just made a symbolic return to its roots by acquiring Bordeaux-based robotics startup Pollen Robotics. The move strengthens France’s position as a rising force in open AI and hardware innovation.
• Pollen Robotics, founded in 2016, is the maker of Reachy, a $70K open-source humanoid robot used by top universities.
• The platform features VR teleoperation, stereo vision, and customizable modules, aimed at education and R&D.
• The two teams had already collaborated on Le Robot, a joint open-source project for household automation.
• Hugging Face, now headquartered in NYC, was born in Paris — and France remains its largest talent hub.
• This deal reinforces Hugging Face’s open-source-first approach, combining LLMs with physical robotics.
• The French tech scene is booming with state support, AI unicorns, and growing interest in hardware+AI convergence.
🇫🇷What it means for French tech:
• Hugging Face is becoming more than a global dev platform — it’s now a role model and consolidator in Europe.
• The acquisition spotlights France’s rise as a robotics and AI innovation hub, with deep talent pools and lower costs than the US.
• It also signals growing confidence in open AI ecosystems beyond Silicon Valley — with Paris leading the charge.
By turning Reachy into an open-source hardware platform powered by Hugging Face AI, this deal brings accessible robotics a step closer — and puts France at the heart of the movement.
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As Meta faces an antitrust showdown in the U.S., internal emails reveal how deeply Facebook feared — and plotted against — rising platforms like Instagram in the early 2010s.
• Zuckerberg flagged Instagram’s growth as an existential threat as early as 2011 — citing rapid user expansion and mobile dominance.
• Execs worried it could be bought by Google or Apple, or evolve into a full social platform itself.
• Facebook’s photos team started scrambling to replicate Instagram’s simplicity with its own app offerings.
• By 2012, Zuckerberg floated a $500M price tag and argued Instagram had “a better thesis” on what users wanted.
• His plan? Keep the app alive publicly but shift its growth and features back into Facebook’s ecosystem.
• In Zuckerberg’s words: “What we’re really buying is time.”
• The FTC argues these messages show a “buy or bury” strategy meant to suppress competition.
• They say Meta knowingly acquired threats to preserve its monopoly, including Instagram and WhatsApp.
• The trial could force a breakup of Meta’s empire, separating Instagram and WhatsApp into independent companies.
This is a rare inside look at how Facebook played offense in tech's most ruthless decade — and the receipts may now help regulators rewrite the rules.
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Beijing’s E-Town just hosted the world’s first humanoid half-marathon, pitting 21 bipedal robots against human runners. The outcome? Progress in robotics — and a reminder that we’re still a long way from robot athletes.
• Only 4 robots finished under the 4-hour cutoff.
• The winner, Tiangong Ultra (by X-Humanoid), clocked 2h40m — thanks to a human guide with a signal device strapped on.
• Other robots tripped, overheated, or crashed — including Little Giant, which started smoking mid-run.
• Swaps and battery changes were allowed — Tiangong needed three.
• All bots had to be humanoid and run on two legs — a big leap from quadrupeds like Boston Dynamics' Spot.
• Most robots were remote-controlled or semi-autonomous — real-world testing like this exposes weak points in balance, coordination, and energy efficiency.
• China’s robotics race is heating up, with startups and research labs pushing the limits on mobility, autonomy, and humanoid form factors.
• X-Humanoid claims its performance “surpasses Western rivals” — bold words that hint at growing ambition in humanoid R&D.
While no one's giving robots a medal yet, this public test signals a shift: humanoid robotics are moving from lab demos to real-world stress tests — even if it’s just one slow step at a time.
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We Ghosted Media, founded by “Bob’s Burgers” AD Chris Jammal and “Peg + Cat” producer Jaclynn Demas, is ditching networks and streaming for blockchain. Their new kids’ show will debut this fall on Lamina1, a decentralized platform — with every viewer getting a crypto wallet.
• An animated series centered on Owen Gloom, a preteen creator on a bizarre family road trip
• The show lives inside Lamina1’s Spaces, a virtual world with interactive digital experiences
• Viewers can suggest episode ideas, vote on plot points, and collect digital outfits, props, and souvenirs
• “Owen Nowhere” isn’t just a show — it’s an open metaverse IP
• Digital collectibles double as community tokens, giving fans influence over content
• The creators aim to set a “new standard” for decentralized children’s entertainment
👪Who it’s for — and the risks:
• Targeted at preteens and older — but onboarding kids into crypto is controversial
• Lamina1 says the focus is token-gated access and community rewards, not trading or speculation
• Parental concerns over wallet management and financial safety are still being worked out
With funding from heavyweights like Reid Hoffman and visual effects projects from Wētā launching on the same platform, “Owen Nowhere” might be the strangest — and most forward-looking — kids’ show launch of the year.
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Uber is reportedly in talks to acquire Trendyol Go, Turkey’s fast-growing food and grocery delivery service — a bold move that would mark its return to the Turkish market after a 5-year exit.
• The delivery arm of Turkey’s largest e-commerce platform, Trendyol
• Backed by Alibaba (70% stake) with deep market penetration
• Offers Uber a turnkey delivery network with national brand reach
• Turkey’s food delivery scene is heating up with players like Getir and Yemeksepeti
• Uber Eats generated $13.7B revenue last year and is scaling globally
• A foothold in Turkey could unlock broader e-commerce logistics potential
• Uber’s rocky regulatory history in Turkey (ride-hailing banned in 2019)
• Ongoing political volatility and economic pressure
• Alibaba’s future intentions with Trendyol remain unclear
This would be Uber’s second shot at Turkey—this time through food, not rides. If successful, it’s a comeback with serious market potential.
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British HealthTech company Skin Analytics is using AI to transform how skin cancer is diagnosed, aiming to fix the global shortage of dermatologists and reduce time-to-diagnosis with scalable, regulated automation.
Skin Analytics developed DERM, the world’s first AI medical device to receive EU MDR Class III CE mark for making independent clinical decisions on skin cancer. The tool can autonomously discharge up to 40% of urgent referrals, reducing face-to-face appointments by up to 95%.
With fresh €17.5M in Series B funding led by Intrepid Growth Partners, the startup plans to expand across Europe, Australia, and the US. Already deployed in 26 NHS sites and used by over 150,000 patients, Skin Analytics wants to become a global triage standard.
Dermatologist shortages are worsening worldwide — with just ~30 specialists per million people across Europe. DERM has already helped detect over 14,000 cancers, boasting a 99.8% Negative Predictive Value, close to dermatologist-level accuracy.
Skin Analytics isn’t just digitizing care — it’s rebuilding the frontlines of cancer detection with regulatory-grade AI.
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London-based startup Hammer Missions is rethinking how structures are inspected — using drones and AI to turn slow, expensive site visits into automated, data-rich assessments.
Hammer’s software enables fully automated drone flights to map and inspect buildings.
It captures high-res data for use cases like facade scanning, defect detection, roof analysis, and thermal forensics, generating 3D reports without needing bulky equipment or scaffolding.
Traditional inspections are costly, slow, and often limited by access.
In the wake of the UK’s Building Safety Act and global attention to structural risk, real-time, scalable, and accurate inspections are no longer a luxury — they’re a necessity.
With €1.6M in fresh funding from ACF Investors and angels like GeoSLAM’s founder and former Atkins execs, Hammer Missions is:
• Accelerating product development
• Growing its presence in the US — where it already works with Thornton Tomasetti and SGH
• Scaling its AI to support 3D data capture across 20K+ drone flights
Hammer’s core strength is in combining hardware-agnostic flight control with AI-powered reporting — helping clients cut inspection time and cost while improving precision.
Instead of sifting through raw drone data, engineers get decision-ready insights — a game-changer for safety and compliance workflows.
Hammer Missions is not just flying drones — it’s rebuilding how the built world is monitored.
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Adaptive Computer, the latest venture from Mem co-founder Dennis Xu, aims to redefine how everyday people interact with software. Instead of learning to code, users simply describe what they want — and Adaptive builds the app for them.
Forget hardware — Adaptive’s platform (ac1) is a no-code web-based engine that builds real apps from text prompts. It handles everything from backend setup to payments, user auth, AI tools, and database management.
Unlike tools like Replit or Lovable, which started with developers in mind, Adaptive is designed for total beginners. No API keys, no config hell — just describe the app you want, and it's up and running in minutes.
Apps created inside Adaptive can talk to each other — one user built a file-sharing tool, then made a second app that used those files for AI storytelling. Xu calls it “an operating system for your ideas.”
Is “vibe coding” the beginning of a world where building software is as easy as talking?
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Indian EV startup Ather is downsizing its IPO, aiming to raise $308M at a $1.4B post-money valuation — down from last year’s $2B ambition.
Citing market conditions, Ather slashed its offering by 18%. Existing shareholders, including Tiger Global and co-founders, are selling fewer shares than initially planned. Hero MotoCorp, its largest backer (40% stake), isn’t selling.
Ather plans to channel funds into:
• A new EV manufacturing plant in Maharashtra ($108.8M)
• R&D efforts ($88M)
• Marketing ($35.2M)
• Debt repayment ($4.7M)
Ather sold over 126K units in 2024, securing a 10.7% market share. That’s a 21% YoY sales bump — but still dwarfed by rival Ola Electric’s 34.1% hold. Ola’s IPO soared on debut but has since dropped 42%.
Is Ather's more conservative listing a smart play — or a signal of slowing EV hype in India?
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Ex-Meta engineer Boris Valkov is tackling a quiet revenue leak in home services — phone calls that don’t convert. His new startup, Lace AI, uses AI to analyze 100% of inbound calls for missed sales opportunities.
After building PyTorch at Meta, Valkov realized AI could reshape the software layer. His journey began in his family’s grocery store, where customer service was everything. With co-founder Stan Stoyanov, he turned that insight into a startup aimed at HVAC, plumbing, and roofing businesses.
• Monitors and analyzes every customer call
• Flags dropped leads or mishandled interactions
• Helps reps recover and improve conversion rates
• Operates on a per-agent SaaS model
• 100+ business clients
• 1000% ARR growth in 2024 (after launching late 2023)
• $19M raised to date — including a new $14M seed led by Bek Ventures
• Team set to triple from 20 employees
For sectors with $300M+ revenue, even a 1% booking boost adds millions — and Lace says some clients are already seeing double-digit growth.
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