Daily Crunch: Beating ‘other takeover bidders,’ Bosch acquires autonomous driving startup Five.ai

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Welcome to the Daily Crunch for Tuesday, April 12, 2022!

This week, the Found team released one of our favorite episodes of the podcast. In it, Jordan and Darrell spent an hour with Dylan Field, the founder of Figma. They dug into the journey of how a 20-year-old founder who had the idea to turn design into a multiplayer game built the de facto standard tool for collaborative design.

Meanwhile, we’ve been watching the utter train crash that is the “WeCrashed” dramatization of the soaring highs and subterranean lows of WeWork’s rise and fall on Apple TV+. Yes, it’s fiction, but we couldn’t put our popcorn away. Also, “The Dropout” on Hulu is worth a watch, as Amanda suggested last month: “Just because you know how the story ends doesn’t mean that it’s not fun to watch how it all went so horribly wrong.”

Remember to drink a glass of water every now and again; you can’t live on psychedelic mushrooms and Red Bull alone – Christine and Haje

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Startups and VC

Some super fun hardware stories today – Brian explored how PitchCom is changing the fabric of baseball, a sport that’s been stuck in the time before technology in many ways. Meanwhile, Miso launched a coffee monitoring system — the internet-of-caffeine-gives-you-wings, if you will.

In the softer, darker underbelly of tech, there’s a flurry of updates from the world of cybersecurity. Russian hackers tried to take down a Ukraine energy provider, showing a new frontier of cyber warfare. A somewhat scary set of vulnerabilities in Atheon hospital robots means that someone can take control of them – in some cases remotely. Trying to counteract all of this is HacWare, which just raised a $2.3 million round to expand training around cybersecurity threats. In addition to the training angle HacWare does, Prelude just raised a beefy $24 million round to do continuous, automated penetration testing against companies to harden their defenses against cyber attacks.

Moar news? You want moar news? OK, fine. We’ve got buckets of the stuff:

Mayfield’s Arvind Gupta discusses startup fundraising during a downturn

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Arvind Gupta, an investor at Mayfield Fund and founder of accelerator IndieBio, reviews several hundred pitch decks each year.

“In 10 days, I can do the primary research and work with the founders to come to a conclusion there. For a larger Series A check, it could take a little bit longer than that, but not that much.”

In a TechCrunch+ Twitter Space last week with Senior Editor Walter Thompson, Gupta talked about how the downturn is affecting seed- and early-stage funding, what he’s looking for, and candid advice for first-time founders trying to raise during a correction.

“You can still finance hopes and dreams, but just with smaller dollars, and you’re generally going to give up a little bit more of your company in terms of dilution during an economic downturn,” said Gupta.

“I expect that to start happening as well in the next year.”

(TechCrunch+ is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.)

Mayfield’s Arvind Gupta discusses startup fundraising during a downturn

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