Elizabeth Warren’s Climate Plan Would Create Up To 10.6 Million Jobs, Study Finds

The growing arsenal of proposals amounts to an industrial policy that could scale quickly, new research shows.

In Memoriam: The Apps and Services We Lost in 2019

The Wii Shopping Channel will never see another update day. iTunes was stripped for parts. MoviePass has been snuffed out like a candle in the wind, burning at both ends, being thrown at a customer’s face. Let us remember the apps and services we lost this year.

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‘The Daily Show’ Rounds Up Trump’s Most Awkward Speaking Gaffes Of 2019

Trevor Noah’s team put together a montage of the president’s embarrassing verbal moments.

Students Defy Protest Ban In Support Of Secular India

A new law that discriminates against Muslims has sparked outrage.

The Low-Key Star Of The Latest Debate Was The Bearded Man Deemed ‘Debate Daddy’

During the Democratic debate, people thirst-tweeted about the man, Luke Collis, sitting behind moderator Judy Woodruff.

Billie Eilish Takes Carpool Karaoke To A New Level With James Corden

The “Bad Guy” singer showed off her ukulele skills and took the host home to meet her mom and spider.

Ex-Model Sues Weinstein, Says He Sexually Abused Her When She Was 16

Kaja Sokola alleges Weinstein assaulted her at his Manhattan apartment in 2002.

Trump Rails Against Evangelical Magazine That Called For His Removal From Office

Trump blasted Christianity Today as a “far left magazine,” and Franklin Graham called the editorial a “partisan attack.”

The sorry state of AR startups in 2019

Even when Apple telegraphs its hardware strategy, it’s proving to be nearly impossible for startups to beat them.

The company’s executives have been motioning interest in following their runaway success on mobile with hefty investments in augmented reality, something that has led to the rise of dozens of venture-backed startups hoping to beat Apple to the punch by creating their own AR headsets.

In 2019, this vision collapsed for some of the most recognizable AR startups as reality proved less predictable than executives at these startups had imagined. A trio of shutdowns this year painted the root cause — overreach, framed by high burn rates and an overly optimistic attitude toward respective software ecosystems taking off.

ODG

At the beginning of the year, I reported on the collapse of Osterhout Design Group. The augmented reality startup was an early pioneer in the AR space that capitalized on industry excitement to raise a $58 million Series A in 2016. Following that raise, the company overreached, expanding its product lines even as it failed to squash manufacturing bugs in its current generation products.

“That’s a little bit the story of ODG and Ralph, in general: everything is a prototype, nothing is finished, and before one thing is 60 percent done, you’re already onto the next one,” a former employee told TechCrunch at the time. “I think the heart of ODG’s downfall was its lack of focus.”

The company laid off employees as acquisition talks with Facebook and Magic Leap fell through, sources told TechCrunch, before it was forced to sell off assets to an undisclosed buyer earlier this year.

Meta CTO Kari Pulli wearing the company’s latest headset.

Meta

One of the more bizarre stories in the AR headset space was the folding and reincorporated unfolding of Meta, a Y Combinator-backed AR headset company that was also an early entrant which decided to ramp up its spending as Apple and others began to invest in the technology.

Audio-Technica's ATH-CKS5TW earbuds offer stellar battery life at a decent price

Now that companies are on at least their second or third generation of true wireless earbuds, many of them are worth recommendations. A lot of these new models address earlier issues like poor battery life, connectivity issues and subpar sound qualit…