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Tanka Launches at TechCrunch Sessions: AI, Claiming to be Startups' 'AI Co-Founder'
Tanka Launches at TechCrunch Sessions: AI, Claiming to be Startups' 'AI Co-Founder'

Business Wire

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • Business Wire

Tanka Launches at TechCrunch Sessions: AI, Claiming to be Startups' 'AI Co-Founder'

BERKELEY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Tanka launched its AI-powered collaboration tool for early-stage teams at TechCrunch Sessions: AI on June 5 at the University of California, Berkeley. Tanka's CEO Kisson Lin, a serial entrepreneur who previously held strategic roles at Meta and TikTok, made the announcement on the main stage of TechCrunch Sessions: AI. Tanka launched its AI-powered collaboration tool for early-stage teams on the main stage of TechCrunch Sessions: AI at UC Berkeley, as announced by CEO Kisson Lin, a serial entrepreneur who previously held strategic roles at Meta and TikTok. Built from day zero to integrate with an entire tech stack, Tanka unifies Slack, WhatsApp, Gmail, Calendar, Notion, Telegram, and more. But it doesn't stop at consolidation. It transforms every fragmented message, buried doc, or forgotten decision into structured, persistent memory—what Tanka calls a company's " MemoryGraph", which powers faster and smarter agents who complete work directly. Imagine an AI that builds your landing page based on scattered chat threads. An assistant that remembers your team's internal debates, design preferences, and customer pain points—then auto-generates a prototype, exports it to Figma. That's what Tanka does. Additional features include: Memory Transfer, which lets companies pass role-specific knowledge between teammates to ease onboarding; Search with Memory, which enables search across Slack, email, WhatsApp, Telegram, Notion, and more, for summaries and specific information; AI Smart Replies, which lets AI draft context-aware replies to one's emails, Slack, WhatsApp, Telegram messages. At launch, the platform will add several new capabilities not available in beta: Landing Page Generation: Teams can create both design and code for marketing pages based on prior internal discussions, without extensive prompt engineering. Presentation Drafting: Fundraising and sales decks can be generated by referencing prior memos and chat history. UX Feedback Integration: Tanka can analyze customer feedback and suggest UI mockups or prototype code. Automated Onboarding Documents: Based on a new hire's role and the memory of their predecessor, Tanka can generate personalized onboarding materials. Lin said the platform is aimed at startups looking to preserve clarity and execution speed as they scale. 'Startups bleed speed when they lose context. Tanka is your memory, your action engine, and your AI-native co-founder rolled into one.' She said. 'It remembers everything, acts with precision, and scales with you.' End users may access Tanka at and journalists are welcome to reach out for trial credentials.

Tanka Launches at TechCrunch Sessions: AI, Claiming to be Startups' 'AI Co-Founder'
Tanka Launches at TechCrunch Sessions: AI, Claiming to be Startups' 'AI Co-Founder'

Yahoo

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Tanka Launches at TechCrunch Sessions: AI, Claiming to be Startups' 'AI Co-Founder'

Former Meta and TikTok entrepreneur Kisson Lin announces the launch of Tanka, a memory-driven workplace tool combining chat, AI, and team knowledge systems. BERKELEY, Calif., June 05, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Tanka launched its AI-powered collaboration tool for early-stage teams at TechCrunch Sessions: AI on June 5 at the University of California, Berkeley. Tanka's CEO Kisson Lin, a serial entrepreneur who previously held strategic roles at Meta and TikTok, made the announcement on the main stage of TechCrunch Sessions: AI. Built from day zero to integrate with an entire tech stack, Tanka unifies Slack, WhatsApp, Gmail, Calendar, Notion, Telegram, and more. But it doesn't stop at consolidation. It transforms every fragmented message, buried doc, or forgotten decision into structured, persistent memory—what Tanka calls a company's "MemoryGraph", which powers faster and smarter agents who complete work directly. Imagine an AI that builds your landing page based on scattered chat threads. An assistant that remembers your team's internal debates, design preferences, and customer pain points—then auto-generates a prototype, exports it to Figma. That's what Tanka does. Additional features include: Memory Transfer, which lets companies pass role-specific knowledge between teammates to ease onboarding; Search with Memory, which enables search across Slack, email, WhatsApp, Telegram, Notion, and more, for summaries and specific information; AI Smart Replies, which lets AI draft context-aware replies to one's emails, Slack, WhatsApp, Telegram messages. At launch, the platform will add several new capabilities not available in beta: Landing Page Generation: Teams can create both design and code for marketing pages based on prior internal discussions, without extensive prompt engineering. Presentation Drafting: Fundraising and sales decks can be generated by referencing prior memos and chat history. UX Feedback Integration: Tanka can analyze customer feedback and suggest UI mockups or prototype code. Automated Onboarding Documents: Based on a new hire's role and the memory of their predecessor, Tanka can generate personalized onboarding materials. Lin said the platform is aimed at startups looking to preserve clarity and execution speed as they scale. "Startups bleed speed when they lose context. Tanka is your memory, your action engine, and your AI-native co-founder rolled into one." She said. "It remembers everything, acts with precision, and scales with you." End users may access Tanka at and journalists are welcome to reach out for trial credentials. View source version on Contacts Press: Kisson Lin+1 (650) 250 7689marketing@ Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Apple says its App Store helped generate $1.3T in billings and sales, most without a commission
Apple says its App Store helped generate $1.3T in billings and sales, most without a commission

TechCrunch

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • TechCrunch

Apple says its App Store helped generate $1.3T in billings and sales, most without a commission

Ahead of its Worldwide Developer Conference on June 9, Apple on Thursday offered a new update on its global App Store business, sharing that developers generated $1.3 trillion in billings and sales in 2024. The company stressed that 90% of those billings and sales did not involve paying Apple a commission. The study also noted that developer billings and sales for digital goods and services in 2024 totaled $131 billion, driven by mobile games, photo and video editing apps, and other enterprise tools. Physical goods and services, meanwhile, topped $1 trillion, thanks to increased demand for online food delivery and pickup, and online grocery apps. In-app advertising revenue was $150 billion last year. Spending across digital goods and services, physical goods and services, and in-app advertising has more than doubled since 2019, with physical goods and services seeing the strongest growth at more than 2.6 times, Apple said. The numbers are intended to highlight how the App Store creates financial opportunities for mobile developers that extend beyond sales from in-app purchases. The storefront provides a place for developers to have their apps discovered by consumers, and Apple provides the technical infrastructure required to run an app business. This position ignores the fact that the App Store is now a mature ecosystem, and apps are a selling point for the iPhone itself. Developers today have a number of tools at their disposal to host, distribute, and manage their own applications, if they choose, but Apple's policies prevent this. That's starting to change, however. In a recent court ruling in favor of Epic Games in the U.S., Apple was required to let developers link to their own websites for processing in-app purchases without having to pay Apple a commission. In Europe, the tech giant is fighting against the rules proposed by the Digital Markets Act (DMA), which, among other things, directs Apple to give developers the right to inform their customers about alternative payment mechanisms. Techcrunch event Save now through June 4 for TechCrunch Sessions: AI Save $300 on your ticket to TC Sessions: AI—and get 50% off a second. Hear from leaders at OpenAI, Anthropic, Khosla Ventures, and more during a full day of expert insights, hands-on workshops, and high-impact networking. These low-rate deals disappear when the doors open on June 5. Exhibit at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot at TC Sessions: AI and show 1,200+ decision-makers what you've built — without the big spend. Available through May 9 or while tables last. Berkeley, CA | REGISTER NOW The new data comes from an Apple-funded study by economists Professor Andrey Fradkin from the Boston University Questrom School of Business, and Dr. Jessica Burley from Analysis Group. The latter has been working with Apple for years throughout its antitrust legal battles to document the App Store's success in a more positive light for the company. The study highlights other regional growth trends, like how the billings and sales facilitated by the App Store more than doubled over the past five years in the U.S., China and Europe. Digital payment spending, meanwhile, also grew by more than 7 times in the U.S. since 2019, thanks to the broad adoption of mobile payments. The report also reiterated other metrics, like how the App Store attracts 813 million average weekly visitors worldwide, and pointed to the various investments Apple has made in tools and technologies to support developers, like coding and distribution platforms, frameworks, analytics, anti-fraud systems, developer support, and more.

The founder of DeviantArt is making a $22,000 display for digital art
The founder of DeviantArt is making a $22,000 display for digital art

TechCrunch

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • TechCrunch

The founder of DeviantArt is making a $22,000 display for digital art

Angelo Sotira started the online digital art platform DeviantArt when he was just a teenager, growing a formative community for millions of artists in the 2000s. Twenty-five years later, Sotira wants to change digital art again, but with a focus on the way it's displayed. On Thursday, Sotira revealed his new venture, Layer, a screen specifically designed to showcase digital art in the best quality possible. 'The way that the canvas needs to perform and behave in your life is quite different than other types of displays,' Sotira told TechCrunch. 'It needs to blend into beautiful environments.' The closest point of reference that the average consumer would have for a product like this is Samsung's The Frame TV, which looks like a painting hung on the wall when it's not turned on. But Layer takes that kind of feel to an even more premium level — unlike The Frame, Layer is not a consumer product, and it's not trying to emulate static paintings or photographs. 'They're $22,000, so that kind of tells you a lot about who that's for,' Sotira said. 'We spared no expense and we spared no effort. We made no compromise in producing what is actually, in our opinion, the very best way to display digital art on a wall.' Image Credits:Layer When Sotira talks about digital art, he isn't talking about digital photography or videos. Layer is working with hundreds of artists like Casey Reas, who makes generative AI art — no, not the kind of generative art you get from ChatGPT, which is created with LLMs that use other artists' work without their consent. Instead, many of these artists are writing their own software to create digital AI artworks that change over time according to what the code says. Techcrunch event Save now through June 4 for TechCrunch Sessions: AI Save $300 on your ticket to TC Sessions: AI—and get 50% off a second. Hear from leaders at OpenAI, Anthropic, Khosla Ventures, and more during a full day of expert insights, hands-on workshops, and high-impact networking. These low-rate deals disappear when the doors open on June 5. Exhibit at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot at TC Sessions: AI and show 1,200+ decision-makers what you've built — without the big spend. Available through May 9 or while tables last. Berkeley, CA | REGISTER NOW But these artworks, like most AI software, require a lot of computing power to execute. That's part of why Layer is so pricey — it needs the technological capacity to display these new kinds of works. 'You're looking at an over 35-year history of extraordinary artists developing the medium of code-based art and essentially, the pixels on the display are being governed by the code that's been written that runs live on that GPU, rendering it in full resolution,' Sotira said. 'It's actually controlling every pixel, so it's not going through any compression algorithms.' Sotira is well aware that he's not the first entrepreneur to try to create a better way to display digital art — when he was at DeviantArt, he was pitched on products like Layer all the time. But because of this, he knows what was missing from the products that were pitched to him in the past. 'One of the driving principles is that you can plug it in, turn it on, and leave it alone, and it should know how to sequence art for you,' he said. In his experience, he enjoys tinkering with these devices for a few weeks, but then it becomes tedious to continue updating the display, so he wanted his own canvas to be more self-sustaining. 'It's going to be on your wall for five years, so it has to play really, really well in your life.' Image Credits:Layer Layer seems like a highly expensive and very niche product, but some venture capitalists and entrepreneurs are betting on it. While in stealth, the startup raised $5.7 million in funding from Expa Ventures, Human Ventures, and Slauson & Co., plus angels like Twitter co-founder Evan Williams and Behance co-founder Scott Belsky. The company's ambitions extend beyond selling hardware to display art. With a Layer canvas, owners get subscription access to a collection of art from the digital artists that Layer partners with. Then, those artists are paid royalties based on the amount of time their works are on view. 'We put artists first, and that's kind of the core mission and philosophy of Layer,' Sotira said.

Toma's AI voice agents have taken off at car dealerships – and attracted funding from a16z
Toma's AI voice agents have taken off at car dealerships – and attracted funding from a16z

TechCrunch

time05-06-2025

  • Automotive
  • TechCrunch

Toma's AI voice agents have taken off at car dealerships – and attracted funding from a16z

When Monik Pamecha co-founded AI voice startup Toma in early 2024, he hadn't anticipated spending the summer months sweating in Bible Belt car dealerships. He and co-founder Anthony Krivonos were still focused on banking and healthcare customers when the dealers came knocking. 'They just called us up and said 'we are drowning in phone calls,'' Pamecha described that initial contact in an interview with TechCrunch. Seeing an opportunity to pivot into a far less-regulated space than banking or healthcare, Pamecha and Krivonos set up a test: They decided to have their voice agent call essentially every car dealership in the country multiple times. Over the span of a few weeks they found those calls were only picked up 45% of the time. The co-founders packed their bags. And like some sort of modern reinterpretation of the movie Tommy Boy, they set out to tour a dozen car dealerships in Oklahoma and Mississippi to get a better understanding of how these businesses work. They got their hands dirty both figuratively and literally; Pamecha said his wife was surprised by the grease stains on his clothes when he returned home. That commitment paid off. Not only did they win customers, they got the dealers' full charm offensive. The founders shared home-cooked meals – a sometimes awkward-but-funny affair given Pamecha's vegetarianism, he said – and were invited to tour the Corvette Museum. At least one dealer even asked the Toma founders to tag along to a shooting range. Seema Amble, a partner at a16z who led the $17 million that Toma has raised to date, said the pair were 'effectively living at these dealerships, going to these dealers' family barbecues, really understanding how they operate.' 'We invest in a lot of the next-generation of vertical AI companies, a lot of the best founders have just lived and breathed with these customers to understand what's going on under the hood,' she told TechCrunch. 'No pun intended.' Techcrunch event Save now through June 4 for TechCrunch Sessions: AI Save $300 on your ticket to TC Sessions: AI—and get 50% off a second. Hear from leaders at OpenAI, Anthropic, Khosla Ventures, and more during a full day of expert insights, hands-on workshops, and high-impact networking. These low-rate deals disappear when the doors open on June 5. Exhibit at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot at TC Sessions: AI and show 1,200+ decision-makers what you've built — without the big spend. Available through May 9 or while tables last. Berkeley, CA | REGISTER NOW The insights from that trip helped Pamecha and Krivonos sharpen the Toma voice agent into a tool that is already in use at more than 100 dealerships around the country. The AI helps customers schedule service appointments, handle parts orders, answer sales questions, and more. Along with a16z, Pamecha and Krivonos attracted investment from Y Combinator (they created Toma at YC in January 2024), the Scale Angels fund, and auto industry influencer Yossi Levi, also known as the Car Dealership Guy. Levi told TechCrunch that dealerships struggle with phone calls in part because it's hard to predict volume. 'It ebbs and flows. Sometimes you're overwhelmed with demand. Other times there's not enough demand, and matching staffing and properly training that staff for a consistent experience is just not an easy thing to do,' Levi said. AI has 'provided an opportunity for dealers to really standardize that process, and deliver a richer customer experience that is consistent.' Pamecha said Toma's onboarding process involves training on a dealers' customer calls for a week or two to give the AI some context. This is important because while dealerships broadly do the same things, there can be a lot of variance in the details. Some dealers might service more diesel engines, for example. Dealerships also run lots of custom promotions for both sales and service. After that initial burst of training, the Toma AI starts taking calls, handing off to human employees if and when it gets stumped. Those handoff calls get analyzed, too, in order to reinforce the AI model to better help that specific dealership. On the business side, Toma operates a subscription model. As the AI agents can handle more parts of a dealership's operations, those dealers will have to pay up for those extra capabilities. The Series A 'comes at a great time' for Toma, according to Pamecha. The startup only hired its first true sales employee within the last few weeks. Before that, it was still largely Pamecha and Krivonos hustling like they did across the country last summer. Without that trip, though, Pamecha said he's not sure Toma would have reached this point. 'It has been one of the best experiences of my life,' he said. 'I feel like we've all become friends, and I think it all comes from a place of like, feeling their pain. I think they see that we feel the pain, too.'

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