tech:

taffy

Coursekit Raises $5M From Former Facebook Exec, Others

 

Techtaffy Newsdesk

Coursekit, the academic social network, has raised $5 million in a Series A round of venture capital financing. Led by The Social+Capital Partnership, a new Silicon Valley venture firm started by former Facebook executive Chamath Palihapitiya, the round includes existing investors IA Ventures and new angel investors Joel Spolsky, the CEO of StackExchange, and Michael Kearns, a professor of computer science at the University of Pennsylvania. Ted Maidenberg, a general partner at The Social+Capital Partnership and a former board member at LivingSocial, has joined Coursekit’s board.

The funding comes on the heels of Coursekit’s public release in November.

Jospeh Cohen, 20, started Coursekit in New York with co-founders Dan Getelman and Jim Grandpre as undergraduate students at the University of Pennsylvania. In May 2011, they closed a $1 million seed financing, and are now focusing full time on the business.

Just in

AI is ‘a new kind of digital species,’ Microsoft AI chief says — Quartz

Mustafa Suleyman, chief executive of Microsoft AI, said during a talk at TED 2024 that AI is the newest wave of creation since the start of life on Earth, and that “we are in the fastest and most consequential wave ever,” writes Britney Nguyen in Quartz.

It’s baaack! Microsoft and IBM open source MS-DOS 4.0 — ZDNet

Microsoft and IBM have joined forces to open-source the 1988 operating system MS-DOS 4.0 under the MIT License, writes Steven Vaughan-Nichols. 

Generative AI arrives in the gene editing world of CRISPR — NYT

New AI technology is generating blueprints for microscopic biological mechanisms that can edit your DNA, pointing to a future when scientists can battle illness and diseases with even greater precision and speed than they can today, writes Cade Metz.

Mark Zuckerberg says Meta will offer its virtual reality OS to hardware companies, creating iPhone versus Android dynamic — CNBC

Meta will partner with external hardware companies, including Lenovo, Microsoft and Asus, to build virtual reality headsets using the company’s Meta Horizon operating system, writes Kif Leswing.