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Yes, so the headline from TechCrunch,
And that headline again from TechCrunch,
So now what's happening is the new entrepreneurs, like Jonah Peretti at BuzzFeed or Sarah Lacey at Pando or, you know, the people the folks who built you know, you see a lot of this in the tech industry, TechCrunch, and
of this in the tech industry, TechCrunch and all these things.
And I would encourage you to step back a little bit and find out the only thing that ships products and the only thing ultimately end users care about is the product you deliver to them, not how they talk about you in TechCrunch or exactly who your investors were or which events you attended.
not how will they talk about you in TechCrunch or exactly
In the first season, we went up to TechCrunch in New York to help, I don't know, either I think it was just to promote or something like that.
when the first season-- we went up to TechCrunch in New York
So I've got just this story from TechCrunch here that's talking about the news.
First of all, as you can see, if you're watching the video version so I've got just this story from TechCrunch here that's talking about the news.
The TechCrunch online newspaper compared it to a lemon peel, but it is a type of robot, a soft one that works underwater and it can fold and walk and even carry stuff.
The TechCrunch online newspaper compared it to a lemon peel,
They do micro-lending for important causes. So we interviewed last weekend in TechCrunch,
So we interviewed last weekend in TechCrunch.
I'm going to maybe tell one or two people and then I'm going to launch it on I'm going to launch it on TechCrunch or somewhere like that.
I didn't even launch on TechCrunch which is the thing that you should definitely do.
The device was originally the brainchild of TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington, who called it the Crunchpad.
The device was originally the brainchild of TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington, who called it the CrunchPad.
They've read about it on TechCrunch.