- Barca claim Liga lead after Araujo’s late derby winner France 24
- Barcelona 2-1 Girona: Ronald Araujo stoppage-time winner sends Barca top of La Liga BBC
- Hansi Flick banned for El Clasico! Barcelona boss set for sanction after being set off for…
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Barca claim Liga lead after Araujo's late derby winner – France 24
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ESMO 2025: A New Era in the Treatment of Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer. Discussant of LBA2 – Perioperative (Periop) Enfortumab Vedotin plus Pembrolizumab in Participants with Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer Who Are Cisplatin-Ineligible: KEYNOTE-9 – U…
- ESMO 2025: A New Era in the Treatment of Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer. Discussant of LBA2 – Perioperative (Periop) Enfortumab Vedotin plus Pembrolizumab in Participants with Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer Who Are Cisplatin-Ineligible: KEYNOTE-9 UroToday
- Pfizer and Astellas announce positive results from phase 3ev-303 clinical trial for Padcev in combination with Keytruda TradingView
- Enfortumab Vedotin Plus Pembro Cuts Risk of Disease Progression, Death 60% for Patients With MIBC Who Can’t Have Chemo With Bladder Removal The American Journal of Managed Care® (AJMC®)
- ESMO25: Padcev, Keytruda regimen given before, after surgery shines in bladder cancer FirstWord Pharma
- KEYNOTE-905: EV/pembrolizumab emerges as new option for cisplatin-ineligible MIBC Urology Times
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Adjuvant Nivolumab Displays Long-Term Activity in Resected Melanoma
Adjuvant nivolumab (Opdivo) generated a long-term efficacy benefit compared with ipilimumab (Yervoy) for the treatment of patients with resected stage IIIB to IIIC or IV melanoma, according to final data from the phase 3 CheckMate 238 trial…
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Why Football Manager 26 has improved its graphics… with the help of VAR
Football Manager 26 launches next month, graphics greatly improved from the last release two years ago.
But while most games will use motion capture to get the most realistic gameplay, the team behind Football Manager have gone leftfield when it…
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Ultra-magnified view of shark skin shows flexibility and resilience
What makes shark skin so tough and fast isn’t one thing but millions: dermal denticles, the tiny, tooth-like scales that armor a shark from snout to tail. They’re made of the same hard material as teeth.
Each denticle is etched with grooves…
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PPP decides to give PML-N ‘more time’ to fulfil demands – Dawn
- PPP decides to give PML-N ‘more time’ to fulfil demands Dawn
- PPP gives govt one-month deadline to fulfill coalition promises The Express Tribune
- PML-N, PPP agree to resolve differences via dialogue, end political bickering Geo.tv
- Coalition…
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F1- Verstappen takes Austin Sprint win as both McLaren retire
Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen took his third consecutive Austin Sprint win, beating Mercedes’ George Russell and Williams’ Carlos Sainz to the flag as McLaren title contenders Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri were knocked out of…
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This top VC has bet close to 20% of his fund on teenagers — here’s why
Image Credits:Prostock Studio / Getty Images Kevin Hartz tends to be first through the door. In 2001, he co-founded Xoom, back when sending money across borders meant standing in line at Western Union. In 2013, it went public, and in 2015, PayPal paid $1.1 billion for it. Four years after launching Xoom, he co-founded Eventbrite, which went public in 2018 and turned buying event tickets into something you could do without wanting to throw your laptop in the ocean.
After a stint at Founders Fund, Hartz co-founded his own venture firm, A* Capital (a nod to a computer science algorithm), then in 2020, he spotted another trend before the masses: the SPAC boom. His blank-check company, “one,” swallowed up 3D printing outfit Markforged in a $2.1 billion reverse merger in 2021, right as every other financier in Silicon Valley suddenly decided SPACs were the future.
Now Hartz is onto his next thing — teenage founders, not as a social experiment but as an unplanned investment thesis. His firm recently cut a check to Aaru, an AI-powered prediction engine with one founder who was too young to get his driver’s license at the time. Hartz is not alone in this by any stretch. The dropout-and-build movement, made most famous by founders like Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, and Mark Zuckerberg, is becoming a standard lifestyle choice for a certain kind of ambitious kid.
Consider Cory Levy, who was interning at Founders Fund, Union Square Ventures, and Techstars while still in high school, then bailed on the University of Illinois after freshman year. Today he runs Z Fellows, a one-week accelerator that hands technical founders — even high schoolers — $10,000 grants. When Levy dropped out a decade ago, the Thiel Fellowship was a radical new idea. Now, the “community of dropouts is at an all-time high,” he told Business Insider last spring. “At a big group dinner of 15 or 20 people, we’ll look around the table, and no one has a college degree.”
It’s becoming enough of a “thing” that the accelerator Y Combinator, which has quietly reinforced drop-out culture since its outset, recently rolled out a program that’s designed for students who want to start companies but don’t want to drop out. The program allows them to apply while still in school, get accepted and funded immediately, and defer their participation in YC until after they graduate. (For YC, known for being countercultural, the move is very on brand.)
Naturally, TechCrunch has been covering the trend: see here and here and here. But to learn more, I’ll be sitting down with Hartz at the StrictlyVC event inside TechCrunch’s rollicking Disrupt show, kicking off in San Francisco on Monday, October 27. (Hartz is talking on Tuesday, October 28.)
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Devs working on Hearthstone and Warcraft Rumble join 1900 other Activision Blizzard staff in unionising
Workers in Blizzard’s Hearthstone and Warcraft Rumble teams have voted to unionise with the Communications Workers of America.
Over 100 software engineers, designers, artists, quality assurance testers, and producers voted to join…
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