News

Just months ago, Neel Shanmugam decided to drop out of his Ivy League university to forge his own path. Today, he is the ...
San Francisco-based AI startup Cluely, co-founded by a former Columbia University student, is taking people's productivity in ...
Talview, headquartered in San Mateo, CA, has been awarded its first U.S. patent — Patent No. US 12,361,115 B1, granted on ...
One of the hottest corners of marketing is ‘clipping’—flooding TikTok and Instagram with bite-size videos until they are almost impossible to miss.
The policy is very straightforward-you will be rewarded with $500 if you successfully set up a date for your colleague. CEO ...
Cluely, a tech firm in San Francisco, offers employees a $500 bonus for successfully setting up coworkers on dates. The ...
US-based AI startup, Cluely, is offering a unique bonus of Rs 43,000 to employees who successfully set up a colleague on a ...
Recently Cluely raised $15 million in Series A funding with backing by Andreessen Horowitz, the multi-billion-dollar Menlo Park venture capital firm. TechCrunch spoke to two investors who said ...
Cluely’s CEO is paying employees $500 for helping coworkers find dates, calling it a new take on workplace welfare.
Marketing itself as an “anti-Cluely,” Truely claims it can detect the use of unauthorized applications by interviewees or others during online meetings. But Truely’s launch didn’t faze Lee.
Today, on TechCrunch’s Equity podcast, hosts Kirsten Korosec, Max Zeff and Anthony Ha are getting into the week’s headlines, including whether Cluely’s viral strategy is genius, gross, or ...
Unlike Cluely’s Lee and Shanmugam, Truely’s Li and Shen have no plans of leaving Columbia to pursue their startup full time. Li added that he encourages AI’s potential to be tested in interviews as it ...