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Indian EV startup Zypp Electric secures ENEOS backing to fund expansion to Southeast Asia | TechCrunch


Indian startup Zypp Electric plans to use fresh investment from Japanese oil and energy conglomerate ENEOS to take its EV rental service into Southeast Asia early next year, TechCrunch has exclusively learned. The company aims to be in 15 markets over the next two years. Of those 15 markets, Zypp Electric plans to launch its […]

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A venture capital firm looks back on changing norms, from board seats to backing rival startups | TechCrunch


Last month, one of the Bay Area’s better-known early-stage venture capital firms, Uncork Capital, marked its 20th anniversary with a party in a renovated church in San Francisco’s SoMa neighborhood, where 420 guests showed up to help the firm to celebrate, trade tips, and share war stories. There’s no question the venture scene has changed […]

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Bye-bye bots: Altera's game-playing AI agents get backing from Eric Schmidt | TechCrunch


Autonomous, AI-based players are coming to a gaming experience near you, and a new startup, Altera, is joining the fray to build this new guard of AI agents.

The company announced Wednesday that it raised $9 million in an oversubscribed seed round, co-led by First Spark Ventures (Eric Schmidt’s deep-tech fund) and Patron (the seed stage fund co-founded by Riot Games alums).

The funding follows Altera’s previous raising a pre-seed $2 million from Andreessen Horowitz and others in January of this year. Now, Altera wants to use the new capital to hire more scientists, engineers, and team members to help with product development and growth.

If the first wave of AI for end users was about AI bots; and more recently, AI “copilots” use generative AI to help understand and respond to increasingly sophisticated queries, then AI agents are emerging as the next stage of development. The focus is on how AI can be used to create increasingly more human-like, nuanced entities that can respond to and interact with actual humans.

One early use case for these agents has been gaming — specifically to use in games that support modifications (mods) like Minecraft. Voyager is one recent project, built on the Minedojo framework, that creates and develops Minecraft AI agents, and this, too, is where Altera is getting its start.

The company’s first product is an AI agent that can play Minecraft with you, “just like a friend” (the waitlist to try that out is here), but this seems to be just chapter one for the company. “We are building multi-agent worlds, opening up exciting opportunities in entertainment, market research, and more,” the company promises on its site. And after that? Robot dreams, it seems.

“Creating the human qualities required to turn co-pilots into co-workers and exploring a world where digital humans are given a physical form factor,” Altera explains.

At the helm of Altera is Robert Yang, a neuroscientist and former assistant professor at MIT. In December 2023, Yang and Altera’s other co-founders—Andrew Ahn, Nico Christie, and Shuying Luo—stepped away from their applied research lab at MIT to focus on a new goal: developing AI agents (or “AI buddies,” as Yang calls them) with “social-emotional intelligence” that can interact with players and make their own decisions in-game.

“It has been my life goal as a neuroscientist to go all the way and build a digital human being—redefining what we thought AI was capable of,” Yang told TechCrunch. That is not to say that Yang is coming from a misanthropic point of view. “Our solidly pro-human framework means that we are building agents that will enhance humanity, not replace it,” he insists.

What is notable about Yang and Altera’s focus is its consumer focus. This stands in contrast with a big swing that we have seen in AI towards building models that can be used either to speed up or sometimes replace humans in enterprise environments. (Even with OpenAI, ChatGPT has certainly been a viral hit globally, but at its heart the startup has been trying to build a business around usage of its APIs.)

“We see more potential in building agents within the gaming industry,” he said. “This approach allows us to iterate faster, collect data more effectively, and deliver a product where there are eager users and where emergent behavior is a feature, not a bug.”

(And yes, in keeping with its consumer focus, you should not be surprised that, for now, the company is not talking about monetization at all. )

Similar to the Voyager GPT-4-powered Minecraft bot, Altera’s autonomous agents are capable of playing Minecraft as if they were humans, performing tasks like building, crafting, farming, trading, mining, attacking, equipping items, chatting, and moving around.

Altera’s agents are designed to be companions for gamers, not assistants who do what you tell them to. Unlike NPCs (non-player characters), they have the freedom to make their own decisions, which could either make the game more entertaining or frustrating, depending on your playing style.

In a video demo, Yang plays around with multiple scenarios, including one where he tries to convince the AI agent to attack other people. The bot is hesitant at first, typing in the chat, “I don’t want any trouble, can we just find a peaceful solution? Fighting won’t solve anything.” Yang taunts it, commanding others to attack the “weak” bot. It eventually defends itself and kills Yang’s Minecraft character. “I’ll make sure they regret crossing me,” the AI agent wrote.

While the ending may be a little sinister, the gameplay feels no different from a regular session with friends, trolling and competing against each other.

Altera is currently testing the model with 750 Minecraft players and plans to officially launch later in the summer. It’ll be available via Altera’s desktop app, which is free to download but will also come with paid features.

Minecraft is just a starting point for Altera. The company eventually plans to bring the model to additional video games and other digital experiences. Altera’s AI agents “execute an action as code, meaning they can play any game without material customization,” Yang explained. For instance, it could work with Stardew Valley, he said. Altera will also integrate the technology with game engine SDKs for “broader developer use.”

In addition to the recent investments by First Spark and Patron, Altera has gained support from a long list of high-profile investors, demonstrating confidence in the company’s potential. Altera boasts investors such as Alumni Ventures, a16z SPEEDRUN, Benchmark partner Mitch Lasky, Duolingo Chief Business Officer Bob Meese, Vamos Ventures, Valorant co-founder Stephen Lim, and more.

“There exists a massive opportunity to create AI companions that engage in all areas of our lives. However, today’s AI lacks critical traits like empathy, embodiment, and personal goals, which prevent it from forming real, lasting connections with people,” Aaron Sisto, partner at First Spark Ventures, said in a statement. “Robert and the team at Altera are leveraging deep expertise in computational neuroscience and LLMs to build radically new types of AI agents that are fun, unique, and persistent across platforms. We are thrilled to be a part of their journey.”




Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

Why AWS, Google and Oracle are backing the Valkey Redis fork | TechCrunch


The Linux Foundation last week announced that it will host Valkey, a fork of the Redis in-memory data store. Valkey is backed by Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Oracle, Ericsson and Snap.

AWS and Google Cloud rarely back an open source fork together. Yet, when Redis Labs switched Redis away from the permissive three-clause BSD license on March 20 and adopted the more restrictive Server Side Public License (SSPL), a fork was always one of the most likely outcomes. At the time of the license change, Redis Labs CEO Rowan Trollope said he “wouldn’t be surprised if Amazon sponsors a fork,” as the new license requires commercial agreements to offer Redis-as-a-service, making it incompatible with the standard definition of “open source.”

It’s worth taking a few steps back to look at how we got to this point. Redis, after all, is among the most popular data stores and at the core of many large commercial and open source deployments.

A brief history of Redis

Throughout its lifetime, Redis has actually seen a few licensing disputes. Redis founder Salvatore Sanfilippo launched the project in 2009 under the BSD license, partly because he wanted to be able to create a commercial fork at some point and also because “the BSD [license] allows for many branches to compete, with different licensing and development ideas,” he said in a recent Hacker News comment.

After Redis quickly gained popularity, Garantia became the first major Redis service provider. Garantia rebranded to RedisDB in 2013, and Sanfilippo and the community pushed back. After some time, Garantia eventually changed its name to Redis Labs and then, in 2021, to Redis.

Sanfilippo joined Redis Labs in 2015 and later transferred his IP to Redis Labs/Redis, before stepping down from the company in 2020. That was only a couple of years after Redis changed how it licenses its Redis Modules, which include visualization tools, a client SDK and more. For those modules, Redis first went with the Apache License with the added Commons Clause that restricts others from selling and hosting these modules. At the time, Redis said that despite this change for the modules, “the license for open-source Redis was never changed. It is BSD and will always remain BSD.” That commitment lasted until a few weeks ago.

Redis’ Trollope reiterated in a statement what he told me when he first announced these changes, emphasizing how the large cloud vendors profited from the open source version and are free to enter a commercial agreement with Redis.

“The major cloud service providers have all benefited commercially from the Redis open-source project so it’s not surprising that they are launching a fork within a foundation,” he wrote. “Our licensing change opened the door for CSPs to establish fair licensing agreements with Redis Inc. Microsoft has already come to an agreement, and we’re happy and open to creating similar relationships with AWS and GCP. We remain focused on our role as stewards of the Redis project, and our mission of investing in the Redis source available product, the ecosystem, the developer experience, and serving our customers. Innovation has been and always will be the differentiating factor between the success of Redis and any alternative solution.”

Cloud vendors backed Valkey

The current reality, however, is that the large cloud vendors, with the notable exception of Microsoft, quickly rallied behind Valkey. This fork originated at AWS, where longtime Redis maintainer Madelyn Olson initially started the project in her own GitHub account. Olson told me that when the news broke, a lot of the current Redis maintainers quickly decided that it was time to move on. “When the news broke, everyone was just like, ‘Well, we’re not going to go contribute to this new license,’ and so as soon as I talked to everyone, ‘Hey, I have this fork — we’re trying to keep the old group together,’” she said, “pretty much everyone was like, ‘yeah, I’m immediately on board.”

The original Redis private channel included five maintainers: three from Redis, Olson and Alibaba’s  Zhao Zhao, as well as a small group of committers who also immediately signed on to what is now Valkey. The maintainers from Redis unsurprisingly did not sign on, but as David Nalley, AWS’s director for open source strategy and marketing, told me, the Valkey community would welcome them with open arms.

Olson noted that she always knew that this change was a possibility and well within the rights of the BSD license. “I’m more just disappointed than anything else. [Redis] had been a good steward in the past, and I think the community is kind of disappointed in the change.”

Nalley noted that “from an AWS perspective, it probably would not have been the choice that we wanted to see out of Redis Inc.” But he also acknowledged that Redis is well within its rights to make this change. When asked whether AWS had considered buying a license from Redis, he gave a diplomatic answer and noted that AWS “considered a lot of things” and that nothing was off the table in the team’s decision making.

“It’s certainly their prerogative to make such a decision,” he said. “While we have, as a result, made some other decisions about where we’re going to focus our energy and our time, Redis remains an important partner and customer, and we share a large number of customers between us. And so we hope they are successful. But from an open source perspective, we’re now invested in ensuring the success of Valkey.”

It’s not often that a fork comes together this quickly and is able to gather the support of this many companies under the auspice of the Linux Foundation (LF). That’s something that previous Redis forks like KeyDB didn’t have going for them. But as it turns out, some of this was also fortuitous timing. Redis’s announcement came right in the middle of the European version of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation’s KubeCon conference, which was held in Paris this year. There, Nalley met up with the LF’s executive director, Jim Zemlin.

“It ruined KubeCon for me, because suddenly, I ended up in a lot of conversations about how we respond,” he said. “[Zemlin] had some concerns and volunteered the Linux Foundation as a potential home. So we went through the process of introducing Madelyn [Olson] and the rest of the maintainers to the Linux Foundation, just to see if they thought that it was going to be a compatible move.”

What’s next?

The Valkey team is working on getting a compatibility release out that provides current Redis users with a transition path. The community is also working on an improved shared clustering system, improved multi-threaded performance and more.

With all of this, it’s not likely that Redis and Valkey will stay aligned in their capabilities for long, and Valkey may not remain a drop-in Redis replacement in the long run. One area Redis (the company) is investing in is moving beyond in-memory to also using flash storage, with RAM as a large, high-performance cache. That’s why Redis recently acquired Speedb. Olson noted that there are no concrete plans for similar capabilities in Valkey yet, but didn’t rule it out either.

“There is a lot of excitement right now,” Olson said. “I think previously we’ve been a little technologically conservative and trying to make sure we don’t break stuff. Whereas now, I think there’s a lot of interest in building a lot of new things. We still want to make sure we don’t break things but there’s a lot more interest in updating technologies and trying to make everything faster, more performant, more memory dense. […] I think that’s sort of what happens when a changing of the guard happens because a bunch of previous maintainers are now basically no longer there.”


Software Development in Sri Lanka

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