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Bumble's Opening Move feature takes the pressure off women to come up with a new message every time | TechCrunch


Allowing women to make the first move has been Bumble’s modus operandi ever since it launched in 2014. A decade later, the company wants to give women even more control. “Opening Move” is a new feature it’s introducing to let women pre-write an opening line so they can quickly send a message without having to come up with new things to say for each match.

The feature is part of a big relaunch of the app unveiled Tuesday, which will also let women prepare questions to send to matches, set additional dating intention preferences and prompts, and more.

In nonbinary and same-gender pairings, either user can create and respond to an Opening Move, the company said.

The updates are putting in significant changes at a time when dating app fatigue is becoming more prevalent, specifically among Gen Z users fed up with swiping culture. Bumble’s recent update indicates that the dating app is trying to step up its game and appeal to younger users. Later this year, the company plans to introduce new AI-powered features and other improvements, like potentially allowing men to send the first message.

To set up Opening Moves, users can either type a custom message or select from Bumble’s pre-composed questions, such as “What do you like about my profile?” and “What book or film changed the way you think?” In addition to alleviating some of that initial messaging anxiety, the new feature could be a helpful way to send a dealbreaker question to weed out unsuitable matches.

“We recognize that it can sometimes be burdensome to start a chat every single time, so we wanted to listen to our members in that respect, help them find more ways to make that first move feel a little easier,” Dara Alsulayman, a senior product manager at Bumble, told TechCrunch.

Alsulayman revealed that Bumble is planning to “add support for dynamic Opening Moves,” meaning users would be able to create and choose from multiple Opening Moves instead of only being able to send one version.

Bumble experimented with the Opening Move feature in various markets, including New Zealand and Australia, new CEO Lidiane Jones previously told Fortune. The company notes in Tuesday’s press release that, during the testing phase, the feature led to higher reply rates and longer conversations.

Image Credits: Bumble

Bumble also made updates to profiles, including expanding its Intentions badges (an advanced filter option for premium members) to help narrow down the dating search. For instance, the dating app added more specific intentions other than looking for a “relationship,” “something casual,” or “marriage.” Starting today, users can choose between “fun, casual dates,” “intimacy without commitment,” “life partner,” and “ethical non-monogamy.” Plus, there’s now the option to show two intentions on a profile.

Additionally, Bumble launched a new Interests section to showcase which three causes and communities a user supports, such as feminism, environmentalism, and LGBTQ+ rights.

Bumble is continuing to help daters show off their personalities on their profiles by rolling out hundreds of new prompts for users, as well as new categories to help users find prompts. For example, there’s now an “About Me” category that offers prompts like “I’m known for,” “I’m a real nerd about,” and “My humble brag is.” Other categories include prompts related to date nights and self-care.

As part of the update, Bumble now requires new users to add four pictures to their profiles, when previously they only required two. Alsulayman said this is because users with more photos are more successful at finding connections. One common complaint among dissatisfied members is that some users haven’t added enough photos.

Image Credits: Bumble

With Bumble approaching its tenth anniversary, the company also unveiled a new logo and refreshed app design, featuring bold fonts and a more “modern” feel, Alsulayman said.

“[The new design] feels a lot more in line with what our users have been asking for,” she added.


Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

Watch: Spotify’s move to paywall lyrics is putting pressure on free users


Spotify’s slow movement to put lyrics behind its paid service wall in its music service are about as popular as you would expect. Precise details of the update are evolving but what we can say at this point is that it seems that Spotify has a new feature up its sleeve to try and get free users to convert to is paid service.

The why behind the move matters more than the what. Sure, it’s a little weird that Spotify is going to start putting information that is freely available online behind a paid wall, but the company is in a slightly difficult position today. Thanks to an early start and attractive pricing, Spotify is huge. It does billions in revenue, and helped shake up the music industry for good.

That said, it largely offers paid access to other peoples’ music. Other companies do the same. Apple is one of them. That means that Spotify’s pricing power is modest at best. Features like its yearly music review are neat, but don’t allow Spotify to charge more for its mostly-music-service than, say, Apple Music.

But as Spotify makes a lot more money off its paid accounts than it does off free users, it can at least try to get them to upgrade. And it only has so many dials to turn there. So, behind the paywall go the lyrics. For those of us who already pay, it’s a non-issue. But for the budget conscious, it may seem that that their prior service is getting worse for no reason that they can suss out. So long as some convert to paying users, Spotify will endure the gripes. It needs the gross profit.


Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

Muscle tissue harvested from mice cells move ‘biohybrid’ robots | TechCrunch


Sometimes nature provides the best blueprints for building effective robots. It also can provide the best material. Billions of years of natural selection has built some pretty impressive machinery, so you can’t really blame engineers for borrowing a bit of inspiration from the world around them. In particular, the field of soft robotics — with its flexible and compliant components — owes a lot to animal biology.

While these systems have soft forms, however, many of their components are still rigid like their more traditional counterparts. Researchers are working to bring flexible elements to create locomotion for these soft robots. As MIT succinctly puts it, “our muscles are nature’s perfect actuators.”

The team is going beyond simply mimicking muscles here, however. Researchers at the school are using live muscle tissue in tandem with synthetic robot parts for a classification of robots known as “biohybrid.”

MIT Professor of Engineering Ritu Raman confirmed the process with TechCrunch, noting, “We build the muscle tissues from mouse cells, and then we put the muscle tissues on our robot’s skeleton. The muscles then function as actuators for the robot — every time the muscle contracts, the robot moves.”

The muscle fibers are attached to a “spring-like” device called a “flexure,” which serves as a kind of skeletal structure for the system. Biological muscle tissue can be difficult to work with and generally unpredictable. Left in a Petri dish, the tissue will expand and contract as hoped for, but not in a controlled manner.

In order to be deployed in robotic systems, they have to be reliable, predictable and repeatable. In this instance, that requires the use of structures that are compliant in one direction and resistant in the other. Raman’s team found a solution in Professor Martin Culpepper’s MIT fabrication lab.

The flexures still needed to be tweaked to the specifications of the robot, ultimately opting for structures with 1/100th the stiffness of the muscle tissue. “When the muscle contracts, all the force is converted into movement in that direction,” Raman notes. It’s a huge magnification.”

The muscle fiber/flexure system can be applied to various kinds of robots in different sizes, but Raman says the team is focused on creating extremely small robots that could one day operate inside the body to perform minimally invasive procedures.


Software Development in Sri Lanka

Robotic Automations

Google Podcasts is shutting down soon, users urged to move to YouTube Music | TechCrunch


Google is shutting down its Podcasts app in the U.S. in a matter of days. The company has begun warning the app’s users they will need to migrate their subscriptions to YouTube Music by April 2 to follow and stream their favorite shows going forward. Users who don’t make the move immediately will still have additional time to migrate, but will no longer be able to stream from the Podcasts app directly after this date.

The Google Podcasts app, installed over 500 million times on Android devices globally, for over half a decade has offered a simple and streamlined interface for discovering, following and listening to podcasts, as well as tools to add podcasts by RSS feed. Unfortunately for fans of the app, the tech giant said last September it would begin to wind down the Podcasts app in early 2024 as part of its broader plan to centralize its audio services under YouTube.

In 2020, YouTube Music offered a similar transition strategy to move music listeners away from Google Play Music ahead of its shutdown that same year. However, the Google Podcasts app continued to be maintained for years because YouTube Music wasn’t ready to support podcasts until more recently. By the end of 2023, YouTube Music was able to support podcasts globally, and, by February, they had the ability to upload their RSS feeds, too.

The move to shift podcasting over to YouTube could help Google become a bigger player in the space, not only by combining its efforts and sharpening its focus, but also because interest in video podcasts — which were already popular on YouTube — is on the rise. This week, for example, Spotify forged a deal with Universal Music Group (UMG) to bring video podcasts to U.S. users of its streaming app after earlier in March announcing tests of video podcasts in 11 other markets around the world.

Bleeping Computer was the first to notice the shutdown date for Google Podcasts in the U.S., and a support page on Google’s site confirms that users in the U.S. will only be able to use the Podcasts app through the end of March 2024. For those who miss the in-app pop-ups, Google will offer users additional time to save their subscriptions by allowing them to use the app’s export feature through July 2024.

Google did not immediately return a request for comment, but after publication did respond to say that while it was still “tracking towards” the April 2 timeline for the U.S., it has not shared a timeline for the rest of the world yet.

From its earlier statements, though, the plan is to discontinue Google Podcasts globally in 2024.

Updated, 3/29/24, 5:00 PM ET with Google comment.


Software Development in Sri Lanka

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