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Asking Eric: Should I offer heirlooms to my uninterested daughter or whoever wants them?

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Dear Eric: My 31-year-old daughter, Lauren, is relocating to California and taking only what fits in her car. She’s embracing a minimalist lifestyle and recently told me there’s nothing she wants me to pass down to her. I’ll admit I was shocked. She’s the youngest in my bloodline, and I always imagined certain heirlooms or sentimental items going to her.

I have two granddaughters from my stepdaughter, Rachel (age 32). I’m very close with both girls and have spent a lot of time with them throughout their lives. Rachel, the girls, and their grandmother (my stepdaughter’s mom) all live together. I also have a 5-year-old granddaughter from my stepson.

I plan to box up Lauren’s personal mementos and let her decide what to keep or discard — that feels like a reasonable boundary. But I’m struggling with what to do about my heirlooms, the things I imagined would carry forward as part of my family’s story.

Do I offer them to Lauren first out of respect for her place as my biological daughter, even if she seems uninterested? Or is it OK to start thinking about passing things on to the step-grandchildren I feel close to, who might actually value them?

I’m not dead yet, but I’d rather see these things appreciated than left in limbo. How do I navigate this without forcing sentiment where it’s not wanted, but also not letting meaningful items disappear unceremoniously?

—Looking Ahead

Dear Looking Ahead: Thinking about this in advance is a wonderful idea and a beautiful sentiment. It’s also quite loving that you’re acknowledging what Lauren needs/wants and you aren’t taking it personally. It can be hard when kids don’t want or don’t have room for heirlooms or mementos. I’m glad that you’re finding other ways of honoring your family history.

Because you’ve laid such a healthy groundwork, you can move forward with giving them to your stepchildren and grandchildren. As you do, chat with Lauren about your plan. It’s good to check in, so that she doesn’t feel blindsided, but, more importantly, it’s good to express your own needs — the need to distribute heirlooms.

This way, the inheritance becomes clear channels of communication that allow you both to make informed decisions and to help you support each other.

(Send questions to R. Eric Thomas at eric@askingeric.com or P.O. Box 22474, Philadelphia, PA 19110. Follow him on Instagram and sign up for his weekly newsletter at rericthomas.com.)

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Drive Capital’s second act –  how the Columbus venture firm found success after a split

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The venture capital world has always had a hot-and-cold relationship with the Midwest. Investors rush in during boom times, then retreat to the coasts when markets turn sour. For Columbus, Ohio-based Drive Capital, this cycle of attention and disinterest played out against the backdrop of its own internal upheaval several years ago — a co-founder split that could have ended the firm but may have ultimately strengthened it.

At a minimum, Drive achieved something newsworthy in today’s venture landscape this past May. The firm returned $500 million to investors in a single week, distributing nearly $140 million worth of Root Insurance shares within days of cashing out of Austin-based Thoughtful Automation and another undisclosed company.

It could be seen as a gimmick, sure, but limited partners were presumably pleased. “I’m unaware of any other venture firm having been able to achieve that kind of liquidity recently,” said Chris Olsen, Drive’s co-founder and now sole managing partner, who spoke to TechCrunch from the firm’s offices in Columbus’s Short North neighborhood.

It’s a meaningful turnaround for a firm that faced existential questions just three years ago when Olsen and his co-founder Mark Kvamme — both former Sequoia Capital partners — went their separate ways. The split, which surprised the firm’s investors, saw Kvamme eventually launch the Ohio Fund, a broader investment vehicle focused on the state’s economic development that includes real estate, infrastructure, and manufacturing alongside technology investments.

Drive’s recent success stems from what Olsen calls a deliberately contrarian strategy in an industry preoccupied with “unicorns” and “decacorns” — companies valued at $1 billion and $10 billion, respectively.

“If you were to just read the newspapers or listen to coffee shops on Sand Hill Road, everyone always talks about the $50 billion or $100 billion outcomes,” Olsen said. “But the reality is, while those outcomes do happen, they’re really rare. In the last 20 years, there have only been 12 outcomes in America over $50 billion.”

By contrast, he noted, there have been 127 IPOs at $3 billion or more, plus hundreds of M&A events at that level. “If you’re able to exit companies at $3 billion, then you’re able to do something that happens every single month,” he said.

That rationale underpinned the Thoughtful Automation exit, which Olsen described as “near fund-returning” despite being “below a billion dollars.” The AI healthcare automation company was sold to private equity firm New Mountain Capital, which combined it with two other companies to form Smarter Technologies. Drive owned “multiples” of the typical Silicon Valley ownership stake in the company, said Olsen, who added that Drive’s typical ownership stake is around 30% on average compared to a Valley firm’s 10% — often because it is the sole venture investor across numerous funding rounds.

“We were the only venture firm who invested in that company,” Olsen said of Thoughtful Automation, which was previously backed by New Mountain, the PE firm. “About 20% of the companies in our portfolio today, we are the sole venture firm in those businesses.”

Portfolio Wins and Losses

Drive’s track record includes both big successes and also big stumbles. The firm was an early investor in Duolingo, backing the language-learning platform when it was pre-revenue after Olsen and Kvamme met founder Luis von Ahn at a bar in Pittsburgh, where Duolingo is based. Today, Duolingo trades on NASDAQ with a market cap of nearly $18 billion.

The firm also invested in Vast Data, a data storage platform last valued at $9 billion in late 2023 (and is reportedly fundraising right now), and Drive made money on the recent Root Insurance distribution despite that company’s rocky public market performance since its late 2020 IPO.

But Drive also experienced the spectacular failure of Olive AI, a Columbus-based healthcare automation startup that raised over $900 million and was valued at $4 billion before eventually selling portions of its business in a fire sale.

What sets Drive apart in both cases, Olsen argues, is its focus on companies building outside Silicon Valley’s hyper-competitive ecosystem. Toward that end, the firm now has employees in six cities — Columbus, Austin, Boulder, Chicago, Atlanta, and Toronto — and says it backs founders who would otherwise face a choice between building near their customers or their investors.

It’s Drive’s secret sauce, he suggests. “Early-stage companies that are based outside of Silicon Valley have a higher bar. They have to be a better business to garner a venture investment from a venture firm in Silicon Valley,” Olsen said. “The same thing applies to us with companies in Silicon Valley. For us to invest in a company in Silicon Valley, it has a higher bar.”

It applies a different lens, seemingly. While many VCs chase companies trying to come up with something entirely novel, Drive has a penchant for startups applying tech to traditional industries. Drive has invested in an autonomous welding company, for example, and what Olsen calls “next-generation dental insurance” — sectors that arguably represent America’s $18 trillion economy beyond Silicon Valley’s tech darlings.

Whether that focus, or Drive’s momentum, translates into a big new fund for Drive remains to be seen. The firm is currently managing assets that it raised when Kvamme was still on board, and according to Olsen, it has 30% left to invest of its current fund, a $1 billion vehicle announced in June 2022.

Asked about cash-on-cash returns to date, Olsen said that with $2.2 billion in assets under management across all of Drive’s funds, all are “top quartile funds” with “north of 4x net on our most mature funds” and “continuing to grow from there.”

In the meantime, Drive’s thesis about Columbus as a legitimate tech hub received further validation this week when Palmer Luckey, Peter Thiel, and other tech billionaires announced plans to launch Erebor, a crypto-focused bank headquartered in Columbus.

“When we started Drive in 2012, people thought we were nuts,” Olsen said. “Now you’re seeing literally the people I think of as being the smartest minds in technology — whether it’s Elon Musk or Larry Ellison or Peter Thiel — moving out of Silicon Valley and opening massive presences in different cities.”



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Pick up this Dyson cordless vacuum while it’s $180 off for Prime Day

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Amazon Prime Day has returned for the summer, making it a good time to check to see if any big-ticket gadgets on your wishlist are on sale. A lot of our favorite tech is on sale at the moment, and that includes a number of Prime Day vacuum deals. One of the best is on the Dyson V15 Detect Plus, which has dropped to $570 for Prime members.

We loved the Dyson V15 Detect and it earned a slot in our best cordless vacuums guide. The Plus model on sale during Prime Day is the same vacuum with more accessories. The suction power on the V15 Detect Plus is really impressive, especially for a cordless vacuum. For anyone with pets, good suction should be a strong consideration when selecting a vacuum, and we were thoroughly impressed with the pet hair this model picked up in our tests from both hardwood and carpet.

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Dyson

The Fluffy Optic hard surface cleaning head comes with a laser that illuminates the ground in front of you as you vacuum. It does a frighteningly good job of highlighting just how much dust, hair and other debris have collected on your hardwood or tile floors that you might not have seen. For a shocking look at just how much stuff is on your floors, try vacuuming with the lights off.

The V15 Detect Plus gets its namesake from a handy LCD display screen on the main body of the vacuum that tells you exactly how many particles across different size ranges the vacuum has detected since you started cleaning. In practice, this doesn’t add anything to the functionality of the device, but it sheds a light on just how much stuff you’ve picked up.



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Google Pixel owners report slow to wake lockscreen on Android 16

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If you’ve updated to Android 16 and noticed that your Google Pixel device is slower to wake up or get past the lockscreen, you’re not alone.

The initial Android 16 release for Google Pixel devices doesn’t really feel any different from Android 15, but there are some changes under the hood in preparation for the future. The update is, overall, pretty stable, but some Google Pixel owners have found an issue.

On the stable Android 16 release, some are reporting that their Google Pixel’s display is slow to wake up and get to the lockscreen following this latest update. The issue, reported across multiple threads on Google’s forums and Reddit, leaves the device either slow to wake up when the screen is tapped, when the power button is pressed, or both. When the screen does finally come to life, the lockscreen lags a bit when going through to the rest of Android.

For obvious reasons, that’s a bit frustrating.

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Notably, my own Pixel 9 Pro Fold experiences this on the Android 16 QPR1 beta release, but users are reporting this on the stable Android 16 update.

Some users say that a reboot temporarily fixes the problem, but it seems to be persistent. Google, as far as we’ve seen, hasn’t acknowledged the problem or promised a fix, but there are just enough reports of this behavior that it’s almost certainly we’ll see a fix in the not-too-distant future.

If you’re seeing lockscreen issues on Android 16 on your Pixel, let us know in the comments below.

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Red Sox reactions: Boston back at .500 after another 7-run inning blows game open early

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WASHINGTON — Instant reactions as the Red Sox (45-45) once again open up a big lead on the Nationals and cruise to an easy victory, this time by a 10-3 score Saturday:

1) The number seven has been as lucky as advertised for the Red Sox in recent days, as Boston has put together three separate seven-run innings since Monday (and two in the last two days). It’s the first time that has happened on back-to-back days since May 2019.

Saturday’s version (the third inning) against Washington lefty Mitchell Parker featured seven hits, including a two-run Jarren Duran triple and a two-run Ceddanne Rafaela homer. The Red Sox opened up a 9-0 lead for Walker Buehler very early.

2) Buehler probably needed to avoid a blow-up outing to avoid being kicked out of the Red Sox’ rotation. He did that in a rather uneven 5+ innings in which he allowed just three runs (two earned) but was still tagged for eight hits.

Buehler said Sunday he feels like he’s fighting for his spot in the big leagues after another bad outing that left him with a 10.38 ERA over six starts dating back to May 31. He kept that fight alive against a bad Nationals team by working around constant traffic. His day ended at 100 pitches in the sixth inning after Nathaniel Lowe led off with a rocket triple and Josh Bell singled him home.

Perhaps most notable for Buehler? He didn’t issue a single walk after issuing 17 free passes in 20 ⅓ June innings.

3) Rob Refsnyder is known as Boston’s resident lefty masher, but what Romy Gonzalez is doing against southpaws is special. He opened the scoring Saturday with an RBI double in the first after leadoff-man-for-the-day Nate Eaton reached on an error, then catalyzed the big third inning with another two-bagger.

Gonzalez, who entered the day with a .352 average and 1.074 OPS against lefties this year, finished the day with three hits (all off Parker).

4) Duran, who was dropped to seventh in the order against the lefty, had big contributions on both sides of the ball early. In the bottom of the second, with two men on and one out, Daylen Lile rocketed a liner into left (at 95 mph) but Duran ranged back and made a brilliant running catch to keep Buehler’s line intact and prevent an extra-base hit. A half-inning later, he turned around a Parker fastball and blasted a 110 mph triple that turned a 3-0 lead into a 5-0 lead.

Duran entered the game with a measly .572 OPS against lefties this year. That was his fourth triple off a southpaw.

5) Rafaela’s two-run blast (his 10th) and an RBI double came after the game had been decided. But the Red Sox continue to get big-time production out of the No. 9 spot and that has keyed the recent offensive turnaround.

Rafaela looked banged up on an attempt to catch a deep fly ball in center and then once again shaken up as he slipped and tumbled trying to stretch his double into a triple in the eighth. Alex Cora pulled him at that point, shifting Eaton from third to center (and installing Marcelo Mayer at third base). It’s unclear if Rafaela needed medical attention.

6) Washington is not a good team — and bad defense (three errors) helped the Red Sox. Only four of the nine runs charged to Parker were earned thanks to two defensive miscues (including one by the pitcher himself). Of course, the Red Sox had a play where they made two errors, too.

7) Roman Anthony’s strong offensive week continued with two singles, including an RBI knock in the third. Alex Cora said before the game that the Sox are at the point where they’re playing Anthony every day, regardless of who’s pitching. Suddenly, his OPS is up to .707 (it was at .505 just 10 days ago).

8) It’s important to reiterate how crucial this stretch of the schedule is. The Red Sox have six really winnable games in a row against the two worst teams in the National League (Washington and Colorado). They’d be smart to stack wins against them before a pre-deadline gauntlet of the Rays (4 games), Cubs, Phillies and Dodgers. So far, so good.

Boston is .500 again (crazy, we know!). It had been 10 games since the last time (40-40 on June 23). They’ve won four of five and five of seven.

9) As the Red Sox go for the sweep tomorrow, they’ll do so with their ace on the mound. Lefty Garrett Crochet (8-4, 2.34 ERA) will make his second-to-last start of the first half with first pitch scheduled for 1:35 p.m. ET. The Nationals haven’t listed a starter yet.

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Google faces EU antitrust complaint over AI Overviews

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A group known as the Independent Publishers Alliance has filed an antitrust complaint with the European Commission over Google’s AI Overviews, according to Reuters.

The complaint accuses Google of “misusing web content for Google’s AI Overviews in Google Search, which have caused, and continue to cause, significant harm to publishers, including news publishers in the form of traffic, readership and revenue loss.”

It also says that unless they’re willing to disappear from Google search results entirely, publishers “do not have the option to opt out” of their material being used in AI summaries.

It’s been a little over a year since Google began adding AI-generated summaries at the top of some web search results, and despite some early answers that were spectacularly off-base, the feature continues to expand, to the point where it’s reportedly causing major traffic declines for news publishers.

Google told Reuters that “new AI experiences in Search enable people to ask even more questions, which creates new opportunities for content and businesses to be discovered.” The company also argued that claims about web traffic are often based on incomplete data, and that “sites can gain and lose traffic for a variety of reasons.”



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Get two months of Essential or Premium for only $2

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Another hot streaming deal has arrived to match the summer heat. This time it comes from Paramount+, which is offering a two-month subscription for only $2. Put another way, you’ll pay $1 per month for your first two months.

But the kicker for this deal is that is applies to two subscription tiers: you can either choose the ad-supported Essential plan or the ad-free Premium plan and the deal price remains the same. That means new subscribers will save $14 on the standard price of the Essential tier, or $24 on the price of the Premium plan.

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Paramount

Paramount+ is a decent service and made our list of the best streaming platforms. It started as a home for all things Star Trek, but that particular bonus is shrinking all of the time. It was recently announced that Star Trek: Strange New Worlds will end after a truncated season five, leaving just the forthcoming Starfleet Academy. The third season of Strange New Worlds premieres on July 17.

It also hosts original programming like the Sonic-adjacent Knuckles TV show and the dad-friendly Tulsa King. Paramount owns CBS, so subscribers can also access much of that network’s programming. This includes stuff like The Amazing Race, Blue Bloods and several CSI entries.

This offer will be available until July 13. There’s just one caveat. Subscriptions will auto-renew if you forget to cancel. Set a reminder to kick in at the end of the second month.

Check out our coverage of the best streaming deals for more discounts, and follow @EngadgetDeals on X for the latest tech deals and buying advice.





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Galaxy Watch 8 prices, full specs, and included bands leak

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We know a lot about the Galaxy Watch 8 series already, but a new leak is now baring all, with full specs and details around all three new smartwatches, including the higher prices.

Dealabs reports that Samsung’s Galaxy Watch 8 series – comprised of Galaxy Watch 8, Watch 8 Classic, and Watch Ultra (2025) – will include a few key upgrades, such as jumping to 64GB of storage across the higher end models, as well as seeing the Exynos W1000 chipset used across the board. The base Galaxy Watch 8 will stick at 32GB of storage, while Classic and Ultra will be doubled to 64GB.

The report goes on to detail the full specs, as embedded below, and also notes that Galaxy Watch 8 (which comes in 40mm and 44mm sizes) will have a silicone band, Watch 8 Classic will have a “Premium Hybrid Strap,” and Watch Ultra (2025) will have an “Extreme Sport Bracelet.” In other words, Classic will have a partially leather, partially silicone or rubber design, while Watch Ultra will have the same band as last year’s model, though in a new color. Another notable detail is that Galaxy Watch 8 Classic doesn’t have LTE on all variants like the Ultra does.

Features Galaxy Watch 8 Galaxy Watch 8 Classic Galaxy Watch Ultra (2025)
OS One UI 8.0 Watch One UI 8.0 Watch One UI 8.0 Watch
Dial size 40 mm / 44 m 46 mm 47 mm
Dimensions 40mm: 40.4 x 42.7 x 8.6mm
44mm: 43.7 x 46 x 8.6mm
46.7 x 46 x 10.6 mm 47.4 x 47.1 x 12.1 mm
Weight 40 mm: 30 g
44 mm: 34 g
63.5 g 60.5 g
Materials Aluminum Armor
Sapphire Glass
Stainless steel
Sapphire glass
Titanium
Sapphire Glass
Screen 40mm: 1.34″ (438×438)
44mm: 1.47″ (480×480)

327 ppi, Super AMOLED, 3000 nits

1.34″ (438×438), 327 ppi, Super AMOLED, 3000 nits 1.47″ (480×480), 327 ppi, Super AMOLED, 3000 nits
Battery 40mm: 325mAh
44mm: 435mAh
445 mAh 590mAh
Memory RAM: 2 GB / Storage: 32 GB RAM: 2 GB / Storage: 64 GB RAM: 2 GB / Storage: 64 GB
Processor Exynos W1000 (5 core, 3nm) Exynos W1000 (5 core, 3nm) Exynos W1000 (5 core, 3nm)
Sensors Accelerometer
Altimeter
Gyroscope
Light sensor
Geomagnetic
sensor PPG (Photoplethysmographic)
sensor ECG (Electrical Cardiac) sensor
BIA (Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis) sensor
Accelerometer
Altimeter
Gyroscope
Light sensor
Geomagnetic
sensor PPG (Photoplethysmographic)
sensor ECG (Electrical Cardiac) sensor
BIA (Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis) sensor
Accelerometer
Altimeter
Gyroscope
Light sensor
Geomagnetic
sensor PPG (Photoplethysmographic)
sensor ECG (Electrical Cardiac) sensor
BIA (Bioelectrical Impedance Analysis) sensor
Bracelets included Silicone sports bracelet (S/M) Premium Hybrid Strap (S/M/L) Extreme Sport Bracelet (S/M/L)

Meanwhile, the report also backs up prior rumors of price changes by revealing the pricing in France. Galaxy Watch 8 will apparently see a price hike just shy of 20%. Watch 8 Classic will also be around 20% more expensive compared to the larger Watch 6 Classic, while Watch Ultra (2025) will be the same price as its predecessor.

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Pricing breaks down as follows:

  • Samsung Galaxy Watch 8:
    • 40 mm : €379.99 (Bluetooth), €429.99 (Bluetooth + 4G)
    • 44 mm : €409.99 (Bluetooth), €459.99 (Bluetooth + 4G)
  • Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Classic : €529.99 (Bluetooth), €579.99 (Bluetooth + 4G)
  • Samsung Galaxy Watch Ultra (2025) : €699.99

The report also suggests a July 23 release date for these smartwatches.

Reservations are open for all of Samsung’s devices, including the Watch 8 series, ahead of next week’s Unpacked event.


Samsung has reservations open now for the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Flip 7, as well as Galaxy Watch 8 series, with a $50 credit when you pre-order and up to $1,150+ in savings. Reservations are free, and there’s no obligation to actually buy a device if you sign up, but there’s no other time you can get that $50 credit (which can go towards Galaxy Watch 8), 3x reward points, and other perks.


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70-year-old man dies in Mass. fireworks incident on Fourth of July

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A 70-year-old man died from a fireworks incident, according to Plymouth County District Attorney Tim Cruz’s office.

The incident occurred in Wareham on the Fourth of July.

Massachusetts State Police, Wareham Police and the Massachusetts State Fire Marshal are investigating the matter, the district attorney wrote on X.

Fireworks in Massachusetts are illegal without licensing and certification. State law mandates that police seize any illegal fireworks they find — even those that were purchased lawfully in another state and then taken to Massachusetts. People who use or possess fireworks illegally can be fined, while those who sell illegal fireworks can be sentenced to jail.

Illegal fireworks have caused more than 200 serious injuries, more than 500 fires and explosions and nearly $1 million in damages in Massachusetts alone over the past five years, the fire marshal’s office said in a press release.

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Ready-made stem cell therapies for pets could be coming

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Earlier this week, San Diego startup Gallant announced $18 million in funding to bring the first FDA-approved ready-to-use stem cell therapy to veterinary medicine. If it passes regulatory muster, it could create a whole new way to treat our fur babies.

It’s still an experimental field, even though people have been researching stem cells for humans for decades. Seven-year-old Gallant’s first target is a painful mouth condition in cats called Feline Chronic Gingivostomatitis (FCGS), which Gallant says could receive FDA approval by early 2026.

The field has shown some encouraging early results. Studies on dogs with arthritis showed improvements in pain and mobility, with some benefits lasting up to two years. But when researchers tried similar treatments for kidney disease in cats — that’s another condition Gallant wants to tackle — the results were more mixed.

What makes Gallant’s approach different is convenience. Most stem cell treatments today require harvesting cells from the patient or donors with matching tissue, whereas Gallant’s therapy uses ready-to-use cells from donor animals, even if they are a different species.

Investors clearly see potential here. The funding round was led by existing backer Digitalis Ventures, with participation from NovaQuest Capital Management, which previously invested in the first FDA-approved human stem cell therapy.

The company has an interesting backstory. Gallant’s founder, Aaron Hirschhorn, previously sold DogVacay to its biggest rival in the dog-sitting marketplace, Rover. Hirschhorn passed away in 2021; Gallant is now led by Linda Black, who joined as its president and chief scientific officer from nearly the beginning. Gallant has now raised at least $44 million altogether from investors.



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