Ganiga will showcase its waste-sorting robots at TechCrunch Disrupt
Ganiga’s fleet of waste-sorting technology is meant to help companies track and reduce the waste they produce.
Ganiga’s fleet of waste-sorting technology is meant to help companies track and reduce the waste they produce.
Ganiga’s fleet of waste-sorting technology is meant to help companies track and reduce the waste they produce.
This process could be a way to reduce the world’s dependency on the ecologically destructive palm oil industry.
Healthcare has a plastic problem, but Okosix thinks its bio-derived, biodegradable material can replace single-use plastics throughout the industry.
Young Minds gives parents control over what their kids do on the internet, while also protecting their children’s privacy and teaching them good online habits.
Agriculture consumes a vast amount of water, and some countries are under more stress than others. Instacrops pivoted to AI to help farmers cut water use by 30%.
Prickly Pear Health provides medical support for women’s brain health, a voice-first, AI-powered companion that helps women in their 30s to 50s navigate the hormonal changes that affect brain health.
Hance is working on low energy-consuming, on-device processing that’s already attracted the likes of Intel.
The gaming industry notoriously targets kids for in-app purchases. Lootlock gives parents granular control over kids game spending.
Age verification laws are a privacy and security nightmare. This Battlefield startup performs age checks on-device, without users having to upload their IDs to the internet.