Tech
The full breakout session agenda at Disrupt 2025
With TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 in less than 3 days, we’re loading up Moscone West with 200+ can’t-miss sessions — including breakout sessions led by top leaders across the tech and startup ecosystem. Breakout sessions are tailored for hands-on learning and tactical takeaways. These first-come, first-served rooms put you shoulder-to-shoulder with operators, founders, and investors building what’s next.
Don’t miss your chance to pocket ticket savings and join these breakouts! Register now to save up to $444 on your pass, and get 60% off a second before prices increase when event doors open on October 27.
The complete Disrupt 2025 breakout session agenda
The Untapped Opportunity Hidden in Business Workflows
Umair Javed, CEO, tkxel; Marcus Torres, CPO, Quickbase; and Umair Bashir, fractional CTO, Signal
The biggest growth levers often hide in plain sight—inside everyday processes. Learn how to spot and productize “boring” workflow pain points into sticky software that drives ROI and fast payback periods. Perfect for founders hunting wedge use cases in large, legacy categories.
From Vibes to Velocity: How AI Tools Can Help You Achieve Your Development Goals
Tim Rogers, staff product manager, GitHub Copilot
Go beyond demos and put AI to work in your SDLC. We’ll dig into real patterns for using agents and copilots to reduce toil, speed reviews, and unblock teams—without sacrificing code quality or security.
Build First, Fund Later: The Founder’s Guide to Bootstrapping Breakout Startups
Tarun Raisoni, co-founder and CEO, Gruve
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Capital efficiency is a superpower. Learn pragmatic tactics for finding your first ICP, landing lighthouse customers, and funding early growth from revenue—so you raise on your terms.
How to Get Acquired in Tech (Without Selling Out): M&A Tips for Founders and Builders
Aklil Ibssa, head of corporate dev and M&A, Coinbase; and Yonas Beshawred, co-founder and CEO, StarSling
The inside view on readiness, outreach, and deal mechanics—from packaging financials to integration planning—so your company commands premium outcomes without losing the mission.
Fundraising Mistakes That Will Kill Your Round (and How to Avoid Them)
Kamila Khasanova, founder and CEO, On Top Strategy; Sam Li, co-founder and CEO, Thoropass; Ashley Paston, partner, General Catalyst; and Dr. Richard Munassi, Managing Director, Tampa Bay Wave
Four vantage points — comms, founder, VC, and accelerator — break down deal-killers (muddy narrative, wrong metrics, mismatched targets) and the fix-it habits that get to “yes.”
Fundraising Process Workshop with TC editor turned VC Josh Constine
Josh Constine, venture partner, SignalFire
Hands-on teardown of your fundraise: story arc, proof points, data room, and outreach sequencing—direct from a former TC editor who’s seen thousands of pitches.
AI at the Brink: Strategic Playbook for National Security
Daniel Hendrycks, executive director, Center for AI Safety
Where frontier-model risk meets real-world stakes. Practical frameworks for evaluating, red-teaming, and governing high-impact systems when failure isn’t an option.
Startup Lessons You Won’t Find in a Playbook
Santi Subotovsky, general partner, Emergence Capital; and Melissa Wong, co-founder and CEO, Zipline
Unvarnished lessons from scaling enterprise software and consumer ops. Expect real talk on hiring execs, navigating slow sales cycles, and staying alive when the plan meets reality.
Agentic AI for Startups: Automate, Adapt, and Accelerate Growth
Anmol Rastogi, head of product management, AI & ML – Amazon Business; and Anjali Mann, technical program manager, Microsoft
Where agents shine today (and where they break). Patterns to deploy agents in ops, support, and sales while keeping humans in the loop for quality.
Leading for Impact: Engineering at the speed of AI
Eno Reyes, CTO, Factory; and Andrew Berman, CEO, Runlayer; Suraj Patel, vp ventures and corporate development, MongoDB, Dima Dzhulgakov, co-founder, Fireworks AI
Explore how engineering founders are redefining startup leadership, shaping product-driven growth, and building the skills to steer their companies to long-term success with insights from leaders at Factory, Fireworks, and Runlayer.

Rewriting Healthcare Workflows with AI
Zubair Ahsan, co-founder and CEO, Max AI; Kanyi Maqubela, managing partner, Kindred Ventures; and Varun Krishnamurthy, co-founder and CEO, Assured Health
This panel will explore how healthcare organizations are reinventing workflows post-scribes and AI documentation, transforming intake, billing, credentialing, and patient care.
Inside the Family Office Playbook: How the Wealthiest Invest in Startups and Venture Funds
Mariane Bekker, managing partner, Founders Bay; Amanda Daniels, founder, vice president, and investor, 5840 Holdings; Brett Horton, chief investment officer, Paris-Roubaix Group; and Daniel Idzkowski, CIO, I.D.I.T. Family Office
Decoding mandates, diligence, and pacing inside family offices — so founders and emerging managers know how (and when) to engage this growing capital source.
CVC: What’s Different? What’s Their Superpower?
Nicolas Sauvage, president, TDK Ventures
TDK Ventures president Nicolas Sauvage demystifies modern CVCs, revealing how to identify the 20% that deliver strategic and financial value, move with speed, and accelerate founder success.
Startups, Stories, and the Fight for Attention
Jenna Birch, founder, SISU; Allie Cefalo, partner, marketing, Kleiner Perkins; and Chantelle Darby, founder, Darby PR
Cutting through noise with earned, owned, and partner channels. Build a narrative that compounds across PR, social, and community without burning cycles.
Embracing AI for a Better Digital Future
Meghana Dhar, tech advisor and investor; and Matt Madrigal, CTO, Pinterest
Pragmatic paths to deploy AI that users actually love: measurement, safety, and what changes when AI touches every surface area — from discovery to commerce.
Being Heard in the Age of AI
Qianwen Chen, CEO, EchoHer; Fay Kallel, chief product and design officer, Headspace; and Chenxi Wang, general partner, Rain Capital
In a feed saturated by AI-generated content, how do brands, creators, and products still feel human? Tactics for signal, trust, and measurable lift.
Powering AI: The Race to Scale Gigawatts of New Energy
Mike Schroepfer, founder and partner, Gigascale Capital; and Garth Sheldon-Coulson, co-founder and CEO, Panthalassa
This panel will reveal how the world’s largest new energy platform can power AI and share lessons on scaling breakthrough clean-tech from R&D to market.
AI & Agents: Shaping How We Build, Live & Connect
Patrick Murphy, co-founder and CEO, Maket; Alyx van der Vorm, founder and CEO, Clyx; and Jeremiah Owyang, general partner, Blitzscaling Ventures, and Thomas Foley, revenue leader, Composio
Real agent use cases spanning build tools, real estate, and social — plus the infra and product decisions that turn novelty into daily utility.
Discovery to Disruption: Turning Research into Venture-Backable Companies
Pratik Nimbalkar, CEO, Plaid Semiconductors; Jared O, co-founder and CEO, SirenOpt; Chon Tang, managing partner, Berkeley SkyDeck Fund; Asad Tirmizi, CEO, T-robotics
The translational playbook: validating markets, securing non-dilutive capital, and sequencing milestones so deep tech passes VC filters without losing scientific edge.
SOSV: Where Deep Tech is Headed (It’s Not JUST AI)
Westley Dang, principal, Philipp Sander, investment analyst, Po Bronson, general partner, and Sierra Brooks, senior scientist and analyst, SOSV
IndieBioSF investors reveal how deep-tech founders can turn breakthrough science into scalable, world-changing companies in biomanufacturing, materials, energy, and health.
Get in the room before it’s full and prices hike at the door
Break into the rooms where startups level up. Disrupt’s exclusive breakout sessions are first-come, first-served — and open to every passholder. Lock in your spot now, save up to $444 before prices jump on October 27, and score 60% off a second pass while you can. Register now.

Tech
Waymo starts autonomous testing in Philadelphia
Waymo is adding another four cities to its growing list of robotaxi rollouts. The company announced Wednesday it has begun testing its autonomous vehicles (with a safety monitor) in Philadelphia, and that it will start manual driving to collect data in Baltimore, St. Louis, and Pittsburgh.
Waymo did not offer a timeline for when it plans to launch commercial services in those locations, nor do we know whether the Alphabet-owned company will partner with other companies to operate robotaxis in each one. That has been the move in cities like Atlanta and Austin, for example, where Waymo has partnered with Uber to advance its robotaxi rollout.
But the new locations join a list of over 20 cities where the company is either offering rides, prepping a commercial launch, or testing. Waymo is also now offering rides on freeways in Los Angeles, Phoenix, and the San Francisco Bay Area. The company plans to be doing one million rides per week by the end of 2026.
Waymo has done all this while claiming to be operating at a level five times safer than humans, according to data the company recently released.
But the expansion has not come without its issues. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating how the company’s vehicles operate near school buses, after a Waymo was filmed driving around a stopped bus in Atlanta in September.
This week, Austin news outlet KXAN published a report showing Waymo’s vehicles have driven past school buses that were in the process of unloading or loading children multiple times — including after Waymo claims to have shipped software updates to address the problem.
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Tech
Spotify Wrapped 2025 adds its first multiplayer feature with ‘Wrapped Party’
Spotify Wrapped is back. After last year’s widely criticized flop that included an AI podcast as its highlight, the streamer’s highly anticipated annual review feature has returned to its roots. This year, Spotify is doubling down on what it knows works best: deep dives into your streaming data, creative experiences, messages from favorite artists, and other social features.
The company claims that Wrapped 2025 is its biggest, as it’s introducing nearly a dozen new features in addition to its old standbys, like top songs and artists. Plus, it’s offering more visibility into users’ data than in years past. For the first time, Spotify Wrapped is adding a live multiplayer feature to compare your listening data with friends.
Wrapped Party, Wrapped’s first live interactive experience, allows you to invite up to nine friends to compare listening stats.

Also new this year, your Top Songs Playlist will include the play counts for each of the top songs, so you can actually see how much time you spent with your favorite tracks.
Other standout features this year include an interactive Top Song Quiz, a Listening Age feature, and Wrapped Clubs, which match you to one of six unique listening styles.
The company believes these additions will not only bring back the personalized, engaging experience that users have long expected from Wrapped, but will take it a step further by making it more interactive than before.
In the Top Song Quiz, for instance, you can try to guess which top song soundtracked your year before seeing the results.
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The new interactive Wrapped Party feature isn’t just about comparing the personal streaming data you’ve already received to your friends’ data, as that’s something people already do on social media. Instead, the feature presents unique data stories for your group, like who’s the “most obsessed fan,” the “early bird,” the most “picky listener,” or even something as nice as the “dinner table explainer,” meaning the person who listens to the most news podcasts.

Spotify says these awards update dynamically every time you join a Wrapped Party, so no two sessions are ever the same — even if you run through them again with the same group of friends.
The new Wrapped Clubs, meanwhile, will group you into one of half a dozen listening styles, like the “Soft Hearts Club,” the “Club Serotonin,” the “Full Charge Crew,” the “Cosmic Stereo Club,” and others. You’ll also receive a role in the club based on your listening data. You might be a club leader if your listening choices strongly matches the club’s values, a scout if you’re always seeking out new releases, or an archivist if you listen to music from past eras.

Another feature, Listening Age, compares your 2025 music listening to others in your age group. To calculate your age, the feature considers the release years of the tracks you listen to most. From there, it identifies the five-year span of music that you engaged with more than other listeners your age.

As in prior years, you’ll see your top songs, top artists, top genres, and, for the first time, top albums. If you engaged with audiobooks and podcasts, you’ll see metrics for those as well. Artists, writers, and podcasters will have their own version of Wrapped as before. And top fans will again receive video messages from their favorite artists, podcasters, and, now, authors.
You’ll also receive a playlist of your top songs of the year, as before.

What you won’t find in this year’s Wrapped is any feature that advertises it was made with AI.
In a press briefing on Tuesday, Spotify’s Senior Director of Global Marketing, Matt Luhks, admitted the company received a “lot of feedback” about its 2024 AI-focused Wrapped experience, saying it was a “mix of positive and ‘more constructive feedback,’” despite the feature driving more engagement than prior years.
“We take all of that in. We use that as information, insights, [and] inspiration for how we approached Wrapped this year,” he said in a press event ahead of today’s launch.
“What our users tell us about Wrapped means a lot to us, so it was really informative in how we approached Wrapped this year. And what we tried to build was the most creative, most innovative, most engaging Wrapped ever,” he added, setting a high bar for the 2025 edition of the now 11-year-old annual year-in-review feature.
“We’re the original and, we believe, still the best,” Luhks said.

Still, AI was a part of the Wrapped experience. Though the company claims the overall experience was not made with AI, it does leverage a LLM (large language model) to add a storytelling layer to Wrapped’s facts and figures, and natural language summaries in other parts of its experience, looking back on your data.
Spotify’s attempt to fix Wrapped after a notable stumble comes as the streamer faces increased competition from Apple, Amazon, YouTube, and others, which have all launched their own annual review features, inspired by Wrapped.
“Everyone seems to have their own version of Wrapped. Now, there’s a lot of reviews and replays and rewinds out there, but we believe that Wrapped still sets the bar for these year-end recaps,” Luhks said.
Along with the consumer experience, Spotify shared its top artists, songs, albums, podcasts, and audiobooks for the year, with top winners that included, respectively, Bad Bunny (top song and album), Joe Rogan (“The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast), and Rebeca Yarros (author of “Fourth Wing”).
Tech
Nothing looks to its community to raise $5M, wants to be ‘IPO-ready’ in 3 years
Hardware maker Nothing is letting its user base buy its stock as part of a new community investment round of $5 million. The new round, which opens on December 10, will enable consumers to buy the company’s shares at its Series C valuation of $1.3 billion.
The company said it has so far raised $8 million in total from over 8,000 people across two previous community investment rounds. It held its first community funding event in 2021, aiming to raise $1.5 million.
“This isn’t about raising capital, it’s about giving our community/fans a chance to invest while we’re private and join us on the journey,” a spokesperson for Nothing told TechCrunch.
Community investors have a rotating seat on the company’s board, but it is unclear what else they get for investing in the company through such rounds.
Nothing raised $200 million in its Series C back in September from investors including Tiger Global, GV, Highland Europe, EQT, Latitude, I2BF and Tapestry. The company has raised $450 million to date.
The community round comes as Nothing makes changes to its corporate structure as it tries to increase its share of a smartphone market dominated by giants like Samsung and Apple. The company is spinning off its budget CMF brand, and plans to explore AI-centric devices while it keeps building smartphones and audio products. And Nothing claims it crossed $1 billion in cumulative revenue this year, up 150% from 2024.
The startup is working to be “IPO-ready” in three years, CEO Carl Pei told TechCrunch in an email. “The timing will depend on market conditions and what makes sense for the business at that point in time,” he said.
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“What’s important is that we’re already operating with that discipline now. We’re building the systems, the governance, the financial discipline that a public company needs. It forces us to think longer-term and make smarter decisions that prioritise sustainable growth,” Pei added.
It’s not clear if Nothing aims to raise another round before an IPO. When asked about its fundraising plans, a Nothing spokesperson said the company is not thinking about raising capital immediately, but it wouldn’t be averse to those conversations.
Those interested in investing in the community round can use platforms like Wefunder and Crowdcube to participate.
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