Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Of course there’s an added subscription service Of course there’s an added subscription service is transportation ...
That’s not a digital glitch you’re seeing — the deck on the Unicorn scooter was designed with that step feature on purpose to open a world of cargo and utility possibilities. As much as I enjoy riding ...
Unicorn, an e-scooter startup from Tile co-founder Nick Evans, closed down after spending all of its money on Facebook and Google ads, according to a recent report. The company had received only 350 ...
It seems that more and more e-scooters are popping up all around the world, and with that come benefits and most certainly even downsides. What, you believed that this system is perfect? Ha! Far from ...
Earlier this month we reported on the demise of Unicorn, an electric scooter company that went out of business before delivering any of its promised electric scooters to paying customers. And when it ...
‘I am upset he basically robbed everyone of his customers and is closing without delivering any scooters’ ‘I am upset he basically robbed everyone of his customers and is closing without delivering ...
AUSTIN, Texas — An Austin startup is living up to its name: The scooters purchased through the electric scooter company Unicorn Rides don't exist. Unicorn Rides was a little different than the average ...
If you hoped to have a new e-scooter from Unicorn Rides under the tree this holiday, you’re out of luck. The Austin-based startup announced over the weekend it is going out of business, and it cannot ...
Bird, 0.58 years: The Los Angeles-based dockless electric scoot company was founded in September 2017 and reportedly became a unicorn in May when it raised a $150 million funding round led by Sequoia ...
Bird, the Santa Monica-based electric scooter-sharing start-up, is raising $150 million in a funding round led by Sequoia Capital that will value the company at $1 billion, people familiar with the ...
In late March, the scooter-sharing company Bird invited about a third of its employees to attend a thirty-minute "COVID-19 update" via Zoom. The meeting only lasted about two minutes, and it wasn't ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results