No one likes being hot and sticky. Here’s how to enjoy the great outdoors without overheating on your next camping trip.
Camping Tips: 10 Ways to Stay Cool While Sleeping Outside This Summer
No one likes being hot and sticky. Here’s how to enjoy the great outdoors without overheating on your next camping trip.
We’ve got pictures to help you easily fold your fitted sheets into neat rectangles (or squares).
TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 returns to Moscone West in San Francisco from October 27-29, bringing together more than 10,000 startup and VC leaders for an inside look at where innovation is headed. Among the must-attend sessions is a candid panel on the Builders Stage about one of the most high-stakes moments in any founder’s journey: raising your first round.
Register now to save up to $675 on your ticket and join this conversation — plus 200+ more sessions across five industry stages, roundtables, and breakouts. Prices go up tonight at 11:59 p.m. PT.
From pitch to partnership: The real roadmap to seed funding
This dynamic panel brings together three seasoned investors — Maria Palma (Freestyle Capital), Gabby Cazeau (Harlem Capital), and Marlon Nichols (MaC Venture Capital) — to unpack the realities of early-stage fundraising. From shaping a compelling pitch to choosing the right capital partners, they’ll share honest, actionable insights to help founders translate interest into investment.
Maria Palma, general partner at Freestyle Capital, brings deep operating and investing experience, with past roles at Kindred Capital, RRE Ventures, and leadership positions at high-growth startups like Eyeview. She’s backed companies such as Fung Money, Lightning Labs, and Payman, and holds an MBA from Harvard.
Gabby Cazeau is a partner at Harlem Capital, investing in pre-seed and seed startups across enterprise software and applied AI. She holds an MBA from Yale and a BS in chemical engineering. Gabby has been featured in Business Insider, CNBC, and Crain’s 40 Under 40, and serves on the VC Council of Startup:NYC.
Marlon Nichols, co-founder and managing general partner of MaC Venture Capital, leads one of North America’s top seed-stage firms with over $600 million AUM (assets under management). A multiple-time honoree on Business Insider’s Seed 100 and PitchBook’s list of top Black VCs, Marlon has helped scale industry-shaping companies like Blavity, Thrive Market, and MongoDB.
What to expect on the Builders Stage
This isn’t your typical venture panel. Expect sharp insights on how to cut through the noise, structure your raise, and build relationships that last beyond a term sheet. Whether you’re gearing up for your first round or advising a founder who is, this is the session you don’t want to miss.
Techcrunch event
San Francisco
|
October 27-29, 2025
Catch Palma, Cazeau, Nichols, and 250+ tech heavyweights across the six industry-specific stages, as well as in breakouts and roundtables, live at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025, at Moscone West in San Francisco. Register now and lock in up to $675 in ticket savings before today ends!
Several sections of Article 1 of the U.S. Constitution appear to have been removed from the official U.S. government website, as pointed out by sleuths on the internet and as seen by TechCrunch.
The changes were made in the past month, according to the Wayback Machine, which shows the full original text on Congress’ website as of July 17.
Several Reddit threads identified the changes in Article 1 of the U.S. Constitution: large parts of Section 8 have been removed, and Sections 9 and 10 have been deleted altogether. In the screenshot below, you can see the archived version of the site on the Wayback Machine on the left, and the current site on the right — the text highlighted in yellow has been removed.
These sections largely relate to the powers that Congress has and does not have, as well as limitations on the powers of individual states. The removal includes sections relating to habeas corpus, the powers that protect citizens from unlawful detention.
Some of the sections’ text appears missing, as indicated by a trailing semicolon at the end of Section 8, where text used to follow.
It’s not clear why the sections of the Constitution were removed from the website. Changing the U.S. Constitution’s text on the website does not change or have any effect on U.S. law, but it nevertheless follows senior Trump administration official Stephen Miller’s threats earlier this year to suspend habeas corpus.
A White House spokesperson did not immediately return a request for comment.
Techcrunch event
San Francisco
|
October 27-29, 2025
Large sections of the U.S. Constitution were removed from the U.S. government’s official page.Image Credits:TechCrunch (screenshot)