Perricone’s opened in 1996 in a very different Brickell, at a time when people went to work in the area but went home at 5 p.m. In 2020, Perricone’s moved to a modern space close to the original location.
But before the doors lock for the last time, let’s take a look at photos in the Miami Herald archives of went went on inside:
With all the controversy surrounding visual artists being ripped off by AI, it seems like these are difficult and confusing days for creators. Now, a London-based startup hopes to use AI to help artists take back control. Exactly.ai says it uses generative AI to help artists retain legal ownership of their art and gives them the ability to reproduce their designs much faster and at scale.
Over the years, fintech startups, particularly neobanks, have thrown a cat among the pigeons in banking and finance by building whole new banking software stacks. FintechOS’ low-code platform has now raised a $60 million “Series B+” investment round led by BlackRock, Cipio Partners and Molten Ventures. This is yet another sign, following the breakout hit of UIPath, that companies from Romania can make it to the international stage without US VCs.
After two years of preparation and four delays over the past several months due to technical glitches, Indian space startup Agnikul has successfully launched its first sub-orbital test vehicle, powered by its unique 3D-printed rocket engines, space agency Indian Space Research Organisation said Thursday. Called Agnibaan SOrTeD (Sub-Orbital Technology Demonstrator), the single-stage launch vehicle lifted off Thursday morning local time from the startup's mobile launchpad at the Satish Dhawan Space Center on South India's Sriharikota island. Data from the test flight will contribute to the development of the startup's Agnibaan commercial orbital launch vehicle.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts (probably) couldn't forecast this level of Mets ineptitude, but he did predict an Ohtani breakout in his pregame media scrum.
Struggling EV startup Fisker has laid off hundreds of employees in a bid to stay alive, as it continues to search for funding, a buyout or prepare for bankruptcy. The layoffs were announced during an all-hands meeting held Wednesday morning. Founder and CEO Henrik Fisker told employees that the large investor his company owes money to -- and the chief restructuring officer working on the investor's behalf -- wanted to let more people go, according to employees who attended.
Here's what I learned watching vintage "The Price Is Right": It's still fun to guess the prices of out of circulation Oldsmobiles and Cheez-Its in 1984.