One thing is obvious: 2019 was a good year for enterprise startups raising money at hefty valuations.
Since NPM laid off five employees, several more have resigned, while others demanded better working conditions. Here's why there's turmoil at NPM.
Snowflakes new CEO Frank Slootman is itching “to do battle with the biggest companies in the world” including Amazon and Microsoft.
NPM CEO Bryan Bogensberger wrote an internal message to employees that the company could fundraise normally without having to worry.
Accel's success gives pause to this idea that the venture capital model is really being blown up, as is the trendy talk these days.
RapidAPI started as a tool for beginner coders at a hackathon. Now, it's partnered with Microsoft and Google and just closed $25 million from M12.
Former Amazon Prime engineering director Peter Chapman explains why he left to become the CEO of quantum computing startup IonQ.
MapR said it is "actively pursuing a strategic transaction" that may allow it to keep the site open and retain some of the employees.
A week after Bob Muglia suddenly stepped down, new CEO Frank Slootman hired two new execs from his previous employer ServiceNow. And it could be part of an IPO plan.
More turmoil for Docker, the startup that helped create a new software market only to watch the tech giants come in and dominate it.
Nginix is getting gobbled up by F5 Networks, in a deal valued at $670 million.