The hardware world had a brutal week, withiRobot,Luminar, andRad Power Bikesall filing for bankruptcy.
Each company faces its own mix of tariff pressures, supply chain issues, and shifting markets, but together they tell a larger story about the challenges of building physical products in an era of global trade tensions and cheap overseas competition. From the Roomba maker that almost got acquired by Amazon to the e-bike company that couldn’t escape its Chinese supply chain, this week’s bankruptcies are a warning sign for hardware startups everywhere.
Today on TechCrunch’sEquitypodcast, hosts Anthony Ha, Rebecca Bellan, and Sean O’Kane discuss what went wrong for three once-promising hardware companies, plusAmazon’s massive OpenAI betandTrump’s new approachto AI regulation.
Listen to the full episode to hear more news from the week, including:
- How “slop” became Merriam-Webster’s word of the year — and why it has become bigger than just AI-generated content
- Why Databricks raised $10 billion at a $134 billion valuation (in a Series L!) instead of just going public already
- The Coursera-Udemy merger and whether online course platforms can survive the AI era
Source: Techcrunch



