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34 MIN LESEZEIT

LET 1,000 UNICORNS BLOOM

A CRAPPY CUP of airplane tea and the rise of Donald Trump led to the launch in May of an outfit with the wacky name of All Turtles, which might usher in a new way to think about tech startups around the world.

The All Turtles story began with Phil Libin, who used to be CEO of the app company Evernote and lately has worked as a partner at the venture capital firm General Catalyst in Silicon Valley. Last fall, Libin boarded a JetBlue light from Boston to San Francisco. As the plane leveled of, he ordered tea. Libin plopped the tea bag in the hot water, then got distracted for about 10 minutes. By then, the tea was over-steeped, and he had the classic problem of what to do with a soaked tea bag while trapped in an airplane seat. “I got thinking that tea is kind of a crappy experience,” Libin tells Newsweek, using the type of language that usually leads people like him to think: How can I disrupt tea?

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Newsweek International
16th June 2017
ANSICHT IM LAGER

Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


BIG SHOTS
Night of Terror
London—Police lead people to safety in central London
Diplomatic Danger
Kabul, Afghanistan— First responders work near the
One Man’s Ceiling
Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh—After killing hundreds in Sri
Killing the Next Pablo
Apartado, Colombia— Jose Mendoza tosses pamphlets out
PAGE ONE
THE GREAT MISCOMMUNICATOR
Can Trump pull a Reagan and beat the rap?
THE UN-HILLARYS
In the shadow of Donald Trump, thousands of millennials are gunning to save the Democratic Party
FRESHMAN DISORIENTATION
Veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are struggling to adjust to life in college. But a Vassar program is trying to change that
FANTASTIC DAMAGE
How corruption in Nigeria is making it hard to defeat Boko Haram
FEATURES
FREEDOM FROM CHOICE
Political operatives used fake news, Big Data and Facebook to suppress the vote and rile up racists in 2016. It’s going to be even uglier next time around
At Long Last Monk
Why did it take 58 years to release the jazz legend’s only soundtrack?
NEW WORLD
MY FAVORITE MARTIAN DRONE
Astronomers hope drones can help map the red planet
TOXIC BURN NOTICE
Destroying hazardous waste out in the open is banned in the U.S., with one glaring exception: the military
LIMITING SCREAM TIME
STARING DUMBLY at a smartphone isn’t just for grown-ups
DOWNTIME
Omachi, Japan
A new festival turns its rural setting into contemporary art
A Recipe for Success
How architect David Rockwell and chef Nobu Matsuhisa built their perfect restaurant
No Handmaidens Here
Secret lives of ancient women
Magic Carpet Ride Arundhati Roy captures
India’s chaotic beauty in her second novel
Widow’s Pique Rachel Weisz has her way with classic melodrama in My Cousin Rachel
THE SCREENING ROOM
Novelist Meg Wolitzer on 20 Years of the Moth
WHEN I WAS FIRST asked to be a storyteller at the Moth
’ Mali, 1988’ Harry Gruyaert
HARRY GRUYAERT is a Magnum photographer, but he doesn’t