Thursday night, hundreds of members of the technology elite—founders, investors, hustlers, hackers—gathered at the Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall for the sixth annual Crunchies Awards, a ceremony which celebrates private-stock valuations and product launches instead of box-office scores and film premieres.
When a handful of tech blogs launched The Crunchies five years ago, the notion of an awards ceremony for startups modeled after the Oscars seemed like a self-mocking joke—and indeed, few took it seriously at the time.
Fast-forward to 2013, and it's clear as day that the tech world has stars like Marissa Mayer, Mark Zuckerberg, Aaron Levie, Brian Chesky, and Kevin Systrom. And arguably, the digital products they launch on the world are far more important than the ephemeral celluloid narratives of Hollywood.
We donned a tuxedo, brought our cameras, and took our seats.
First stop: a pre-party thrown by Menlo Ventures, the backer of Uber and Fab. Wall Street Journal reporter Evelyn Rusli shared a moment with Box marketer Ashley Mayer.
Sarah McBride from Reuters talked to BitTorrent founder Bram Cohen.
Menlo also backed Getaround, founded by Jessica Scorpio.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider