AngelList now has a sweet new blog. Therein, the AngelList team expounds upon the latest features, including screenshots that are sure to bring you great joy.



Our team is using the AngelList blog to post our weekly progress. We used to put it on Yammer, but now we’re posting it publicly on the blog. So don’t expect polished posts with the “final” version of each feature. We’ll be sharing works in progress (that we’ve shipped).
So check out the AngelList blog and stay up to date on our endless product developments. We promise a steady stream of pretty pictures.
| Budget | Title | Location | Quotes | RFP# | |
| 1. | $1000 - $2499 | Promotional Product Ecommerce Website Redesig | Elk Grove , CA | 5/8 (3 Avail) | 35400 |
| 2. | $500 - $999 | CGI Script for Online Teachers Course | Phnom Penh , nv | 1/8 (7 Avail) | 35387 |
| 3. | $250 - $499 | McHenry County: Wordpress Website for Histori | Mc Henry , IL | 1/8 (7 Avail) | 35399 |
| 4. | $1000 - $2499 |
|
., FL | 8/8 (0 Avail) | 35401 |
| 5. | $1000 - $2499 |
|
Orange , ca | 8/8 (0 Avail) | 35402 |
| 6. | $500 - $999 |
|
Dallas , tx | 8/8 (0 Avail) | 35380 |
Congrats to TechCrunch Disrupt winner GetAround. Guess what they used to raise part of their first round?
We’ve covered this before, but it’s worth repeating: don’t raise money in series, raise it in parallel. Don’t talk to one investor at a time, talk to all of them at once. It’s the only way to get market-clearing terms. Meetin
Mike at TechCrunch published a nice post today about VCs who use AngelList. I especially like the quote he pulled from DFJ’s Josh Stein. The only part I disagree with is the “VCs hate AngelList” idea. I think it’s the opposite—they