brandonlin, Author at CREtech | Page 49 of 165

brandonlin December 21, 2021
Tech executives and engineers are quitting Google, Meta, Amazon and other large companies for what they say is a once-in-generation opportunity with crypto.
brandonlin December 21, 2021
Dottid, the commercial real estate (CRE) SaaS technology platform for asset management and leasing transactions, announced today its strategic partnership with ...
brandonlin December 21, 2021
Lumber prices have nearly doubled over the past month, holding above the $1,000 mark as recent floods in Canada limited shipments while demand remains strong with US homebuilders staying busy.
brandonlin December 21, 2021
Yardi’s suite of commercial real estate data and marketing services continues to grow for the benefit of its clients. Today, the company announced its acquisition and redesign of 42Floors.com, the popular online marketing platform for tenants and brokers.
brandonlin December 21, 2021

Hundreds of Israeli real estate startups have raised $3.5 billion. Sensors embedded in concrete, walls that monitor temperature, windows showing ads, hands-free cranes? All in a day's work.

brandonlin December 21, 2021
New hires to strengthen Fifth Wall's expertise in the global real estate and technology industries, across both private and public markets, while advancing the firm's original content strategy
brandonlin December 21, 2021
Annie Rinker of Hines reveals what drove the company to launch a flex workspace offering, and how technology has helped them succeed within the flex space.
brandonlin December 21, 2021

Social media platform partnering with Virtual Dining Concepts

brandonlin December 21, 2021
Undeterred by inflation, supply chain issues, and the start of another winter of COVID-19, venture capitalists invested $32 billion in proptech companies in 2021, a 28 percent increase in funding over 2020 and a 3.23 percent increase compared to 2019, according to a report released Monday.
brandonlin December 18, 2021
Two years after cashing out of Invitation Homes, the investment firm is jumping back into single-family rentals