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Snap buys Saturn: Why Snapchat just grabbed this secret app loved by high schoolers and college students…

With 80% of U.S. high schools on board, Saturn’s social calendar is about to make Snapchat even stickier. Here’s what we know so far.

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Snap’s newest move: Saturn’s social calendar could turn your Snapchat into your daily planner and hangout hub.

In a bold move that could reshape how young people plan their days — and their social lives — Snap Inc., the parent company of Snapchat, has quietly acquired Saturn, a buzzy calendar app that’s been a hit among high school and college students across the United States.

First reported by Engadget and confirmed by Snap to TechCrunch on Friday, the acquisition’s financial details remain under wraps. However, the ambition behind the deal is loud and clear: Snap wants to bring Saturn’s innovative scheduling magic straight into Snapchat, where it could supercharge real-world connections among friends and classmates.

“Saturn’s calendaring expertise will come to Snapchat in new, innovative ways,” a Snap spokesperson teased in an email to TechCrunch — hinting that this is not just a buyout but a deep integration.

What makes Saturn special?
Founded in 2018, Saturn has taken a mundane task — keeping track of class times — and turned it into a social playground. Instead of texting around to ask, “What class do you have next?” students can simply share their daily schedules, see when friends are free, and plan meetups, games, or study sessions in real time. Think of it as a live, social calendar designed for the chaos of student life.

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This approach clearly struck a chord: according to Snap, Saturn already supports a stunning 80% of U.S. high schools, making it a natural fit for Snap’s youthful user base.

What’s next for Saturn and Snapchat?
For now, Saturn will remain a standalone app — so current users don’t need to change a thing. Nearly the entire Saturn team (just under 30 employees) is joining Snap to help fold their scheduling expertise into Snapchat’s ecosystem.

The acquisition also gives Snap fresh talent and a trusted tool in the race to keep Gen Z hooked on Snapchat, which already boasts features like Snap Map, Bitmoji, and group chats — all built around the idea of strengthening friendships.

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Saturn’s backstory: A star-studded funding journey
Saturn’s rise has been boosted by some big names. Back in 2021, Forbes reported that the startup raised $44 million from heavy-hitting investors like General Catalyst, Insight Partners, and Coatue. Notable supporters also include Bezos Expeditions, Salesforce’s Marc Benioff, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, and celebrity duo Ashton Kutcher and Guy Oseary’s Sound Ventures.

With Snap now steering Saturn’s next chapter, expect your Snapchat experience to become even more about planning your day with your closest friends — and maybe ditching those boring group texts forever.

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Tech

Microsoft to axe 120 jobs in Australia amid global layoffs: Will AI take your tech job next

After slashing 6,000 roles just last month, Microsoft confirms another 9,000 job cuts globally — with nearly 120 in Australia. Is AI behind the silent shift

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Microsoft to Cut 120 Jobs in Australia Amid 9,000 Global Layoffs — Is AI Taking Over?
Microsoft’s AI push triggers fresh layoffs: Nearly 120 Australian jobs are now on the line as global restructuring deepens.

In a move that’s sending shockwaves through the tech industry, Microsoft is set to cut nearly 120 jobs in Australia as part of a massive global downsizing impacting 9,000 employees — approximately 4% of its entire workforce.

The announcement marks the second major round of layoffs from the Redmond-based tech giant in just two months, prompting growing concerns over the direction in which global tech firms are heading — and the looming question many workers are now asking: Is artificial intelligence replacing human jobs faster than expected?

Australia in Microsoft’s Crosshairs

According to the Australian Financial Review, close to 120 employees in Microsoft’s Australian operations will be affected by the fresh wave of redundancies. While the company has not released an official list of affected departments or roles, insiders suggest the cuts could span across engineering, product development, and sales, hitting both junior and senior levels.

A Microsoft spokesperson stated the layoffs were necessary to remain “competitive and efficient in a dynamic marketplace,” adding, “We continue to implement organisational changes necessary to best position the company and teams for success.”

But for many Australian workers, the sentiment is clear: the pace of tech layoffs is picking up, and job security in the AI era is no longer guaranteed.

9,000 Jobs Cut Globally — But Why Now?

Microsoft’s workforce stood at 228,000 employees globally, but now 9,000 of those positions will be eliminated. This follows a previous round in May 2025, when 6,000 employees, mostly in product and engineering divisions, were let go.

That prior wave was described as an effort to “reduce layers” and “flatten the management structure.” Sources suggest that the upcoming layoffs may target sales and operations units, particularly those roles being evaluated for outsourcing or automation.

Back in April, Microsoft made headlines when it indicated it would outsource software sales tasks to third-party firms, stirring speculation that in-house roles were being silently phased out.

Is AI Replacing Humans at Microsoft?

Perhaps the most pressing concern is the role of artificial intelligence (AI) in these layoffs.

While Microsoft has not explicitly stated that the jobs are being replaced by AI, many analysts are pointing to the company’s aggressive AI strategy as a likely reason for the downsizing.

The tech giant is a major backer of OpenAI, the organization behind ChatGPT, and has been integrating its own AI-powered assistant, Microsoft Copilot, into key services across Windows, Microsoft 365, and Azure.

“As we roll out more generative AI and agents, it should change the way our work is done,” wrote Andy Jassy, CEO of Amazon, in a similar internal memo earlier this year. “We will need fewer people doing some of the jobs that are being done today.”

This sentiment appears to echo across the tech industry, where AI adoption is no longer a trend — it’s the new baseline.

A Broader Industry Trend

Microsoft isn’t alone in its AI-fueled restructuring. Earlier this year, Meta, parent company of Facebook and Instagram, also announced job cuts targeting “low-performers” — around 5% of its global workforce or 3,600 people.

Telstra CEO Vicki Brady warned that the Australian telco’s workforce will likely shrink significantly by 2030, stating, “Our workforce will look different in 2030 as we develop new capabilities, find new ways to leverage technology, including AI, and we have to stay focused on becoming more efficient.”

Even Amazon is signaling AI-fueled reshuffles, hinting at massive workforce transitions as more tasks become automated.

What Happens to Displaced Workers?

There’s still no clear word on whether Microsoft will offer internal transfers or upskilling options to the affected employees. Critics argue that despite record-breaking profits and expanding AI infrastructure, tech firms are failing to invest in human reskilling.

Tech analyst Dr. Lydia Carr, from the University of Sydney, notes: “We’re seeing an inflection point. AI is reshaping business faster than workers can reskill. Companies must take accountability for the human fallout of this automation wave.”

If Microsoft does not provide clear transition plans, Australia’s highly skilled tech professionals may find themselves stranded in an industry racing toward automation.

What’s Next for Microsoft?

Despite the layoffs, Microsoft continues to scale up its AI infrastructure, including new microchips, data centers, and deep integrations of Copilot across its platforms. CEO Satya Nadella has been a vocal advocate of “AI-first transformation” — and the market has rewarded it. Microsoft remains the second-most valuable company globally by market cap.

But at what cost?

With thousands of jobs slashed, and more potentially on the chopping block, the Microsoft story now stands as a case study in AI’s disruptive force — a warning for workers, and a call for policy-makers to regulate the speed of tech-led restructuring.

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