MayimFlow wants to stop data center leaks before they happen


The mania around data centers has a lot of companies looking to become “picks and shovels” providers, by building profitable businesses that are ancillary to the gold rush gigs of selling server access or training leading AI models.

MayimFlow, the Built World stage winner at this year’s TechCrunch Disrupt, is a good example. The startup is focused on essentially one task: preventing damaging water leaks.

Data centers use a lot of water, and that water can present a big risk, even if a leak is small. Founder John Khazraee told TechCrunch that many data centers only have reactive solutions for water leaks. That can saddle companies with downtime and set them back millions of dollars if one occurs.

Khazraee would know. He spent more than 15 years building infrastructure for IBM, Oracle, and Microsoft. With MayimFlow, he’s developed a combination of IoT sensors and edge-deployed machine learning models that can detect signs of impending leaks.

“I’ve noticed these issues in data centers, and the only solution they had was: ‘when the leak happens, we find out,’” he said in an interview. “Now you have to spend a lot of money to go remediate the situation. Now you got to turn off the servers. Now the data is being disrupted. So I decided to do something about it.”

Khazraee assembled a small team with plenty of experience to take on this challenge. Jim Wong, MayimFlow’s chief strategy officer, has spent decades working with data centers. Chief technology officer Ray Lok has carved out a career in water management and IoT infrastructure.

Beyond the scariest consequences of unnoticed water leaks, there’s an element of frugality to what Khazraee is trying to do with MayimFlow, which he said comes from his childhood.

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“I grew up in a very, you know, I don’t want to say the word ‘poor’ family, but we weren’t the most well-off family,” he said. “And my dad would always, when I was taking a shower, tell me, ‘Hey, you’re in the shower too long. Are you singing in there?’”

As he grew up, Khazraee said he found himself always thinking about how to make things more efficient — especially as he studied to become an engineer. In college, he worked at a facility that collected frying oil from restaurants and converted it to biodiesel. It was a “messy job,” he said, but he liked the end result.

Khazraee is now trying to mix this penchant for frugality with the experience of his team. He believes they can give data center operators 24 to 48 hours of advanced warning that repairs will be needed.

MayimFlow has collected a glut of sample data from various industrial water systems that allow them to make these kinds of predictions, he said. The company can provide sensors that can help monitor a water system or plug its machine learning models into existing ones if companies already have similar hardware.

Khazraee said he wants to bring this solution beyond data centers to commercial buildings, hospitals, manufacturing facilities, and possibly even utilities. In his eyes, any company that wants to spot leaks early, or optimize water usage, could be a customer.

Khazraee thinks it’s such a big opportunity he’s turned down roles at multiple big tech companies while building MayimFlow over the last two years.

“I really believe in the vision. I believe in the impact that we’re making,” he said. “Water is becoming one of those big issues in our world.”

Waymo’s co-CEO on the challenge of scaling robotaxis safely


Waymo’s co-CEO, Tekedra Mawakana, had a clear message during her interview on the TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 stage Monday: “It is imperative that we scale.”

Mawakana was speaking in the context of how Waymo balances fundraising (and burning through that money) with eventually achieving profitability. But she was also clear in the interview that she believes Waymo can increase road safety by reaching that scale.

All this helps explain why the company has been on an expansion tear this year, and expects to launch in many more U.S. cities — D.C., Miami, Denver, Dallas, Seattle, and Nashville — as well as in London in 2026. It’s a furious pace that has seen the autonomous vehicle company leverage multiple partnerships with the likes of companies like Uber, Lyft, and Avis.

“By the end of 2026, you should expect us to be offering 1 million trips per week,” she said.

Mawakana spent a lot of time during the interview with TechCrunch Transportation Editor Kirsten Korosec talking about the challenges of safely reaching that kind of scale.

The Waymo co-CEO maintained that the company is operating at a level that is safer than the typical human driver. And while she didn’t name names, she took a shot at competitors, saying they aren’t doing enough to prove that their autonomous vehicle technology is truly safe.

“It is incumbent upon [them] to be transparent about what’s happening,” she said. “And if you are not being transparent, then it is my view that you are not doing what is necessary in order to actually earn the right to make the road safer.”

Her comments come as the company continues to iron out edge cases during its expansion — with one of the most recent incidents coming in Atlanta, Georgia, where a Waymo vehicle pulled out in front of a stopped school bus, leading to an investigation from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Waymo itself recently released a report claiming its vehicles are already five times safer than most human drivers, and 12 times safer with respect to pedestrians.

Still, Waymo vehicles have been caught making a number of head-scratching decisions.

“It’s important to recognize, it’s not going to be perfection, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t be accountable for transparency,” Mawakana said on stage. “I think…we really worry as a company about those days. You know, we don’t say whether, we say when, and we plan for them.”

Mawkana also said Waymo doesn’t think in terms of “how many [incidents] are allowable.”

“We know they’re going to happen because our cars are on the road with humans, and unfortunately, right now, the state of the roads and the state of human driving is there is a lot of deaths, and there are a lot of injuries being caused on the roadways,” she said.

And when asked whether the public would accept a death caused by a robotaxi in the face of the promise of greater safety, Mawakana said: “I think that society will.”

Today is the last day to save up to $668 on Disrupt 2025 tickets


This is it! You have less than 24 hours left to lock in ticket savings of up to $668 for TechCrunch Disrupt 2025, happening October 27-29 in San Francisco, before prices go up at 11:59 p.m. PT tonight. Wait too long and you’ll miss out on these last-minute savings — and the most anticipated tech conference of the year. Register here to lock in your ticket at these low rates.

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If you’re on the fence about joining, here’s what you’re about to miss

250+ of tech’s most influential voices

These aren’t just big names — they’re the leaders actively shaping the future of tech. They’re bringing real-world insights on product, AI, security, GTM strategy, scaling, and leadership. If you’re a founder or investor, these conversations aren’t just inspiring — they’re critical. Sitting in these sessions means walking away with lessons, frameworks, and foresight you can actually use.

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Hear valuable insights from leaders like the following:

200+ sessions across 5 industry stages, breakouts, and roundtables

TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 Mary Barra on stage
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Whatever your goal — fundraising, hiring, scaling, launching, selling — there’s a session for it. Each one is designed to give you actionable takeaways, not just theory. Explore the fast-growing session lineup on the Disrupt agenda.

Just a taste of what’s on the stages:

  • Love, Lies & Algorithms: The truth about AI in relationships
  • The Future of AI Defense: DARPA, Point72, and the Department of the Navy on national security
  • GTM That Works: Real startup strategies with leaders from GTMfund, Google Cloud, OpenAI
  • The AI Talent Shift: Mercor’s Brendan Foody on the global AI workforce
  • Where VCs Are Placing Their Bets in 2026: Top VCs cover what’s next in tech and where VCs will invest

100+ exhibitors and future-facing tech

Disrupt isn’t just for listening — it’s for exploring. You’ll get a first look at tomorrow’s innovations across AI, dev tools, climate tech, fintech, and more. These aren’t science fair demos. They’re real, scalable solutions. Investors find their next portfolio company. Founders meet the tools and partners that help them scale.

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Startup Battlefield 200

This is the World Series” of pitch competitions — a launchpad for future unicorns. Over three days, 20 early-stage startups from around the world battle it out for funding, mentorship, and the $100,000 equity-free prize. You’ll hear live VC feedback and learn exactly what makes a winning pitch and a viable startup. Whether you’re an investor, a founder, or just love watching pressure-cooker innovation, this is your front-row seat.

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Thousands of curated connections and endless opportunities to network

With 2,000+ curated meetings, powered by Braindate, and the networking lounge, breakout areas, and happy hours, every corner of Disrupt is a chance to meet the right people. Investors meet founders. Founders meet co-builders. Operators meet mentors. It’s designed to make serendipity scalable.

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Beat the clock: Don’t let today pass you by without securing up to $668 in savings

This is your last chance to join thousands of founders, investors, builders, and operators at the tech epicenter that moves the industry forward. Register by tonight at 11:59 p.m. PT and save up to $668. Secure your ticket savings now.

Founder or Investor? Your pass unlocks even more

Founder Pass: Includes curated VC matchmaking, private mentoring sessions, and exclusive access to the founder-investor area and content to help you scale smarter.

Investor Pass: Get direct access to high-potential startups, curated meetings, the investor-founder-only lounge, and premium networking opportunities.

Bringing a group?

Get a bonus discount! Bundle packages for groups of 4 to 9 people offer even greater savings of 15%. Explore bundles here and invite your team.

Even Rogers and Max Haot join the Space Stage at Disrupt 2025


The next era of the space economy isn’t just about rockets and satellites — it’s about infrastructure, autonomy, and entirely new models for building and defending off-Earth assets. At TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 this October 27–29 in San Francisco’s Moscone West, the Space Stage is where this shift gets real.

If you’re ready to explore how next-gen tech meets the cosmos, grab your ticket before prices rise on September 1 and save your seat at the Space Stage.

TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 Evens Rogers Max and Haot

Building the new backbone of space

In this forward-looking panel, Even Rogers, co-founder and CEO of True Anomaly, and Max Haot, serial entrepreneur and founder of Launcher (acquired by Vast), and CEO of Vast, take the stage to explore what’s changing — and what’s needed — to unlock a more sustainable and scalable space economy.

Rogers brings deep national security and defense experience from his years as an Air Force officer and space systems strategist, including time as a DARPA Service Chiefs Fellow and contributor to the foundational doctrine of the U.S. Space Force. Now he’s deploying cutting-edge space technologies to protect orbital assets and reimagine how the U.S. ensures freedom of action in space.

Haot, meanwhile, brings the commercial side of the equation — he’s CEO of Vast, a multi-exit founder with companies spanning aerospace, livestreaming, and connected devices. Most recently, he led Launcher to acquisition by Vast as part of a mission to build artificial gravity space stations, making him a key voice in turning science fiction into capital-backed reality.

The future of space isn’t theoretical — it’s operational

From new government-commercial partnerships to venture-backed orbital platforms, this session looks at the strategies and tech fueling the next wave of growth. It’s a candid conversation for anyone betting on the intersection of space, innovation, and private enterprise. More space tech leaders will join this panel discussion, so stay tuned for the update.

Join the new pioneers on the Space Stage

Disrupt 2025 will bring together more than 10,000 founders, investors, and operators — don’t miss the chance to hear what’s next in space before it makes headlines. Get your pass before prices rise on September 1 and be there when the future lands.

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Wonder Dynamics co-founder Nikola Todorovic joins Disrupt 2025


TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 is back at Moscone West in San Francisco from October 27–29, bringing together 10,000+ startup and VC leaders to dig into what’s next in tech. And when it comes to artificial intelligence, the conversations aren’t just technical — they’re creative, cinematic, and boundary-pushing. That’s why Nikola Todorovic is headed to the AI Stage.

A visual effects veteran turned AI entrepreneur, Todorovic is the co-founder of Wonder Dynamics, now an Autodesk company. Alongside actor and producer Tye Sheridan, he helped launch Autodesk Flow Studio (formerly Wonder Studio), a groundbreaking AI platform that allows creators to seamlessly integrate 3D characters into live-action scenes. The platform uses cloud-based tools to automate complex processes like lighting, animation, and composition, giving filmmakers a radically faster and more accessible path to high-end visual effects.

TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 Nikola Todorovic

Where film meets AI

Todorovic’s journey to this moment wasn’t traditional, but that’s exactly the point. As an award-winning filmmaker and VFX supervisor, he spent years working at the intersection of storytelling and technology. That experience led to Wonder Dynamics, where the mission has always been to empower artists, not replace them. The company’s acquisition by Autodesk in 2024 marked a major validation of that vision, and now Todorovic is helping shape the future of creative AI inside one of the industry’s biggest ecosystems.

At Disrupt, he’ll join other AI industry leaders for a wide-ranging panel on what’s coming next — from generative tools to ethical design to the future of creator workflows. Stay tuned to the fast-growing Disrupt agenda page for the latest updates. Expect a conversation in Todorovic’s session that spans beyond buzzwords and dives into the real-world impact of AI in media and beyond.

Join 10,000 other tech and VC leaders on the AI Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 to hear from Nikola Todorovic and other top voices driving the future of artificial intelligence. It’s all happening October 27–29 at Moscone West in San Francisco. Lock in your spot today and save up to $675 before prices go up.

Today’s your last chance to apply for the Startup Battlefield 200


Today’s the day, startup founders. It’s your final opportunity to join Startup Battlefield 200, the world’s preeminent startup competition, at TechCrunch Disrupt in October. It’s your last chance to launch on a global stage like 900+ other Startup Battlefield companies have, including Vurb, Trello, Mint, Dropbox, Yammer, TripIt, Redbeacon, Qwiki, Getaround and Soluto.

Startup Battlefield 200 applications close today

Don’t miss your shot! Submit your application today, before this opportunity disappears at 11:59 p.m. PDT.

A reminder that applying to and participating in Startup Battlefield 200 is absolutely free and equity-free. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain.

What exactly do we mean by “everything to gain”? Let’s take another look at the VIP experience all SB 200 companies receive. First and foremost, this thoroughly vetted cohort earns the highly regarded TechCrunch seal of approval — which carries door-opening weight in the startup world.

Startup Battlefield 200: Bask in benefits at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Check out this bevy of free, exclusive benefits:

Full access to Disrupt: SB 200 founders attend Disrupt, receive four additional passes and VIP access to all the presentations, breakouts and roundtables.

Exhibition space: The SB 200 will be the only early-stage startups allowed to exhibit at Disrupt.

Investor interest and media exposure: Investors hunting for future unicorns and journalists looking for the next big story will beeline it for the exhibition floor to meet and greet the SB 200 founders.

Workshops and pitch training: Invitations to SB 200 founders-only workshops and masterclasses in the weeks running up to Disrupt, including special pitch training from TechCrunch staff.

Flash-pitch to investors and TC editors: That training will come in handy when you step onto the Pitch Showcase Stage. You’ll receive invaluable feedback, and you might find your way into an investor’s portfolio.

Repeat after me: Applications close today. Don’t miss your opportunity to launch on a global stage, accelerate your startup growth and maybe even win $100,000. Apply to the Startup Battlefield 200 before 11:59 p.m. PDT today. We’d love to see you in San Francisco!

Is your company interested in sponsoring or exhibiting at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024? Contact our sponsorship sales team by filling out this form.