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Ezab This Week On The TC Gadgets Podcast: WWDC, iOS 8, OS X Yosemite, And WWDC!
 The lawsuit is the result of several months of investigation, a statement from the DA   office explained. It was filed today, bu stanley drink bottle t Lily was informed yesterday 鈥?likely prompting the decision late last night to issue refunds and dissolve the company. Maybe they were planning to do it anyway, but the timing is certainly a l stanley flasche ittle suspect. I ;ve contacted the company for comment.Update: A Lily representative tells TechCrunch that the refund and wind-down was in the works for this week anyway, and that the warning fro stanley cup m the DA came at just the right time, or wrong, depending on how you look at it. An official statement on the suit is expected soon.Part of the suit has to do with the initial pitch video, watched by millions of people, showing off what appeared to be a Lily drone following users and shooting video. The drone responsible for all that fancy aerial work and video was not in fact a Lily, but a DJI Inspire, something the creators failed to mention.It may not be surprising Osdd NBA Champion And Finals MVP Andre Iguodala Will Speak At Disrupt SF 2015
 Los Angeles-based Divshot calls itself an interface builder for web apps. Built on the popular UI framework Bootstrap, the startup provid stanley water bottle es developers with a WYSIWYG editor that lets them spend less time building wireframes and mockups and more time, you know, developing. According to co-f stanley cups ounder Michael Bleigh, the Divshot team created the product, because, as developers, it   something they always wished they had had.So far, Divshot has had more than 2,000 developers try the product out in private beta, and has more than 9,000 on a wai stanley quencher ting list. But it   spent the last several weeks fixing bugs, adding features, and getting the product ready for a public beta, which opens today. While in public beta, Divshot users can sign up and try it out for free for 15 days. After that, the startup will charge developers just $9 a month for its product, allowing them to create an unlimited number of projects.Bleigh, a partner at web and mobile consultancy Intridea, began work on the pr