Enterprise

Squint peers at $13M led by Sequoia for AR aimed at B2B to interact with physical objects

Comment

Squint displayed on tablet
Image Credits: Squint

Apple’s and Google’s move into smart augmented reality several years ago, creating ways for people to use their smartphone cameras to identify everyday objects to interact with them, put the technology on the map with everyday consumers and gave a way for businesses to build new experiences to cater to them. It also laid the groundwork for building new frontiers in visual search.

Squint is one of the startups capitalizing on this concept with what founder and CEO Devin Bhushan describes as “a platform that connects people with the right information at the right time.”

Focusing for now on business users, it has created a simple and fast way for organizations to build AR-based workflows: users pointing their smartphone or tablet cameras at physical objects in the work environment — whether or not those objects are “smart” and connected or not — can trigger detailed, step-by-step instructions to use those machines, log sheets to record maintenance or other work and more, and they can use generative AI-based interactions to even figure out what they need to know.

Squint to date has picked up a number of large enterprise customers who use it to manage workflows in factories and other industrial settings, including Volvo, Siemens, Colgate-Palmolive, Michelin and Berkshire Hathaway Energy. Now, to fuel its business growth and more tech development, Squint is announcing a Series A of $13 million led by Sequoia, with participation from Menlo Ventures.

B2B is its initial target, but contrary to its name, Squint has a wider focus. Its ultimate goal, Bhushan said, is to “eliminate the search bar, and eliminate all that time we spend looking for information and data.”

Bhushan first came up with the concept for the company when he was working in a very different kind of business: He was an engineering manager at Splunk, where he helped conceive of and build Splunk AR, a way for users of the data analytics company’s tools to map that data directly on to physical machines to better understand how they were working in real time.

The idea was to widen out Splunk’s addressable customer base to more non-technical users.

“People actually really loved it, but they didn’t have that many use cases for just visualizing Splunk data,” he recalled. However, he was seeing that customers were trying to use the AR tool for other kinds of workflows, which are outside of what Splunk handled on the data side, and that got Bhushan’s enterprise antennae twitching. “We’re on to something with this concept,” he said he thought to himself. “I think we can actually bring AR to the masses. There’s been an unlock.”

Bhushan left Splunk in 2021 to pursue this idea with the founding of Squint. He said that while working at Splunk got him thinking about the bigger problem, Squint’s objectives, and route to achieving them, is very distinct.

“At Splunk we never solved the problem around allowing data and information from anywhere to come in and we also never solved the authoring problem (since it would just let you scan your device and see metrics),” he said. “At Squint we innovated around the object detection portion and also on the content creation.” For example, computer vision and object detection are used to turn videos into AR procedures, he added.

“We also wrote it entirely from scratch, more using our time at Splunk as a learning experience.”

There are a number of ways already in the market to provide help to those working in industrial or other hands-on roles. If a business already equips workers with handsets or tablets, they may have apps pre-loaded on them, or they might stick QR codes on the machines themselves. The more common approach has been very analogue: manuals with instructions and registration logs when people have to verify their work.

The advantage to Squint’s solution, Bhushan said, is that it’s more dynamic and specific: A business can create workflows easily and tie them to very specific actions to be carried out by users, and to specific areas of a machine’s system. The AI in the system covers not just the computer vision for recognizing objects, but around the workflows that a person might be going through and the generative AI that powers the ability to ask questions and get answers from the platform.

Bhushan’s first stop as founder was to do a stint incubating the company at Menlo Ventures, as part of its Menlo Labs product: His connect was Tim Tully, a partner at the firm who had been the CTO of Splunk and worked closely with Bhushan there.

Squint in turn became acquainted with the Sequoia team when it was in a cohort of Arc, Sequoia VC’s early-stage program for finding and mentoring outlier startups. (Menlo and Sequoia are both previous investors as a result.)

But Bhushan goes back even further with Jess Lee, the Sequoia partner who helps run Arc: The two were at Yahoo together almost a decade ago. She described the first time she saw Devin demonstrate how Squint worked as a “moment of intuitive magic,” similar to what she said she felt the first time she saw an AirTag, she said.

Lee believes that the time is ripe for building the next generation of tools to help skilled laborers do their work better. “When you are put on a new job, you can find the person on the floor who can talk you through what to do, or you can go to a storage room to find a binder, or you can wing it. Or, you can take out your phone and that can help you figure it out,” she said.

Whether it’s for taking stock, machine maintenance or something else, the key is that Squint signals how tech will ultimately penetrate into the offline world beyond knowledge workers. In these situations, “no one thinks about whether they are using AI or AR,” she added.

More TechCrunch

For frontier AI models, when it rains, it pours. Mistral released a fresh new flagship model on Wednesday, Large 2, which it claims to be on par with the latest…

Mistral’s Large 2 is its answer to Meta and OpenAI’s latest models

Researchers at MIT CSAIL this week are showcasing a new method for training home robots in simulation.

Researchers are training home robots in simulations based on iPhone scans

Apple announced on Wednesday that Apple Maps is now available on the web via a public beta, which means you can now access the service directly from your browser. The…

Apple Maps launches on the web to challenge Google Maps

AltStore, an alternative app store, has launched its first batch of third-party iOS apps in the European Union. The rollout comes a few months after the company launched an updated…

Alternative app store AltStore PAL adds third-party iOS apps in wake of EU Apple ruling

Microsoft this afternoon previewed its answer to Google’s AI-powered search experiences: Bing generative search. Available only for a “small percentage” of users at the moment, Bing generative search, underpinned by…

Bing previews its answer to Google’s AI Overviews

Hiya, folks, welcome to TechCrunch’s regular AI newsletter. Last Sunday, President Joe Biden announced that he no longer plans to seek reelection, instead offering his “full endorsement” of VP Kamala…

This Week in AI: How Kamala Harris might regulate AI

But the fate of many generative AI businesses — even the best-funded ones — looks murky.

VCs are still pouring billions into generative AI startups

Thousands of stories have been written about former NFL quarterback and civil rights activist Colin Kaepernick. If anyone knows a thing or two about losing control of your own narrative,…

Colin Kaepernick lost control of his story. Now he wants to help creators own theirs

Several people who received the CrowdStrike offer found that the gift card didn’t work, while others got an error saying the voucher had been canceled.

CrowdStrike offers a $10 apology gift card to say sorry for outage

TikTok Lite, a low-bandwidth version of the video platform popular across Africa, Asia and Latin America, is exposing users to harmful content because of its lack of safety features compared…

TikTok Lite exposes users to harmful content, say Mozilla researchers

If the models continue eating each other’s data, perhaps without even knowing it, they’ll progressively get weirder and dumber until they collapse.

‘Model collapse’: Scientists warn against letting AI eat its own tail

Astranis has fully funded its next-generation satellite program, called Omega, after closing its $200 million Series D round, the company said Wednesday.  “This next satellite is really the milestone into…

Astranis is set to build Omega constellation after $200M Series D

Reworkd’s founders went viral on GitHub last year with AgentGPT, a free tool to build AI agents that acquired more than 100,000 daily users in a week. This earned them…

After AgentGPT’s success, Reworkd pivots to web-scraping AI agents

We’re so excited to announce that we’ve added a dedicated AI Stage presented by Google Cloud to TechCrunch Disrupt 2024. It joins Fintech, SaaS and Space as the other industry-focused…

Announcing the agenda for the AI Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

The firm has numerous legs to it, ranging from a venture studio to standard funds, where it does everything from co-founding companies to deploying capital.

CityRock launches second fund to back founders from diverse backgrounds

Since launching xAI last year, Elon Musk has been using X as a sandbox to test some of the Grok model’s AI capabilities. Beyond the basic chatbot, X uses the…

X launches underwhelming Grok-powered ‘More About This Account’ feature

Lakera, a Swiss startup that’s building technology to protect generative AI applications from malicious prompts and other threats, has raised $20 million in a Series A round led by European…

Lakera, which protects enterprises from LLM vulnerabilities, raises $20M

Alongside a slew of announcements for Play — such as AI-powered app comparisons and a feature that bundles similar apps — Google has introduced new “Curated Spaces,” hubs dedicated to…

Google Play gets ‘Comics’ feature for manga readers in Japan

Farmers have got to do something about pests. But nobody really likes the idea of using more chemical pesticides. Thomas Laurent’s company, Micropep, thinks the answer might already be in…

Micropep taps tiny proteins to make pesticides safer

Play Store is getting AI-powered app comparisons, automatically organized categories for similar apps, dedicated hubs for content, data personalization controls, support for playing multiple mobile games on PCs, and more…

Google adds AI-powered comparisons, collections and more data controls to Play Store

Vanta, a trust management platform that helps businesses automate much of their security and compliance processes, today announced that it has raised a $150 million Series C funding round led…

Vanta raises $150M Series C, now valued at $2.45B

The Overture Maps Foundation is today releasing data sets for 2.3B building “footprints” globally, 54M notable places of interest, a visual overlay of “boundaries,” and land and water features such…

Backed by Microsoft, AWS and Meta, the Overture Maps Foundation launches its first open map data sets

The startup is not disclosing its valuation, but sources close to the company say the figure is just under $400 million post-money.

Dazz snaps up $50M for AI-based, automated cloud security remediation

The outcome of the Spanish authority’s probe could take up to two years to complete, and leave Apple on the hook for fines in the billions.

Apple’s App Store hit with antitrust probe in Spain

Proton’s first cryptocurrency product is a wallet called Proton Wallet that’s designed to make it easier to get started with bitcoin.

Proton releases a self-custody bitcoin wallet

Dental care is a necessity, yet many patients lack confidence in their dentists’ ability to provide accurate diagnoses and appropriate treatments. Some dentists over treat patients, leading to unnecessary expenses,…

Pearl raises $58M to help dentists make better diagnoses using AI 

Exoticca’s platform connects flights, hotels, meals, transfers, transportation and more, plus the local companies at the destinations.

Spanish startup Exoticca raises a €60M Series D for its tour packages platform

Content creators are busy people. Most spend more than 20 hours a week creating new content for their respective corners of the web. That doesn’t leave much time for audience…

Mark Zuckerberg imagines content creators making AI clones of themselves

Elon Musk says he will show off Tesla’s purpose-built “robotaxi” prototype during an event October 10, after scrapping a previous plan to reveal it August 8. Musk said Tesla will…

Elon Musk sets new date for Tesla robotaxi reveal, calls everything beyond autonomy ‘noise’

Alphabet will spend an additional $5 billion on its self-driving subsidiary, Waymo, over the next few years, according to Ruth Porat, the company’s chief financial officer. Porat announced the commitment…

Alphabet to invest another $5B into Waymo