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Nvidia Inception highlights 4 AI startups for enterprise applications

Devaki Raj, CEO of CrowdAI.
Image Credit: Nvidia

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Nvidia is tracking more than 2,800 companies through its Inception program, which was created to identify the best artificial intelligence startups. It does so to find investment opportunities, but the world’s biggest standalone maker of graphics processing units (GPUs) also knows that these startups will use its technology for AI computing.

I headed out to Nvidia’s new headquarters in Santa Clara, California, last week to watch pitches from 12 companies in a Shark Tank-styled judging event. The 12 presenters were chosen from 200 applicants and are vying for a $1 million prize pool.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang introduced a panel of four judges and said he was glad that he didn’t have to go through this kind of process when he cofounded Nvidia in 1993. Twelve semi-finalists gave their eight-minute pitches, six finalists were selected, and the final winners will be picked at the company’s GPU Technology Conference on March 27 in San Jose, California. Pitches ranged from real-time maps to checkout-free systems for stores.

“We raised $2.5 million in 1993,” said Huang. “Other giant companies raised $50 million to $100 million to $150 million around us. We are the world’s largest computer graphics company.”

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The same chance is available to the companies presenting, Huang said. The 12 speakers were divided into the categories of AI for autonomous systems, health care, and enterprise. Here are the details on the four pitches for enterprise applications. (Check out the autonomous systems AI startups here).

CrowdAI


You might think mapping technologies such as Google Maps or Apple Maps have solved the problem of providing satellite-based maps for the world. But CrowdAI CEO Devaki Raj said that big opportunities arise when you apply deep learning neural networks to satellite and aerial imagery.

CrowdAI gets access to real-time satellite and aerial imagery and uses AI to automatically detect features such as buildings or roads. It can then provide this information to big companies that need to monitor the status of global infrastructure. This is particularly useful in rural areas or the developing world, where this kind of data isn’t always available and where new construction tends to happen.

It’s also useful in emergency situations. If there’s a flood, for instance, CrowdAI can quickly determine which buildings are underwater or which roads have been wiped out. It can help insurance companies know exactly how much square footage a building occupies.

“What we’re doing is fundamentally deeper,” Raj said. “We deliver actionable insights at a scale and granularity never available before.”

Above: CrowdAI can monitor changes in the globe in real time, like the expansion of a labor camp in North Korea.

Image Credit: CrowdAI

CrowdAI can also unearth some disturbing things, such as the growth of the size of a labor camp in North Korea, or which buildings have been destroyed by shelling in Syria. The company charges governments and companies based on the amount of data they use on a country-by-country basis.

The company was founded in May 2016, and it currently has fewer than 15 people. It went through Y Combinator and has raised $2.1 million from SV Angel, AME Cloud Ventures, BoxGroup, Liquid 2 Ventures, Susa Ventures, Compound Ventures, Vy Capital, and Y Combinator. CrowdAI competes with larger companies like Orbital Insights, but Raj said her company specializes in low-resolution imaging on a global scale.

DarwinAI

Above: Sheldon Fernandez, CEO of DarwinAI.

Image Credit: Dean Takahashi

DarwinAI CEO Sheldon Fernandez came from Waterloo, Canada, to make his presentation. “We are focused on foundational challenges with respect to deep learning,” he said. Deep learning networks are hard to build and expensive to run. And they are hard to explain.

“They remain black boxes to people who run them,” he said.

DarwinAI focuses on reducing the size of deep learning neural networks while maintaining accuracy and minimizing inference time, or the time it takes to do something like recognize an object. It also tracks how deep learning networks reach the decisions they make, such as deciding whether an object is a muffin or a dog, and then it explains that learning to the human users.

This is called generative synthesis, and it came from academics at the University of Waterloo.

“We use AI to observe a neural network during training, to understand its inner workings, and then generate an entirely new and highly compact instance of that network,” Fernandez said. “We are using artificial intelligence to build artificial intelligence. That allows developers to focus on the important task of getting their networks to run functionally correctly while offloading performance tasks to our network.”

He showed three networks using Nvidia hardware while running on a single Nvidia Jetson TX2 chip. This showed the networks running much faster — 1.7 times to 2 times faster — than networks that don’t use DarwinAI’s solution. It can be used in financial services, self-driving cars, and consumer electronics.

“We can dramatically reduce the amount of computing resources to run neural networks,” Fernandez said.

DarwinAI was founded in January 2017. It has fewer than 15 employees and has raised $400,000 from angel investors.

Determined AI

Above: Evan Sparks, CEO of Determined AI.

Image Credit: Dean Takahashi

Determined AI CEO Evan Sparks has created tools to enable AI engineers to create AI solutions faster. It’s kind of meta, as it uses AI to make AI better. The company has created Productivity Engine for Deep Learning (PEDL), a deep learning workflow management engine that is installed on GPU hardware. It is designed to help engineers through the process of AI development.

Sparks quoted Huang as saying “Software is eating the world, but AI is going to eat software.” He added “We agree. AI is on the verge of revolutionizing every industry.”

But there are some obstacles. Developing AI solutions is extremely complex and time-consuming. It can take years and require teams of experts with considerable experience. It needs a lot of GPUs to do the actual processing, and the software often doesn’t work well together.

“We think software development has to be reinvented for the AI age,” Sparks said.

Sparks said that PEDL can make AI software engineers 20 times to 100 times more productive. It also allows them to determine why AI made a particular decision, based on each step it took along the way.

Berkeley, California-based Determined AI was founded in 2017 and has fewer than 15 people. The company has raised $2.6 million from Amplify, Techammer, The House Fund, and others.

AiFi

Above: The leaders of AiFi: Kaushal Patel (left) and Steve Gu on right.

AiFi wants to get retail stores ready for the future. It is following in the footsteps of Amazon Go, a small retail store in Seattle where you can check out your purchases automatically, without waiting in line. While the Amazon store is custom-built, AiFi wants to create a solution that scales and is more flexible.

“Our solution works both for the mom-and-pop store or the giant,” said AiFi CEO Steve Gu. “Our first store is 50 times bigger than Amazon Go.”

AiFi works by building a simulation of a store. It then uses that simulation to train its AI network so it can use multiple cameras to monitor shoppers for theft or check them out immediately as they put things into their bags and exit the store. Gu said that big stores could save $3 million in reduced labor costs alone.

“We are building AI on the edge,” Gu said. “Our superior algorithms can recognize over 15 different shopping activities. We can track 500 people and can recognize over 50,000 SKU items.”

The company has a fully functional test store at about 725 square feet, and it is working on a much bigger pilot store with a customer.

AiFi was founded in 2016 and has fewer than 30 people. The company has raised $4 million from Stanford StartX, Plug & Play, Greylock, Amino Ventures, Oriza Ventures, CSC Ventures, and AngelPlus Ventures.

The results of judging

The judges included Nvidia’s vice president of business, Jeff Herbst; Tammy Kiely, head of semiconductor investment banking practice at Goldman Sachs; Steve Wymer from Fidelity Investments; and Jaimin Rangwalla of Coatue Management. The judges chose CrowdAI and AiFi to go forward to the final round at GTC.

In the end, three winners in the three categories will split the $1 million prize, with about $330,000 going to each. All told, there are now 2,800 startups in the Inception program.

Last year’s batch included 14 finalists who had raised $28 million from investors before the Inception event. A full year later, those 14 companies have raised $200 million. Huang said that Inception really turbocharged development for the startups.

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