When the Kickstarter campaign came to an end in November of 2013, the company had raised an astounding $1,290,439 from 3,515 individual backers, blowing well past their original funding goal. In the time since, the Structure Sensor has matured and has become a product that will go down as one of the more successful crowdfunding stories of all time. Occipital has also continued to advance their SDK which allows for 3D capture, orders of magnitude cheaper and simpler than ever before.
Now, with a well established product at hand, the company has today announced that they have raised $13 million in Series B funding. This round of funding includes new investors such as Intel Capital, Shea Ventures and Grishin Robotics, as well as existing investor, Foundry Group.
“Our hardware and software platform is being increasingly adopted in industries including medicine, architecture, visual effects, and 3D printing, and by industry leaders like 3D Systems, ILM, and many others,” explained Jeff Powers, Occipital co-founder and CEO. “We’ve also recently started to show how our technology will impact virtual and augmented reality.”
While no exact word was given as to what the funding will go towards, the company has made it clear that they are developing their technology for a time when computer vision enables devices to map out and completely understand a user’s surroundings, leading to an era where we see a new form of technology emerge which allows software to operate over our real physical worlds. Occipital calls this “spatial computing”. Some may say we are on the brink of entering a new digital world where reality blends with fantasy, and Occipital apparently plans to be one of the companies there as this happens. Powers did say that the funding will provide them with the resources needed in order to further advance the Structure platform and bring “spatial computing” closer to becoming a reality.
“Occipital’s work in 3D computer vision is an important building block for the future of interactive computing,” explained Achin Bhowmik, vice president of Intel’s New Technology Group and general manager of its Perceptual Computing Group. “Our investment underscores that as computing devices with 3D sensing proliferate, the importance of this technology will rapidly grow.”
What do you think about this latest round of funding? Are you glad to see Occipital raise additional capital in order to advance their products further? How do you think Occipital’s technology will effect 3D printing in the years to come? Discuss in the Occipital Series B Funding forum thread on 3DPB.com.