After 5 years of nothing, Humane 'startup' is now shifting to AI

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Founded in 2018 by ex-Apple executives, the mysterious Humane company has announced $100 million in new funding plus a shift into AI -- and still has no product to announce.

Imran Chaudhri and Bethany Bongiorno, founders of Humane
Imran Chaudhri and Bethany Bongiorno, founders of Humane


Humane was formed in 2018 by two Apple veterans, former director of software engineering Bethany Bongiorno and designer Imran Chaudhri. The two reportedly met while working on the iPad, and left Apple in 2017 to begin working on their company.

Originally stylized as hu.ma.ne, the company has steadily recruited Apple staff such as a former 5G modem lead, and an iCloud executive. The company now says that it has "been creating a first-of-its-kind software platform and consumer device built from the ground up for artificial intelligence (AI)."

That is more information than the firm has previously said. It's also a clear shift in the company's goals. The technology it will implement now wasn't in its infancy then.

On Wednesday, it announced that it has raised $100 million in what it calls a Series C round. Alongside the financing, Humane says in a blog post that it "has secured strategic collaborations with some of the most influential technology companies in the world."

The companies in question are Microsoft and OpenAI, Qualcomm, and SK Networks. And, "while the initial Humane device will be focused on delivering the next generation of personal technology," investors LG and Volvo Cars Tech Fund will be working to bring its technology into cars and other unspecified devices.

Humane now sees an AI future

"Our first device will enable people to bring AI with them everywhere," said Chaudhri. "It's an exciting time, and we've been focused on how to build the platform and the device that can fully harness the true power and potential of this technology."

"We are at the beginning of the next era of compute," he continued, "and believe that together we can begin the journey to fundamentally reshape the role of technology in people's lives."

The announcement was first spotted by the Wall Street Journal, which claims that Humane intends to launch its first product this spring. It also reports that filed patents imply that Humane has been working on wearables.

Separately, in 2021, Chaudhri was recently one of many people marking the 20th anniversary of OS X. He recounted buying a NeXT Cube for his office at Apple, just so Steve Jobs would stop insisting it was better than the Mac.

Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 16
    DAalsethDAalseth Posts: 2,783member
    Our first device will enable people to bring AI with them everywhere," said Chaudhri. "It's an exciting time, and we've been focused on how to build the platform and the device that can fully harness the true power and potential of this technology. We are at the beginning of the next era of compute, and believe that together we can begin the journey to fundamentally reshape the role of technology in people's lives."
    Sounds like doublespeak, marketing jive, slick, fast talking sales hustle. 
    StrangeDaysmacpluspluslolliverwatto_cobramattinozuraharaMacPro
  • Reply 2 of 16
    jhalmosjhalmos Posts: 23member
    AI is the new grift.
    DAalsethdanoxlolliverwatto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 16
    omasouomasou Posts: 572member
    Having previously once separate devices (phone, camera, PDA, GPS, etc.) all collapse into a single device attempting to pursued people to carry an additional device may be an uphill challenge, unless it is something truly innovative and makes life simpler.

    All that said, Apple has been slowly migrating AI to run on the phone.

    Should be interesting.
    watto_cobraurahara
  • Reply 4 of 16
    StrangeDaysStrangeDays Posts: 12,877member
    From wearables a few years ago, pivoting to today's buzzword of AI...yet still no products. It's amazing what suckers Silicon Valley venture capitalists are.
    macpluspluslolliverwatto_cobraurahara
  • Reply 5 of 16
    StrangeDaysStrangeDays Posts: 12,877member
    DAalseth said:
    Our first device will enable people to bring AI with them everywhere," said Chaudhri. "It's an exciting time, and we've been focused on how to build the platform and the device that can fully harness the true power and potential of this technology. We are at the beginning of the next era of compute, and believe that together we can begin the journey to fundamentally reshape the role of technology in people's lives."
    Sounds like doublespeak, marketing jive, slick, fast talking sales hustle. 
    Actually it sounds like it was written by a marketing AI (which is really just language modeling, not intelligence). He checked off all the boxes.
    DAalsethmacpluspluslolliverwatto_cobraurahara
  • Reply 6 of 16
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 2,707member
    Call themselves “humane” but going to AI. LOL
    macplusplusJapheyDAalsethwatto_cobraurahara
  • Reply 7 of 16
    Having watched the Elizabeth Holmes / Theranos story on TV, this smells like redux. Grift at a scale of $100 Million? Wow, possibly a new record. 
    DAalsethlolliverStrangeDayswatto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 16
    jimh2jimh2 Posts: 615member
    More grift. Ran through $130 million of someone else's money with nothing to show for it. Now they regroup to jump on the latest buzzword train. There is not a chance I'd hand these grifters a penny yet someone ponied up another $100 million. It pays to have friends in high places, but I assume they would want a product.
    edited March 2023 lolliverwatto_cobranetling
  • Reply 9 of 16
    DAalsethDAalseth Posts: 2,783member
    From wearables a few years ago, pivoting to today's buzzword of AI...yet still no products. It's amazing what suckers Silicon Valley venture capitalists are.
    Wearables,
    Smart
    Internet
    Computer
    Space
    Jet


    The list of buzz words that meant nothing when Marketers used them goes on and on
    watto_cobrabyronl
  • Reply 10 of 16
    JapheyJaphey Posts: 1,767member
    Call themselves “humane” but going to AI. LOL
    Nice catch. Somehow I missed the irony on my first read. 
    edited March 2023 watto_cobraurahara
  • Reply 11 of 16
    JapheyJaphey Posts: 1,767member
    DAalseth said:
    Our first device will enable people to bring AI with them everywhere," said Chaudhri. "It's an exciting time, and we've been focused on how to build the platform and the device that can fully harness the true power and potential of this technology. We are at the beginning of the next era of compute, and believe that together we can begin the journey to fundamentally reshape the role of technology in people's lives."
    Sounds like doublespeak, marketing jive, slick, fast talking sales hustle. 
    So does everything else these days. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 12 of 16
    boboliciousbobolicious Posts: 1,146member
    "we can begin the journey to fundamentally reshape the role of technology in people's lives"

    I wish the word improve had been used instead of reshape...
    byronl
  • Reply 13 of 16
    robin huberrobin huber Posts: 3,958member
    Elizabeth Holmes/Sunny Balwani 2.0? “What fools these mortals be.”
    edited March 2023 cg27
  • Reply 14 of 16
    swat671swat671 Posts: 150member
    ""Our first device will enable people to bring AI with them everywhere," said Chaudhri...."  How's that different than Siri, Alexa, etc? 
  • Reply 15 of 16
    maasjmaasj Posts: 11member
    Sounds a lot like General Magic from the '90s: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Magic
    • former Apple employees
    • attracting some "best & brightest"
    • getting lots of funding
    • working on a mysterious next big thing
    • struggling to produce a mass market product

    Time will tell...
    netlingFileMakerFellerbyronl
  • Reply 16 of 16
    netlingnetling Posts: 74member
    jimh2 said:
    More grift. Ran through $130 million of someone else's money with nothing to show for it. Now they regroup to jump on the latest buzzword train. There is not a chance I'd hand these grifters a penny yet someone ponied up another $100 million. It pays to have friends in high places, but I assume they would want a product.

    I find it incredibly impressive that there are numerous small companies out there that could benefit from a $100,000-$1MM investment to kickstart their growth and contribute meaningfully to the economy. While it's true that many of these startups will probably fail, a select few will thrive and even fewer will expand into major players. It sickens me, however, to see $100MM invested in a company during its C-round, especially when it hasn't actually produced any products. This issue stems from the prevalence of networking and good-ol boy networks in the industry.

    byronl
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