Hazel Moore: Top 5 British VR/AR Companies

The UK, historically strong in the gaming and creative industries, has a leading role to play in the VR landscape in Europe, and has the largest number of up and coming VR companies of any European country, as featured in the recently launched European VR Landscape (available on www.thevrfund.com) published by the VR Fund and LucidWeb.

Here is my take on 5 of the most interesting companies in the UK in VR/AR:

Improbable:

In 2015 Andreessen Horowitz, an A-lister in Silicon Valley venture capital terms, invested $20mn in a little known UK firm called Improbable, only the second deal the firm had ever done in the UK. Improbable was developed by two computer scientists from Cambridge University, and has developed SpatialOS, which is a platform for third parties to build massive virtual and simulated worlds. The alpha version of the platform was launched in late 2016, and we expect a beta version in 2017.

Improbable

Ultrahaptics:

Ultrahaptics is a Bristol based company that is making waves, literally. It uses ultrasound technology to project sensations through the air, enabling the user to “feel” virtual objects without needing to wear or touch anything. The company is a spin out from Bristol University, and raised £10mn from Woodfood funds in 2015. Applications include things like changing the in car infotainment system with just a press of a virtual button in the air.

Ultrahaptics

Touch Surgery:

Touch Surgery, backed by Balderton Capital, was founded by surgeons to help provide surgical training via powerful software applications. With more than 200 apps and more than one million users worldwide, it provides medical students with a cost effective and safe practice environment BEFORE they start practising on people and wielding a sharp knife. In 2017 at CES Touch Surgery announced that it has made this content available for augmented reality platforms such as Hololens and Daqri.

Touch Surgery

Blippar:

Blippar is certainly the most high profile of the UK’s VR/AR start-ups. In 2016 it raised $54mn, reportedly at a valuation of $1.5bn, taking the total raised to almost $100mn. Founder Ambarish Mitra is on a high, having won the EY UK Entrepreneur of the Year in 2016. Recent signs are less positive, with the company cutting staff as losses widen, but the roster of clients who advertise through the platform includes some stellar global names.

Blippar-Header

Curiscope:

Curiscope has raised just $120k through crowdfunding, yet its VR film Great White Shark on YouTube has racked up an astonishing 16mn views. It has also developed the Virtuali-Tee, a £24 t-shirt available from the company’s website (currently out of stock), which, in combination with a smartphone, allows you to see “through” the t-shirt and view the wearer’s guts, heart, lungs and kidneys in graphic pulsating 3D. Biology lessons will never be the same again! Founder Ed Barton was named one of Forbes’s 30 under 30 in Europe for 2017.

Curiscope

There are undoubtedly many more great VR/AR companies in the UK, and the outlook is bright. The UK is fertile ground for large corporates looking to acquire talent in the VR/AR space. Facebook has made a number of acquisitions of UK companies, including Surreal Vision and Two Big Ears, while Snapchat snapped up Seene/Obvious Engineering, and Two Trees Photonics was sold to Daqri. Success breeds success, and Facebook has been expanding its UK team with further investment. In addition the pipeline of future talent is being nurtured more formally through two new accelerator programmes which have been launched in recent weeks to work with AR and VR start-ups:

* In February 2017 the Digital Catapult, which is funded by Innovate UK, the UK’s innovation agency launched an accelerator programme called Augmentor for VR, AR and mixed reality start-ups in the UK, in partnership with Seedcamp (augmentor.co.uk). Successful companies will have access to an enviable list of mentors to provide advice and experience to help companies become successful.

* Meanwhile Barclays has teamed up with Creative England to create Barclays Eagle Flight Lab (https://labs.uk.barclays/flight), a 12 week accelerator programme in Brighton to work with start-ups in the creative industries, including VR and AR, which will run from March –May 2017.

EdTech AR Conference and Hackathon Taking Place at the Realities Centre Next Month

This month the Realities Centre opened its doors for the first time, hosting two MedTech events, one of which was a conference and the other a hackathon. Now the centre has revealed two new events taking place in January 2017, both focused on the EdTech industry. 

As before there will be a conference and separate hackathon within a few days of each other, but these will be focused on augmented reality (AR). The two events are EdTech: Augmented Reality Conference and EdTech: Augmented Reality Hackathon, both being sponsored by AR company Blippar.

Education Blippar1

The EdTech: Augmented Reality Conference will be held on 19th January 2017, between 6pm – 9pm GMT. The evening event will feature talks and demos from Collum Eliott-Kelly of Blippar,  Ed Barton – CEO of Curiscope, Joshua Redmond – Deloitte,  Elena Sinel – Acorn Aspirations, along side Microsoft HoloLens and Meta 2. Early Bird tickets are available for £5 GBP rising to £10 for the standard ticket price.

While the EdTech: Augmented Reality Hackathon is a 24 hour event taking place from 21st – 22nd January 2017. Just as before teams will be given a theme on the day and tasked with developing a unique AR experience for the benefit of EdTech. The teams will be able to call on mentors from Blippar, Acorn Aspirations, the Realities Centre and more to help guide them throughout the hackathon. Early Bird tickets for the hackathon are already sold out, but general admission tickets are still available for £15.

Realities Centre will also be running another hackathon at the same time, but this will be a youth-orientated event run in partnership with Acorn Aspirations. On the same weekend 25 12-18 year old’s will participate in the hackathon getting the opportunity to develop an AR experience using the Blippar AR Builder tool.

For the latest events taking place at the Realities Centre, keep reading VRFocus.

Create Your Own AR Experiences with Blippar’s Blippbuilder Suite

Technology company Blippar has been championing the use of augmented reality (AR) technology for some time now, with a free app for smartphones and many other initiatives. Today the company has announced its opening up its proprietary tech to allow anyone to develop AR experiences, whether its for gaming, advertising, design or other purposes.

Primarily design to help studios and marketers, as well as those who may not have coding experience, the Blippbuilder AR self-service suite is available in a web interface offering two levels of functionality. There’s the basic level Blippbuilder, aiding development through drag-and-drop tools and requiring no coding. This allows those anyone to dabble and learn about AR, with no cost for personal use.

The second level is Blippbuilder Script, Blippar’s full AR Suite that allows for the creation of advanced AR experiences in JavaScript.

Blippar - Blippbuilder Script

“After over five years of defining this space and evolving with it, Blippar is seeing the world start to wake up and truly realize the enormous market opportunity for augmented reality,” said Ambarish Mitra, Blippar co-founder and CEO. “Where once AR was viewed as a niche technology, recent adoption in gaming alongside advancements in wearables have combined with a rising desire among everyday consumers to better tap into the potential of the world around them to create a mainstream trend.

“After creating thousands of AR experiences and campaigns and learning what moves the needle for brands as well as consumers, we know it is now time to open our platform to the world, empower developers, marketers and everyday consumers to be creative, establish new best practices for this space, and together realize the full potential AR combined with Artificial Intelligence has to make everyone’s lives better, everywhere.”

For those interested in building their own AR apps there are several options to chose from. There’s the previously mentioned basic version which is free but comes with no re-sale rights and all the blipps include watermarks. For professionals there’s a Pro Blipp pay-as-you-go plan, simply pay per blipp which are watermark and ad free, or there’s the Unlimited Pro Plan which includes unlimited blipps. While there’s no pricing on Blippars website, Blippbuilder/Blippbuilder Script can be purchased through the SAP Store for £759 GBP per month.

VRFocus will continue its coverage of Blippar, reporting back with any further updates.

Augmented Reality M&A – Blippar kauft Layar

Das US- und UK Unternehmen Blippar hat in seinem Blog mitgeteilt, dass sie den niederländischen Wettbewerber Layar erworben haben. Laut CEO Amarish Mitra ist die Acquisition sehr „komplentär“ und es habe nur 3-4 Monate gedauert den M&A Prozess abzuschließen. Blippar hat damit laut TheNextWeb 50 Millionnen Nutzer. Quelle: Blippar Blog & TheNextWeb ***** XING-Gruppe “Augmented […]