Apple’s highly anticipated annual developer conference starts Monday. The traditional keynote from CEO Tim Cook, which will doubtless describe how iOS 18 will be powered by AI, will be livestreamed starting at 1 pm Eastern, 10 am Pacific.Apple has a lot riding on this as it is percieved to be behind rivals in the development of AI. Siri improvements are among the most talked about AI upgrades, with a rumored integration of ChatGPT, which would finally enable the conversation, control, and personalization that have thus far eluded this key app.
Pika Labs Raises Another $80 M. The text-to-video Generative AI tool famously started by 26-year-old CEO Demi Guo who, along with her friend and co-founder Chenlin Meng, dropped out of Stanford University’s artificial intelligence PhD program to start the company. This brings Pika’s total funding to over $130 M. Business Insider says the raise values the company at $700 M. They’ll need deep pockets to take on OpenAI’s Sora, Google’s Veo, and RunwayML, a text-to-video startup that’s raised $250 M. Spark Capital led the round with notable investors Greycroft, Lightspeed, Neo, Makers Fund, actor Jared Leto, Atlantic Records Chairman Craig Kallman.
Twelve Labs Nabs $50M For AI that Understands Video. The company developed a foundational AI model for multimodal video understanding. The Series A investment round was co-led by New Enterprise Associates (NEA) and NVIDIA’s NVentures. Existing backers Radical Ventures, Index Ventures SA and Korea Investment Partners also participated.
Wevr Announces New $3.5 Million Investment from HTC and Epic Games. The creator of the 2016 VR classic The Blu got a boost of confidence with this follow on investment from two of its original backers. Co-founders Neville Spiteri, Anthony Batt, and Marcel Samek lead Wevr.
Browserbase Raises $6.5M for “headless browser.” The company says it raised pre-seed and seed funding in just 90 days. A headless browser is a web browser that operates without a graphical user interface, allowing applications to interact with websites solely through code. This technology is crucial for apps like Perplexity and ChatGPT that need to read and extract data from websites. As AI agents increasingly perform tasks on our behalf, headless browsers have become essential. These agents not only read but also interact with and modify data on websites. However, developers face challenges as many websites don’t render data until fully loaded, dynamic frameworks like Next.js add unpredictability, and some sites, such as Reddit, restrict access. Kleiner Perkins led the round with participation from AI Grant, and Basecase Capital.
Layoffs Hit Microsoft Mixed Reality. A reorg was inevitable after Microsoft deprecated Windows Mixed Reality in Windows 11 back in December 2023. This week Microsoft axed 1,000 people, including many on its mixed reality team. The company says it will continue to sell and support the HoloLens 2. Plans for a successor device were shelved last year. “We remain fully committed to the Department of Defense’s IVAS program,” said Microsoft in response to an email, “and will continue to deliver cutting edge technology to support our soldiers.”
Oculus Founder Palmer Lucky Working on New VR Headset. The creator of the original Oculus Rift teased an upcoming announcement that he’s working on a new XR headset. In a post on X, Lucky said he’ll talk more about the device at Augmented World Expo (AWE), which takes place in Long Beach, California from June 18-20.
Sony all-in on AI as difficult negotiations with film workers looms. The below-the-line craftspeople (camera, lighting, sound, sets, and costumes, animation and vfx artists) are rightly concerned that AI is going to replace or reduce the amount of work available. Things have not gone back to normal since the strike ended. “The biggest problem with making films today is the expense,” said Sony Pictures Entertainment CEO Tony Vinciquerra at an investor event earlier this week. “We will be looking at ways to…produce both films for theaters and television in a more efficient way, using AI primarily.” The focus on AI masks what should be a much bigger concern. People have appointments with other screens. They’re playing games. They’re looking at YouTube and social media. Hollywood is not as important as it was. It’s not as relevant. THAT is what is costing people jobs, NOT AI.
Tribeca Festival And OpenAI Announce ‘Sora Shorts.’ Last Friday the Tribeca Festival and OpenAI announced a program to debut five original short films, marking the first time films made using OpenAI’s text-to-video AI model Sora will be showcased at a festival. Sora can make video clips up to a minute long, a revolutionary advance. It’s still in private testing, but Open AI has been gradually opening it up to more filmmakers. Just last month we took a deep dive into filmmaker Paul Trillo’s new music video, “The Hardest Part,” created entirely using Sora AI.
AWE, The Most Essential XR Conference, Is Upon Us. April 18 – 20. Long Beach, CA. The 15th annual event features over 500 speakers on 15 tracks over three days, accompanied by an expo with over 300 exhibitors, museum exhibits, and awards show. Over 6,000 participants are expected to attend. AWE is very good at capturing the zeitgeist in this vertical of the tech industry. In the first post-pandemic event in November, 2022, the hot topic at AWE was the Metaverse. Last year, Mixed Reality was the order of the day as participants were giddy with anticipation of the Apple Vision Pro, and the new Meta Quest 3. This year’s hot topic will most assuredly be AI, and how it will integrate with AR and wearables.
The 9th Raindance Immersive will happen both in real life and in VRChat. The virtual VRChat festival has already started on June 1, while an in-person Immersive Summit will take place on June 18-19 in London. An Immersive Showcase will follow from June 21-23, aimed at how developers, XR filmmakers, and more can utilize Apple Vision Pro. This year’s edition will be curated by Mária Rakušanová, Joanna Leigh, Mary Lee Desmond, and Tropi Ginger.
The Netflix of AI is a terrible idea and a dire warning for actors, writers, animators, and directors Lance Ulanoff drops a hate bomb on AI entertainment site Showrunner in TechRadar.
More demented AI filmmaking from Doug Pledger.
This column, once called “This Week in XR,” is also a podcast hosted by author Charlie Fink, Ted Schilowitz, former studio executive and co-founder of Red Camera, and Rony Abovitz, founder of Magic Leap. This week our guest is Ori Inbar, co-founder and Executive Director of Augmented World Expo (AWE). We can be found on Spotify, iTunes, and YouTube.