Augury (company)
Augury is a technology company that produces hardware, artificial intelligence, and software that diagnose malfunctions in machinery.
Industry | Technology |
---|---|
Founded | 2011 |
Founder | Saar Yoskovitz Gal Shaul |
Headquarters | Haifa New York City |
Products | Artificial Intelligence Software |
Website | www |
History
Augury was founded in 2011 by Saar Yoskovitz, who currently serves as their CEO, and the company's Chief Technology Officer Gal Shaul.[1] In 2015, the company received $7 million in investment from a Series A round of funding,[2][3][4] in 2017, it received $17 million in venture funding,[5] and in 2019, it received an investment of $25 million in a Series C venture capital round, bringing its investment total to $51 million.[6] The company has offices in New York and Haifa, Israel.[4]
In January 2019, Augury acquired Alluvium.[7]
System
Augury continuously measures and records machine data, including[8] vibrations, temperature, and magnetic data from machines to determine if any potential malfunctions exist. It also provides information about the potential cause of any detected malfunctions. The hardware listening device is a wireless halo sensor,[6] which uploads mechanical data[9] to the cloud[6] where its software uses an algorithm that is tied to a database of recorded malfunctions, to predict potential machine breakdowns before they occur. The database was developed by the company, which recorded a myriad of functioning and malfunctioning machines to determine the variables that would be helpful in diagnosis.[10]
References
- "Saar Yoskovitz - Founder and CEO of Augury Systems". ideamensch. August 25, 2015.
- "News "Shazam" for machines, Augury, snags $7M Series A". Business Journals.
- "Augury Lands $7M in Series A Funding". Connected World Magazine.
- "Israeli Internet-of-Things co Augury raises $7m". en.globes.co.il. Globes. August 27, 2015.
- Industrial IoT Startup Augury Secures $17 Million In Series B Funding To Expand Partnership Strategy
- "Augury raises $25 million for AI that predicts equipment failure from ultrasonic vibrations". Venture Beat. January 31, 2019.
- "Augury Secures $25M Series C to Grow Impact on Machine Health, Completes Acquisition of Alluvium". www.businesswire.com. 2019-01-31. Retrieved 2020-04-14.
- Finley, Klint (November 4, 2015). "An Artificial Ear Lets Machines "Hear" When They're About to Break Down". Wired Magazine.
- Valle, Marius (December 6, 2015). "Bruker en iPhone til å høre hva som er galt med motoren". Tu.no.
- "The Shazam of machines". CBC.