Conversation with Pete Wassell
Welcome everyone to our Momenta Edge Podcast. Our guest today is the CEO and founder of Augmate, Pete Wassell. Pete, it’s great to have you on.
Thank you so much for inviting me. I love everything you’re doing at Momenta, it’s been great to connect at some of the
Well, we’ve been a huge fan of you and the team at Augmate, and this is a great opportunity for us to really help some of our listeners understand a bit more
My background is, I went to Engineering School, Clarkson University in upstate New York, and that really set the foundation for thinking about technology, and computers. Over the time from when I started in school I got picked up by IBM in my senior year of college, I also spent a number of years in Silicon Valley, and I think between both IBM from let’s say a scalability standpoint, just the sheer size
I’d have to say that I’ve taken the advice of mentors and folks along the way, they say follow your passion, so when the right technology came along I felt I had the experience and the insights, and enough sense, enough naivety as well to start the company.
It’s super-interesting that what you’re involved with at Augmate really touches on several, I think, really profound, and really consequential technology trends; one is wearables, the other is virtual reality or augmented reality, and the other is Blockchain. But I’d like to address each one and drill down a little bit into some of the dynamics around wearables, and just talk first about what you saw in the market when you were first looking at Augmate. How you looked at wearables early-on, because I think as we look back to the late eighties or early nineties, you’d have these headsets that were very bulky, couldn’t really work, and of
I’d love to understand your perspective and your experience as you looked at the market evolve, and what you saw in the market that led you to identify some burning pain points out there.
We’ve got a ton of technology at Augmate, disciplined approach to engineering and building product and everything, but in reality, often the things that inspire you and motivate you in the beginning come from fantasy, and early-on Sci-Fi pictures, whether it was Terminator, thinking about Terminator vision, that was one of the first thoughts I had about augmented reality, leaping further to Iron Man kind of thinking, that’s where it starts. Unfortunately, those concepts are great,
It’s great that it plants the seed and inspires folks, but then the real work comes into building it. Oftentimes there’s a convergence of technology that has to take place. So, in other
The way I had started was, I took a disciplined approach, I started building out slides on the history of wearables, and I’ll send this over to you, it’s kind of amusing. It ended up being over 50, probably 60 slides, and each slide was an incremental part of the technology, and so I put a little blurb on it, maybe a picture that was a device or some sort of technology, and what I was trying to do was; you look in the past and then start making these points to figure out the future, the trajectory of where things are going. So, that was like a scientific approach to doing it, and what it’s good for is pointing the direction to technology, so oftentimes they’ll say, ‘You’ll know the direction of technology, but you may not know the timing’. So, market timing from an adoption standpoint and that kind of thing, that’s the part that’s tricky. It’s a little bit easier to figure out where things are going, but it’s the win that’s the challenge.
Early-on when it came to wearables I’d have to say, those early movies and those types of things got me thinking about really the end-goal, which was kind of a brain to computer interface. So, I started thinking about it, I thought to myself, ‘What’s the biggest bandwidth to the brain?’ what pipe is the biggest bandwidth, and it turns out to be your vision, your optic nerve, you already have a wire to your brain, your optic nerve. By placing the computer on your face in having smart glasses, is this way to facilitate it, it’s not perfect, they are not plugging into the brain, but it’s a way to get closer. I thought that was incremental, enough of
It’s really interesting because the evolution of augmented reality or wearables, there was a lot of basis for flight simulators, but also smart goggles for airline pilots. You must have been familiar with Steve Mann from MIT, the guy who had really equipped himself with a constant recording device, it was pretty geeky but it was pretty amazing out of that vision back then. Were there any use-cases that struck you as particularly promising or viable at that point? Or some that just seemed a bit too much of a mismatch between where technology
Steve Mann is a friend of mine, we’ve actually worked on a lot together for wearables, and when he got started at MIT he actually wore the smart glass device he invented. Later-on the interviewer had commented and said, ‘This kid is either crazy or genius’, and obviously he’s more on the genius side. So Steedman was definitely an influence, and
Another guy early-on here in the city was Steven Feiner from Columbia University, so if you look at any of the academic research that’s out there, papers that were written, it’s Steve working with some of the earliest smart glasses. I’m talking like 1996-97, all the way through early-2000’s devices, and he still does it today. Steve Feiner and I got to be friends, he attends our Augmented Reality meet up each month, it’s ARNY – Augmented Reality New York, and he’s become a friend. Steve Feiner was great and again I would pick his brain, he would do things like maintenance on
Ori Inbar who’d actually started Augmented Reality in New York, he was an influence, and early
It’s really interesting that you were able to collaborate with all of these cutting-edge thinkers at the time. What did you learn about this concept of collaboration and consortiums, with technology that at the time some of the enterprise wearable technology was quite cutting-edge, and you made a really key point I think which is this idea of
I think it’s one of those things, emerging technologies are such that nobody has got all the answers, so people are trying to figure out, it’s almost the premise of a start-up. A start-up is trying to figure out the business model and technology model, and take it to market; people who know me and know my background with corporate in IBM, to be able to go back and forth and see the problems with a big company when it comes to things like process, bureaucracy, red tape, and those types of things, to the way you think in the start-up and being really agile, and navigating the space, and knowing 90 percent of what you try is going to fail. You have to iterate, and
I’m a big fan
That’s
It’s totally fascinating, there are just different use cases, and I’ll even preface this by saying we’re not even all the way there yet. Augmate had started as a glass at work partner with Google, and that particular device they were marketing and positioning as a consumer device. I didn’t think it was ready, I was vocal and adamant about telling them that, I thought it was enterprise. There were other smart glass companies that said similar things, when I said I was going after industry they said, ‘Hey, this is really an entertainment and gaming, that kind of consumer device’, and the technology really wasn’t there yet, and I just didn’t think it was the right move.
Ultimately the technology is one of those things that it was gain adoption, and you can gain adoption in a number of different ways, but the premises add up, and the premises make sense, and that’s information in your field of view. What we believe here at Augmate is, digital information is not where it’s needed or expected. I want to be able to essentially right-click on the world to get more information about it, and I can’t do that, I’m trapped in a physical world, but yet I need digital information. The phone’s not good enough, I want to have it literally attached to physical world objects, especially in a worker’s setting; so, the folks we work with, the target audience or users of our technology, they’re kind of a mobile workforce, they’re
This information in your field of view, it’s such that you want to keep your workers in a state of flow, so if you have to reference a paper-based manual, laptop, or some other system, and then they come back to the task at hand, oftentimes they can make mistakes. Besides that, you need access to hands-free information, when you go from a mobile device someone can make the argument, ‘well, you could have an app on a Smartphone’. When you go from a mobile device to smart glasses, you know you double the amount of handset that you have to work with, and oftentimes these are people who need their hands to do their job.
Can you talk about how you approached the management problem for glasses? You just mentioned that you’re doubling the number of devices that an employer may have; how did you approach the pain points or the business problems of some of the types of customers that you’re working with? What have you learned so far about the needs of businesses that are trying to harness this technology, and take advantage of the vision that you just articulated?
That would all work out fine. The piece would be when you went over to the IT Department and you wanted to
Really, that’s become the basis of expanding into IoT, we wanted to get wearables down really well. We’ve had 25 security features build into our wearables platform, great functionality, essentially when we put our provisional software on those devices you can operate them from the Web, you could actually operate those devices from the Web. So, doing something small, very-very well, puts you in the right position in order to expand, so, that’s become the foundation and the basis of why and how Augmate is now expanding into all IoT, we believe wearable
That’s a great lead in too, which I wanted to dive in a bit deeper,
First of all, some of the things that shaped my way of thinking on IoT was the fact that the cost of sensors has gone down tremendously, so we’re getting to think about the point in time of when technology makes sense to really start jumping onboard and making things happen. The cost of storage has gone down tremendously, the rise in artificial intelligence, so when I talk about converging technologies that are needed, these are some of those fundamental pieces that underpin what’s needed, 5G is coming up right around the corner, so these kinds of things all come together that then you’re able to start moving in that proper direction. When it comes to the devices or universal management system on this stuff, there’s a couple of thoughts on that.
We’re going from 10 or 12 devices to thousands of devices, and that’s the challenge. So, there
We believe that in the next three to four years you won’t be able to buy a piece of equipment, a device, an appliance, any of these things that are not connected to the internet. So, that’s not going to be an option, and you could just imagine, one of the guys that influenced me
Think back to 2006 and the kinds of phones we had, it was hard to imagine that your life would depend on these Smartphones, that you’d be glued to them, that they change your life; well that’s how people are going to feel about the fourth generation. When that generation of the internet really emerges, and that’s what we’re building towards, those applications and services are going to help humanity in such a way that it’s hard to fathom right now the impact it’s going to have on society.
It is really just a level of scale and orders of magnitude that’s really hard to imagine. You made a comment about blockchain, and I wanted to follow up on that, why blockchain is so useful for IoT. I’d love to hear your thoughts about why is it important, why is it so suitable, and then why did you find the technology to fit so well with what you’re doing at Augmate?
When I started thinking about the devices were going to add, our Chief Engineer had sent me a list of
We’re doing our token offering essentially to become the currency of data, and that’s what we see this emerging world becoming, a way to exchange data; you need a way to have trust in a trustless environment. Think about it, we’ve got thousands of use cases that we think are appropriate, and I’ll take one that may resonate with consumer layer, let’s say at home, you can do a health use case at home, so you step on your IoT scale at home, it’s connected to the internet, that’s connected to your Fitbit, it’s connected to your fridge, it’s connected to your Nest thermostat, its connected to your Health Mirror that’s giving you a readout of your vitals and information. You’ll take a pill that determines your blood-glucose and your hormone levels, and you start thinking, ‘Am I sharing this data with my doctor?’ ‘Am I sharing this data with my insurance company, to get a discount?’ ‘Am I selling this data to a pharmaceutical company? Because I don’t mind if they market to
That’s like one of
Everyone gets that IoT is a huge market and that companies are in a mad rush to get there, but the barriers have to do with this device management insecurity layer,
How do you think about the current state of blockchain and distributed ledger technologies, in terms of the scalability? I think there’s an enormous amount of promise, but right now we’re in the early stages of
Absolutely. I think there’s a lot of misconceptions on scalability, and I’ll give you an example; when you buy something with your Visa card, your credit card, whatever you buy it doesn’t matter, the manufacturer, the company that sold that, they don’t see that money for a couple of days, that’s the way it works. You get the item right away, but the backend processing that gets done takes a couple of days, that’s just the way it works. When you look at a transaction on blockchain taking 30-minutes, that’s actually incredibly fast. They often use these examples of transactions per second, and a lot of times the early protocols compared themselves to
Certain protocols by design are different
We have to think fundamentally, almost mathematically to determine the right kinds of protocols for the right kinds of use cases. There’s only a subset of protocols that we can use, so we felt good about IOTA, Hash Graph, where you’ve got a similar structure, so these are the things that make the most amount of sense. Internally for let’s say off-chain, or OnPrem, within a company, private protocols are totally fine; you want the high volume, micro transaction,
So yes, that’s how we determined those things, and our online platform that’s on AWS Access, we can set up a region very easily, we’ve got load balancing and all that kind of thing, so we’re designed to be highly suitable.
That’s a really interesting point that you make about all those technologies. Are there any disconnects that you see, or misperceptions in the market, particularly around IoT and Blockchain technologies, and the awareness of really how to apply them correctly?
I’ll tell you the hardest thing with misconceptions is, the fact that
You get to understand
So, the misconception, I think there’s a little
Yes, I’d have to agree. Somebody made a comment that I thought was quite incisive, this whole Blockchain or Crypto market industry, you can see the extremes of the best aspects of human nature, as well as the worst at the same time. You can pick how you want to look at it, but of
I love Tim, Tim gave us our first half-million, he kicked off our seed round, so I owe him a debt of gratitude. By observing Tim and his portfolio of companies I came to understand what disruption meant. If you want to disrupt something you’ve got to feel comfortable with breaking things, and
It’s been said, even in a company like let’s say Kodak, there were folks that brought digital imaging to the executives, and said, ‘Hey this is something that will be really great for us to pursue’, and they said, ‘Well, that will cannibalize or kill our film business’, well, it did! It did, it’s just they didn’t do it and they had the opportunity. There’re countless examples that show you’ve got to be disruptive, it’s like there’s Blockbuster and there’s Netflix, and so it continues to happen, and I’m always surprised that the companies who don’t learn that lesson. But that’s a lesson by spending some time in Silicon Valley, it gets beaten into you,
It’s a really powerful lesson to see how the growth of exponential technologies can really up-end in
You get to a certain size, and the processes, red tape, and bureaucracy take over. There’s a couple of companies that can do it, Google has seemed to have been able to figure it out, Amazon in a lot of respects, but a lot of companies in the past have had difficulty in making that transition. What I have noticed, what I’ve observed in Silicon Valley was, five people would start the company, the company would be started with a valuation of 5 million. I’d say technologies like fashion – every year there’s something new, even if it’s only incrementally better than previous technologies, that’s the way it works. Then these five people determine how to solve problems in the market place using that new technology.
They’re able to be agile, and just move so much quicker, and figure out that business case, the technology side, and the business side, in order to solve problems in the marketplace, and create that engine of capital. This is what I’ve observed, companies like IBM would look at the landscape and say, ‘Here’s
And so, you do growth play to get your 5 million to 100 million, and then in that year five you get an MNA broker that sends quarterly reports, and a nice cover letter, and works with that acquiring company because not so many companies are IPOs, the vast majority are acquisitions. Your bigger companies can’t innovate because of all that bureaucracy, it’s easier for them to look across the landscape, and they always have a growth player, they can take that emerging technology and they can sell it to their 100,000 customers. So, it’s a formula I witnesses that was repeated – that’s why you have serial entrepreneurs, they understand it and they just execute that over and over, every five years. It’s just that’s the way it works.
Now, when you’re looking back to the application of the Augmate platform for Blockchain, enabled wearables management, and device management, are there any industries that you’re particularly optimistic about where there could be real potential for transformative impact, from adopting what you guys are putting together which is really a
The ones we see that seem to really make a difference that we’ve got numbers on for efficiency improvements, and productivity improvements, or accuracy improvements, supply chain are pretty significant, so the areas of logistics and distribution, those types of things. Field maintenance is also very relevant, anywhere where you have let’s say people with the expertise, this whole trend of boomers we’re hiring, and having millennials that go out into the field, but yet call back to the office and get guided walkthroughs on how to fix certain things and repair things, and that kind of thing in the field, that’s certainly an area. Workflow and instruction, we think are good.
At the end of the day, a number of these systems, these industries, are only as good this technology as the content that’s available. So, there’s always this component of tying in a backend system to be able to deliver the information to people. That’s the kind of PC, start thinking about let’s say a WMS – Warehouse Management System, or a PLM type system, or ERP type system that you connect to in order to pull out the relevant and meaningful information to help workers.
That’s great, I think we will see a lot of these
Yes, you can make someone productive on day one, make them an expert so to speak, hire people that have lower skills and provide them on the job training, literally.
Yeah, it’s incredibly powerful. As you look out over the next decade, what is your vision of how ultimately the market for industrial wearables will evolve, and adjacent to that, or in conjunction with that, how we see the Blockchain space evolve as well? I’d love to get your thoughts on that.
Absolutely. I started with the vision of
The reason why it’s important is because you can’t make changes on things that you don’t measure, and you need data to make good decisions; we don’t make emotional decisions, we don’t make knee-jerk decisions, we make decisions based on information, and there’s going to be a lot of information. I think artificial intelligence that rides on top of this layer of IoT is critical, it’s got to assist in the applications and services on this fourth generation of the internet, this layer. 5G will certainly be a part of that, and Blockchain that communicates across the devices, because here’s how things work; in anything in life or work, you take an action, you communicate the action, and then that action is somehow processed. So,
Then there’s TCP/IP, you get your text messages all the time, the communication layer that’s fine, what we needed was a universal way to
Yes, this whole concept of convergence around these multiple technologies is really compelling, and you’ve highlighted the importance of AI, that gets layered on top of that unlimited storage on cloud computing, and then you have the cheap processing that will enable the visual rendering of data, and then of course Blockchain which creates that amazing trust layer, and it’s all happening together. It really is an amazing time to be alive. I share your optimism around that.
Pete, this has just been a fantastic conversation, we’ve hit so many different topics. One of the questions I always like to ask of anybody that I talk to is, a recommendation, whether it’s a book or resource, something you would share with somebody who’s looking to get a little bit deeper, either into the technologies or just something that you would share with a friend. Is there anything that comes to mind?
I still like, ‘Thinking Fast and Slow’, by Daniel Kahneman.
That’s a great book, yeah.
I catch myself because we’ve got biases, and we’ve got quick thinking and I’ve learned sometimes even today it seems like… I’m an impatient guy but I’ll tell you what, I’ve made better decisions by holding off and thinking about my biases and thinking about oftentimes those knee-jerk instinct kinds of ways of thinking about something
There’s another one out there by Mark Manson, ‘The Subtle Art of Not Giving
I would recommend those. There’s so many, but at the top of
Those are great recommendations Pete, I think our listeners will certainly appreciate them as well. Again, that was a terrific conversation, we really hit a lot of cool topics, and I was thrilled to get more of a chance to hear your insights. We’ll be including the links to the books in the show notes, but again I just want to thank you for taking the time Pete to share your thinking, as always, it’s a tremendously fascinating conversation, and hope we’ll do it again soon.
Awesome Ed, my pleasure, any time.
Thanks. This is Ed Maguire, Insights Partner from Momenta with another Edge podcast.