NexOptic is a technology company with a focus on software solutions for the imaging industry. Our suite of AI solutions, called Aliis, integrates into smartphones, content creation cameras, video streaming platforms, security cameras, medical imaging instruments, surveillance systems and more to supercharge image and video enhancement, while compressing data. This reduces file sizes for cloud storage, but still retains — or improves — the quality.
What do you think makes this company unique?
What differentiates NexOptic from others in our industry is that we’re focused on the foundational elements of image creation. Most other companies are creating algorithms that ‘read’ images and videos, in order to determine what’s in them (such as counting the number of humans in a shot).
We’ve built our Aliis AI to incorporate into image sensors to process raw data in real time, in order to ‘manipulate’ the image – not to change it, but to enhance its characteristics. Aliis is powerful in extreme low-light conditions, and works pixel-by-pixel to perfect the image.
More from Interviews
- Interactive Fun and Entertainment: Interview With 501 Fun
- Meet Jaron Soh, Co-founder & CEO of LGBTQIA+ Mental Wellness App: Voda
- Meet Nathalie Morrison: The Founder Behind Astrea, the Fashion-Tech Brand Putting Lab-Grown Diamonds at the Heart of Luxury
- Meet Badr Ward, CEO And Founder Of Education Platform: Lamsa
- A Conversation with Andrej Persolja, Founder of We Fix Boring
- A Chat with Kebbie Sebastian, CEO and Founder of Merge
- Meet Dr Agnès Leroy, GPU Director at Cryptography Tool: Zama
- Meet Roman Eloshvili, Founder of ComplyControl
How has the company evolved over the last couple of years?
There’s a pivot story here for us. NexOptic actually began as an optics hardware company, aimed at creating optical technologies for commercial use. Smartphone lenses, a handheld telescope with built-in digital binoculars. But in the process of that development, we realized that we needed a software component to really offer a complete package. So while we worked on that software, we realized that the software itself could be a standalone product.
Then COVID hit, the economy slowed, and we had to question the viability of bringing a binocular product to market. We started to focus on the AI. Software is much easier to scale. Our team could develop it remotely, and licensing is simpler to obtain. We’ve since partnered with the Korean government to test our technology on an auto-pilot initiative. And our tech has found its way into the first 4K high resolution single-use endoscope in the medical industry.
What can we hope to see from NexOptic in the future?
In the next year or two, our strategy is to build our presence in the AI imaging space. We’re rolling out the latest component of Aliis – called NexCompress.
Together, the software compresses large video files while heightening their visual