
AI startup led by UW computer science whiz enables ‘superhuman hearing capabilities'
GeekWire's startup coverage documents the Pacific Northwest entrepreneurial scene. Sign up for our weekly startup newsletter , and check out the GeekWire funding tracker and venture capital directory .
Shyam Gollakota.
A new stealthy Seattle startup is taking sound technology to a whole new dimension.
Hearvana was just founded by University of Washington computer science researchers.
Shyam Gollakota, co-founder of Hearvana, told GeekWire that the company is 'creating AI breakthroughs that are shaping the future of sound.'
'Our AI algorithms enable on-device superhuman hearing capabilities and will be part of billions of earbuds, hearing aids and smartphones,' he said. 'It is an exciting time.'
Gollakota, a renowned tech inventor and researcher, said the company is developing unique AI models to help people seamlessly choose what they want to hear in real-time.
Part of the company's secret sauce is its ability to quickly process audio on a device without requiring large amounts of power or compute on a device.
Hearvana is being incubated at the AI2 Incubator in Seattle.
'Hearvana is my favorite kind of startup as it addresses a familiar pain point — we all struggle to hear in noisy settings like a restaurant or a party — with deep AI technology,' said Oren Etzioni, technical director and partner at AI2 Incubator.
Etzioni, the former CEO of the Allen Institute for AI, called Gollakota a 'world-class computer scientist.'
Hearvana co-founder Malek Itani.
Gollakota has a track record of turning research into startups.
He previously co-founded Sound Life Sciences, a UW spinout that developed an app to monitor breathing that was acquired by Google in 2022.
He's also the co-founder of Wavely Diagnostics, which uses a smartphone app to detect ear infections.
Gollakota last year won a $100,000 award as one of six researchers honored as part of this year's Infosys Prize.
His research focuses on wireless tech, battery-free devices, WiFi sensing and imaging, medical diagnostics via smartphones, and more.
Malek Itani, a research assistant and PhD student at the UW's computer science school, is a co-founder of Hearvana. Itani was an intern at Meta, where he worked on smart glasses.
Gollakota and Itani published research last year on a headphone prototype that uses AI to create a 'sound bubble' and can learn the distance for each sound source in a room.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Geek Wire
18 hours ago
- Geek Wire
GeekWire Podcast: Amazon, Microsoft, and the new AI playbook at work
Andy Jassy says AI will reduce Amazon's corporate workforce over time, due to efficiency gains. (GeekWire File Photo / Todd Bishop) Amazon just told its workers that AI is coming for their jobs. Microsoft says we're trapped in an 'infinite workday.' We can't tell the difference between humans and bots anymore, and Alexa is happy to laugh about it with us. This week on the GeekWire Podcast, we discuss how AI is transforming our local tech giants, changing the fundamental nature of work, and blurring the lines between human and machine. We dive into the memo that has Amazon employees either signing up for AI training or updating their resumes; unpack why you're answering emails at 10 p.m.; and explain how one of us ended up quizzing his dentist's office assistant (or was it an AI chatbot?) about whether he or she (or it?) was human. Then we ask the new Alexa+ what it (she?) thinks about the exchange. Welcome to the new world of work — where the bots are getting better at being human, the humans are working more like machines, and your boss can't tell if you're burnt out or just badly programmed. Related stories Subscribe to GeekWire in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.


Geek Wire
14-06-2025
- Geek Wire
Fresh produce with your package: Amazon testing tighter grocery bundling for same-day deliveries
Blueberries, apples, and cucumbers showed up in my recent order that included a micro SD card and dishwasher detergent. (GeekWire Photo / Taylor Soper) Amazon is making a more concerted effort to get customers buying groceries online as they shop on the tech giant's main shopping storefront. I've noticed this lately after loading up my online cart on and clicking 'proceed to checkout.' Instead of taking me to checkout, Amazon shows me a page with more than 100 grocery items that can be delivered same-day. Most of the items I saw were fresh produce or meat, with some packaged foods. ( screenshot) I tested this out a few days ago — adding some apples, cucumbers, and blueberries to my online cart that already included a micro SD memory card and dishwasher detergent. After ordering late one evening, everything arrived at my Seattle doorstep the next morning — non-grocery items in one package, groceries an hour later. 'We are currently iterating on new experiences that make it easier for customers to shop for fresh groceries alongside the millions of items available for same-day delivery,' Amazon said in a statement to GeekWire. Amazon said in October that it was running a trial in Phoenix that let customers bundle perishable items with other products for same-day and overnight delivery. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy talked about the new initiative during the Q&A portion of Amazon's shareholders meeting last month: 'We've experimented in Phoenix, in Kansas City, in Orlando at this point. And so now, when you're getting those items that you get same day, you can add perishables, like eggs or milk, or bread, or yogurt. That experience is really resonating with customers. We're seeing very significant adoption, and I'm optimistic as we roll that out to many more of our same day facilities, that that will lead to more of our customers buying perishables from us.' Personally I've had a hard time keeping track of Amazon's various grocery delivery services — from Amazon Fresh to Whole Foods to the same-day platform (which was called Prime Now in a previous incarnation). That's partly why the tighter integration with the shopping experience caught my attention. It was baked directly into the traditional e-commerce shopping flow, and made everything feel like one process versus buying products off and then making a separate grocery order. There were no extra fees or subscriptions required (I am a Prime member), and everything came within the same delivery window. I'm surprised it took Amazon so long to roll this out. But I'm not sure I'll keep using it. I'm not a big online grocery shopper — I prefer to pick my own produce if possible. The items came inside insulated bags and were somewhat cool on arrival, but the cucumbers had a weird look and weird smell. I ended up throwing them out, and reminded myself why I still like grocery shopping the old fashioned way. In another sign of grocery-related consolidation at Amazon, the company is reorganizing its grocery unit leadership ranks and bringing Whole Foods corporate staff under Amazon's employee programs, Business Insider reported this week. It's the first big structural change for the company's grocery arm under new leader Jason Buechel, the CEO of Whole Foods who expanded his role earlier this year to also oversee Amazon's Worldwide Grocery Stores business. From the initial launch of Amazon Fresh in 2007 to the $13.7 billion acquisition of Whole Foods in 2017 and beyond, Amazon has had mixed results in grocery. Over the past few years the company introduced new store formats, closed some stores, paused and restarted expansion, and shifted away from its 'Just Walk Out' checkout-free technology in its large format Amazon Fresh stores. More recently Amazon has launched small format 'Daily Shop' Whole Foods stores and an automated micro-fulfillment center co-located within a Whole Foods store. 'I think that the way people buy groceries is going to continue to evolve over time,' Jassy said at the shareholders meeting. 'So I continue to be very, very bullish on our grocery business. It's large today and has a chance to be much larger in the future.' Amazon said it had more than $100 billion in gross sales of groceries and household essentials in 2024, excluding sales from Whole Foods and Amazon Fresh. Amazon still has a small slice of the U.S. grocery market, at just 1.4%, with Whole Foods at 1.6%, according to data cited by Business Insider.
Yahoo
12-06-2025
- Yahoo
Vercept Raises $16M With Google Legend And Dropbox Co-Founder Backing To Build Future Of Workflows With Vision-Based Mac App Called Vy
Vercept, a Seattle-based AI startup, has secured $16 million in seed funding to develop Vy, a computer vision-powered Mac application designed to automate digital workflows with a single natural language command, GeekWire reports. The company was founded by a group of former leaders from the Allen Institute for AI, and according to GeekWire, its backers include some of the most prominent names in tech, such as former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Google DeepMind chief scientist Jeff Dean, Dropbox (NASDAQ:DBX) co-founder Arash Ferdowsi, and Cruise founder Kyle Vogt. Don't Miss: Maker of the $60,000 foldable home has 3 factory buildings, 600+ houses built, and big plans to solve housing — 'Scrolling To UBI' — Deloitte's #1 fastest-growing software company allows users to earn money on their phones. The round was led by San Francisco-based venture firm Fifty Years, with participation from Point Nine and the AI2 Incubator, which was Vercept's first institutional investor, GeekWire says. Vy Uses Vision AI To Mimic Human Computer Interaction Vercept's flagship product, Vy, uses artificial intelligence to "see" and interpret screens the way a human does, allowing it to replicate complex workflows after observing them once, GeekWire reports. According to the company's website, Vercept was founded with the goal of radically rethinking how people interact with technology, aiming to replace the maze of menus and code-heavy workflows with a seamless, intuitive interface that feels like an extension of the user's mind. The company describes its mission as enabling users to do more with less effort, tackling tasks that were once considered too technical or time-consuming to attempt. Users can perform any digital task, such as filling out forms, organizing invoices, or creating content, while Vy records the actions, and then it automates those same tasks using natural language commands. Trending: Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. Unlike traditional robotic process automation tools, GeekWire says that Vy does not require pre-built application programming interfaces, connectors, or hardcoded steps to engage with software. Vercept CEO Kiana Ehsani told GeekWire that the product is a 'unified paradigm for interacting with the computer.' Ehsani previously led robotics and embodied AI projects at Ai2, while other Vercept co-founders include Oren Etzioni, the founding CEO of Ai2, and Matt Deitke, who worked on prominent AI projects like Molmo, ProcTHOR, and Objaverse, GeekWire reports. Luca Weihs, another co-founder, was a research manager and infrastructure lead at Ai2, focusing on AI agents and reinforcement learning. According to GeekWire, Ross Girshick, a pioneer in combining deep learning and computer vision, also joined the founding team after stints at Meta (NASDAQ:META) AI and has already found traction with a wide range of early adopters, from students using it to manage assignments to businesses automating administrative workflows. In one example, GeekWire reports that individuals with disabilities have integrated Vy with speech-to-text systems, allowing them to remotely operate computers and complete digital tasks independently. While user growth and revenue figures were not disclosed, Ehsani told GeekWire that the reception to Vy has exceeded expectations. Vercept currently employs eight full-time staff members. As major tech players like OpenAI, Google, and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) explore generative AI tools for task automation, GeekWire says that Vercept is differentiating itself with a visual-first solution that requires no technical setup or custom coding. Read Next: Here's what Americans think you need to be considered wealthy. Deloitte's fastest-growing software company partners with Amazon, Walmart & Target – Image: Midjourney Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Vercept Raises $16M With Google Legend And Dropbox Co-Founder Backing To Build Future Of Workflows With Vision-Based Mac App Called Vy originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Sign in to access your portfolio