Meta (company)


Meta was a company that designed augmented reality products. The company was founded by Meron Gribetz in 2013. The company furloughed two-thirds of its approximately 100 employees in September 2018. In 2019, the company declared itself insolvent and sold all its assets in a foreclosure sale. In all, investors — BOE Technology Group, Draper Associates, Horizons Ventures, and others — sank $73 million into Meta.

Products

The company's products included the Meta 1 and Meta 2 Developer Kits, headsets by which users could view and manipulate holographic images.

History

Meta was founded by Meron Gribetz while he was a student at Columbia University. In 2013, Meta launched a crowd-funded Kickstarter campaign that raised $194,444. Also in 2013, Meta was accepted into the Y Combinator's seed accelerator program. Steve Mann became the company's chief scientist and Steven Feiner became an adviser.
In 2014, founder Gribetz was awarded the "30 Under 30 award" in the technology category by Forbes and Meta won best heads-up display award for the Meta Pro at the Consumer Electronics Show. Meta presented the Meta 1 Developer Kit with a live medical demo at 2014's TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco.
In September 2014, Meta began to ship its Meta 1 Developer Kit.
In 2015, Meta received $23 million in Series-A funding from Horizons Ventures, Tim Draper, BOE Optoelectronics, Garry Tan and Alexis Ohanian of Y Combinator, Danhua Capital, Commodore Partners, and Vegas Tech Fund.
In 2016, Meta unveiled its second-generation product at a TED conference. The company received another $50M in venture-capital funds from Lenovo, Tencent, Banyan Capital, Comcast Ventures, and GQY.
In March 2016, it announced the launch of the Meta 2 at the $949 to compete with the Microsoft HoloLens, which retailed for $3000. However, the Meta 2 would be a tethered and would require an external PC whereas the Hololens was a standalone product.
In 2018, Meta furloughed two-thirds of its one-hundred employees after it failed to secure another round of venture-capital funding. In 2019, Meta declared itself insolvent.
In 2019, a company called Meta View announced it acquired the intellectual property assets of Meta. Jay Wright, who previously served as president and general manager of Qualcomm's augmented reality division, Vuforia, serves as CEO of Meta View.