National Post - Financial Post Magazine

Av Utukuri has Baanto Internatio­nal’s Canadian-made touchscree­n technology on the verge of something big.

Baanto Internatio­nal is getting viewers from around the globe hooked on its Canadian-designed touchscree­n technology

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Innovation has long been a buzz word in Canada, but most of the talk begins and ends with the BlackBerry smartphone. After that, jaws go slack and everyone cries for the government to help. Av Utukuri, though, is a big believer in the potential for Canadian innovation, which is why he started up Nytric Ltd. 16 years ago to help budding entreprene­urs get their ideas turned into products. But he hadn’t spun out his own company even though his employees had certainly asked to do it. Now, with Baanto Internatio­nal Ltd., he believes he’s on the verge of something big: A touchscree­n technology that eliminates annoying problems such as entry errors and slow speeds.

Founded in 2008, Baanto has big-name customers such as Toshiba, L3 and ESPN abroad, and Canadian Tire, CTV and Cineplex closer to home. But getting them wasn’t easy. Big companies often don’t have a favourable view of Canadian innovation, believing product evolution can only be achieved by companies with massive billion-dollar R&D budgets. “We had booked a meeting room at the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Vegas to show our sensor — it’s literally two pixels and one division — to Samsung executives who came in from Korea and they walked out saying you’re lying,” Utukuri says. “They said, ‘It’s black magic. There’s gotta be something more than this because there’s no way it can be that simple. And even if it was that simple, I cannot believe the patent for this does not exist.’”

But, as Utukuri points out, it’s easier to create a disruptive product when you are not wedded to a certain technology or industry. In this case, Baanto’s technology was completely different than the camera-based touchscree­ns that preceded it. Being an outsider, though, means it’s also easier to be ignored, especially when the idea seems so simple. Non-overlay-based touchscree­ns (which use electrical impulses or touch) traditiona­lly use cameras or beambreak sensors and algorithms to determine where an object is, but they have a hard time keeping up since people write fast. Utukuri likens Baanto’s technology, dubbed ShadowSens­e to separate it

from the touchscree­n pack, to a sundial since both use shadows as input data. ShadowSens­e measures the angle, width and intensity of a finger’s or pen’s shadow and uses algorithms to determine location. As a result, things such as water drops, blood drops in a surgical theatre, or accidental swipes are dismissed as irrelevant.

“A sundial has infinite depth of field, so it doesn’t matter whether the sun is five metres away or five million miles away, the shadow is always in focus,” Utukuri says. “Why are you imaging the object and sending megabytes of data with complex optics when you can get an image of the shadow of the object and get it for one byte? It’s far faster, cheaper and computatio­nally less extensive.”

Baanto’s origins stem back to the downturn that started in 2007 when Nytric’s revenue run rate went from $4 million a year to $400,000. Rather than pack it in, Nytric held an internal competitio­n to develop a product and take the winning one to potential customers. A touchscree­n won and was shown to the Canadian divisions of companies such as Hasbro, Mattel and Panasonic, who all agreed it was cool, but wanted Nytric to create the product.

After Baanto was formally spun out of Nytric, the Industrial Research Assistance Program kicked in $500,000 to match the funds the company was investing and it received some help from the Canadian Scientific Research and Experiment­al Developmen­t Tax Incentive Program. But it was a meeting with author Margaret Atwood that sealed the deal when she gave Utukuri a cheque for $100,000. “She said, ‘Son, I’ve written about all this stuff and imagined all this stuff before you were born, so I know a good deal when I see one,’ he recalls. “She gave me the confidence to go do it.”

Given that an entire generation is being raised to expect touchscree­ns as opposed to imagining them, users can expect more innovation­s to come, but Utukuri believes a Canadian company can keep ahead of the competitio­n. “I want to create enough of a barrier so that for someone to out-innovate us will take so much time and money that it’s easier for them to come in and say I want to acquire you, I want to partner with you, I want to license with you,” he says. “Which is usually what happens.”

 ??  ?? Av Utukuri touches a Baanto Internatio­nal screen being developed for the medical industry
Av Utukuri touches a Baanto Internatio­nal screen being developed for the medical industry
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