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Osmo rises from the ashes
Also: Anthony Wood on Roku's new home screen

Hi there! My name is Janko Roettgers, and this is Lowpass. This week: Osmo’s revival, and Roku’s upcoming home screen changes.
Osmo is trying to crack AR edutainment (again)
I still remember the first time I tried the kids edutainment system Osmo back in 2014: I was sitting in front of an iPad, placed vertically on a white iPad stand, that showed me pieces of a tangram puzzle, its squares and triangles arranged to make a shape.
In front of the iPad were matching wood puzzle pieces strewn across the table. I went to work to re-create the shape in question with those wood pieces. When I had managed to do so, the iPad played an animation and a sound, and showed me a new shape to crack.
This combination of digital and physical play felt like magic, especially because the physical side of it was so dead simple: In addition to the iPad and the custom white stand, Osmo only relied on analog objects — wood tangram pieces, as well as Scrabble-like letter and number tiles — forits various puzzles and other tasks. And all it took for Osmo’s apps to recognize these objects was a simple clip-on mirror that redirected the field of view of the iPad’s front-facing camera onto the table surface.
Osmo’s playful use of computer vision to bridge the physical and the digital world helped the company win over many millions of fans over the years, and ultimately led to a $120 million acquisition by India’s edutech giant Byju’s in 2019. Then, Byju’s imploded amid fraud accusations — and Osmo went down with the mothership, forced to shutter operations in 2024.
Now, a small group of former Omso employees is trying to bring its magic back: Together, they acquired Osmo’s IP and other assets for just $825,000 out of bankruptcy in December. Since then, they have been quietly restoring some of Osmo’s existing apps, and even started selling remaining hardware — all while brainstorming ways to take Osmo’s technology to the next level.
Two key members of the new Osmo team are Felix Hu and Ariel Zekelman, who met working on Osmo’s coding app, and have since married and become parents themselves. “Having kids just made us realize how special Osmo is and how there is nothing quite like it on the market,” Hu says. “We put so much love and energy into those products. We still want to see them thrive.”
As parents, Zekelman and Hu also realized that the problems Osmo was trying to solve in 2014 — kids zoning out with screens and ignoring the world around them — have only gotten worse over the years. “I really want to create healthy relationships with the digital space,” Zekelman says. “I don't want parents to feel like they can't introduce technology to children. I think that we just need to be more responsible about it.”
At the same time, Zekelman acknowledges that kids themselves have changed. They start using technology much earlier, and consume vastly different forms of media. “Ten years ago, the world was a very, very different place,” she says. “Kids were in a different mindset. We had a different relationship to technology.”
Zekelman and Hu didn’t want to talk too much about upcoming products just yet. Hu said the company is initially focused on regaining trust with its existing customers, including the thousands of schools that once used Osmo.
But the couple suggested AI could play a big role in Osmo’s future. In the company’s early days, its computer vision was often limited to recognizing a very small set of physical objects. Basically, whenever Osmo wanted to build a new iPad app, it also had to ship new play pieces to put in front of the iPad’s camera.
“We were limited by the technologies that were available at the time,” Hu says. “Now that you have large language models, there's a lot more opportunities [to] put anything in front of [the iPad] and interact with it in a meaningful way.”
At the same time, AI could also be a godsend for a small, largely self-funded team. “We can dream much bigger and we can do much more exciting things to bring kids out of this digital world and into the physical world,” Zekelman says.
This combination of digital and physical play has been something many companies have tried to crack over the years. Amazon’s Glow — a projection mapping device for children and their caregivers — was clearly inspired by Osmo, down to the physical tangram puzzle (Zekelman briefly worked on Glow after leaving Osmo in 2022). The Nex Playground is using a Kinect-like approach to tackle the same problem in the living room. One could even argue that Pokémon Go, and the way it uses the physical world as a playground, falls into the same category.
It’s also something that’s a lot harder to pull off than building apps or games confined to phone screens. Case in point: Amazon killed its Glow product just over a year after its launch. Osmo is likely going to face challenges as well, starting with distribution. In its prior iteration, the company had a number of retail partnerships, including with Target and the Apple Store. Striking those kinds of deals requires significant capital.
Hu didn’t want to comment on future distribution plans yet, but Zekelman suggested that the new Osmo may focus on slow, sustainable growth. “You can’t be held to VC growth standards, and you shouldn’t be,” says Zekelman about kids hardware like Osmo that isn’t optimized for constant engagement and growth. “You don't want to create these problematic play patterns. You don't want to create addictive garbage.”
Zekelman and Hu tell me that they’re clear-eyed about the challenges ahead, which include reminding the world that Omso even exists and staying clear of the temptation to chase hyper-growth. “We have an idea of what we're getting into,” Zekelman says. “We can't be stupid. I think that's it. We can't sell out.”
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Roku to launch its new home screen this year
Roku will finally launch a revamped home screen this year, the company’s CEO Anthony Wood confirmed during a fireside chat at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom conference Wednesday.
“We have been testing a bunch of different alternatives to our home screen, working on a next-generation home screen for a couple of years now, and those tests have been going really well,” Wood said. “We’re seeing great results in terms of user sentiment, monetization, engagement, and [...] we’re going to roll it out this year.”
Roku has long been a hold-out when it comes to smart TV home screen interfaces, with virtually all its competitors now emphasizing title-level recommendations over app icons. Over time, Roku introduced additional recommendations to its home screen, including through dedicated tabs for recommended content, sports, and live TV programming in its left sidebar.
A few years ago, Roku also added a row of recommended content sitting at the very top of the home screen. However, at the center of the screen are still icons for installed apps. Wood said Wednesday that the next iteration of the home screen would be better organized and have better personalization, but also feature more ad units.
Roku is testing several versions of the new home screen, Wood said. Some previously publicized tests included additional content rows, but also dynamically organized app lists based on the apps that consumers access the most.
Wood added that he was personally involved in the redesign process. “The home screen is so important that I spent a lot of time [on it]. For me, the fundamental principle number one is: Don’t screw up our home screen. We’ve got a great home screen. It’s iconic. It’s different than anything else, super simple. One of the things that makes Roku popular is [that] it’s very easy to use, and a lot of that comes from our simple home screen.”
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What else
Netflix buys Ben Affleck’s AI startup. My latest for Fast Company: Netflix has acquired InterPositive, a startup working on AI tools for filmmakers that was founded by Affleck.
“There are easier ways to make $2.8 billion.” Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos talks losing Warner Bros. to Paramount, and why this was never about the breakup fee, with Bloomberg’s Lucas Shaw.
David Ellison wants to merge Paramount+ and HBO Max to better compete with Netflix. My guess: It will be called Paramount Max for a year, and then inevitably rebranded as HBO.
Amazon is shutting down Wondery’s podcast app. The Wondery+ podcast subscription service will also be discontinued.
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Pico teases new VR headset. The ByteDance subsidiary also unveiled its new VR operating system, which takes a few cues from Apple’s VisionOS.
BBC may open up its iPlayer. The British broadcaster is considering distributing other public television networks via the iPlayer app as it is looking to convince people to keep paying public TV license fees.
FCC approves Cox-Charter merger. The approval comes ten months after Charter announced its plan to buy Cox for $34.5 billion.
Meta is all in on FFmpeg. This is neat: Meta has been using the popular open source FFmpeg video encoding tool for years, but long relied on an internal fork optimized to run “tens of billions of times a day.” Now, the company merged all those code changes back into FFmpeg, meaning that other companies can easily make use of the same tech that helps Meta process more than one billion daily video uploads.
That’s it
Speaking of that $2.8 billion Paramount Skydance paid Netflix as a breakup fee after the streamer walked away from its Warner Bros. Discovery deal … I don’t know if David Ellison is reading this, but I am also open to giving up on my dream to one day buy Warner Bros.. I’d even do it for far less. Say, $2.8 million? Call me, David!
Thanks for reading, have a great weekend!
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