腦瞳憫

21 October 2021

It started as a hobby project while working in research at 腦瞳憫. Now the six founders of the Senion company are selling it to the American telecommunications giant Verizon.

Picture of a map and a ipad in the corridors of Link繹ping University.
The first steps towards what would later become Senion were taken in the corridors of 腦瞳憫. This photo is from the research period around 2009.
Senion Lab was founded eleven years ago by researchers from the Department of Electrical Engineering at Link繹ping University. It arose from their experience of how difficult it was to find their way around all the lecture theatres, and remember where everyones office was.

They speculated that it would be possible to use their research within sensor fusion to create a solution for indoor positioning. No sooner said than done, and Senion Lab was in place, developing a system that can be thought of as indoor GPS. With the companys software installed on a smartphone, its easy to navigate simply and accurately indoors.

Sensor fusion research

The company name derives from an abbreviation of sensor fusion, a research field in which data are combined from a large number of sensors. This gives information of higher quality than can be achieved with a single sensor, or that otherwise would require more expensive solutions.

The sensor fusion research group is part of the Division for Automatic Control at Link繹ping University. This field of research has existed since 1995, and has since then become an important component in many research contexts.

A breakthrough, a new name and a new direction

The company achieved something of a breakthrough in 2012, when an Asian telecommunications company purchased the Senion system for around 70 shopping centres. The technology now helped customers find shops simply and correctly. Stories about the technology spread, and a couple of years later the company removed Lab from its name to become Senion. The system by now had been sold to 35 countries all over the world.

Around this time, the company started to discuss other possible uses for the technology. One of these was a solution for companies with many offices and many employees. With the aid of indoor positioning systems (IPS), a system was developed that uses office space in the best and most efficient way.

Employee meetings and room bookings can, for example, be synced against an individuals calendar, and in this way show that a room has become free earlier than planned, if the person leaves the meeting room before the specified time.

Bought up by Verizon

Picture of Christian Lundquist, managing director of Senion.From PhD student in the Department of Electrical Engineering to managing director for Senion. Christian Lundquist and his previous research colleagues are selling the company to telecommunications company Verizon. Photo credit: CrelleThe founders are now selling the company to telecommunication giant Verizon, led by Swedish managing director Hans Vestberg. Even though the company will now become American-owned, Senion plans to continue operating from Link繹ping.

We plan to remain in Link繹ping, and will even expand the office, with the aid of investments from Verizon, says managing director Christian Lundquist.

Translation from Swedish: George Farrants

Latest news from LiU

A view of a space shuttle flying over the audience in the dome.

Anyone can land on the moon with a new immersive film

The film Once Upon the Moon allows the audience to experience the moon landings as if they were there themselves. Authentic footage, astronauts own stories and the latest visualisation technology make this possible.

En kopp som st疇r p疇 ett bord.

LEAD appointed as Swedish accelerator for NATO DIANA

LEAD, an innovation incubator based in Östergötland, has been appointed Swedish accelerator for NATO DIANA NATOs innovation programme for the development of new technologies with both civilian and military applications.

A woman standing in front of a laptop computer.

LiU educates elected representatives on AI and societal impact

LiU is launching a learning platform that gathers research-based knowledge about the impact of artificial intelligence and digitalisation on our democracy. The aim is to equip politicians for a new reality where AI is an integral part of society.