A quick 20-minute conversation with Vassal signals and there’s a good chance you’ll realize you’re eating inexplicable amounts of unhealthy food and really aren’t in your best shape. This is because Signal – and his partner Mohit Kumar – are behind Ultrahuman. ultrahuman There’s a wearable — with app support — that continuously manages your glucose. The wearable sticks to your body like a patch and has a microfilament that can read through interstitial tissue, not blood. What it does, explains Singhal, is it gives you “real-time data and a true understanding of your body”. A bad meal and glucose level can tell you how to ‘fix’ it.
Singhal and Kumar used to run Runner, a logistics services startup, which was acquired by Zomato in 2017. Ultrahumans got a lot of support from this. Apple‘s app accelerator In terms of design, and getting the right feedback, among other things. Good health, as they say, has no cost, but ultrahuman comes at a great cost. For a one-year subscription, you will have to spend Rs 1.1 lakh for sensor and app support. You get ‘affordable’ plans, but they are periodic. Singhal knows this is a niche product that has a similar audience but Ultrahuman is reaching the right people. These include elite athletes, Bollywood celebs – who give importance to fitness. “We know this is a premium product, but we’re confident hardcore fitness enthusiasts will appreciate its value.”
If Ultrahuman was to target a specific audience, Stamurai’s setting was down to personal struggles and filling a void that needed to be looked at seriously. You may know that stuttering is a real problem that many people deal with. Anshul Agarwal was one of them. He along with two other friends started Stamurai, an app meant to help people who suffer from stuttering and other speech problems. Aggarwal says, “I used to stammer since childhood and it affected everything I did.” An IIT-Delhi graduate and his colleague Meet Singhal observed that there are about 4,000 accredited speech therapists in the country. An estimated 60 million people suffer from speech disorders. stamurai He wants to fill that gap. Over the years, the app has seen over 200,000 downloads, a third of them from India. Since its inception, the app has come a long way. There are practitioners who are part of the team and supported with Apple’s App Accelerator. Aggarwal says, “Apple has helped us improve the app in many ways in terms of UI and design.
In My Shadow is one of those indie games that really gets you thinking. Nakul Verma runs an indie studio based in Gurgaon and gaming has been his “thing” for a while. He worked as a data analyst but knew deep down that gaming was his true calling. He went on to create In My Shadow. Back in 2018, he applied for the India Game Developer Conference and moved to San Francisco. “That’s when things really changed because I met developers who were doing some crazy things.” He came back, quit the job and worked on the game.
In My Shadow is available on Steam, app Store, PlayStation as well as Xbox. “My dream was to get my game featured on the App Store as Game of the Day,” he says. He got in touch with Apple and they liked the game. “I was offered support, suggestions and feedback to make it better.” And soon the game ended up on the App Store as Game of the Day.
Singhal and Kumar used to run Runner, a logistics services startup, which was acquired by Zomato in 2017. Ultrahumans got a lot of support from this. Apple‘s app accelerator In terms of design, and getting the right feedback, among other things. Good health, as they say, has no cost, but ultrahuman comes at a great cost. For a one-year subscription, you will have to spend Rs 1.1 lakh for sensor and app support. You get ‘affordable’ plans, but they are periodic. Singhal knows this is a niche product that has a similar audience but Ultrahuman is reaching the right people. These include elite athletes, Bollywood celebs – who give importance to fitness. “We know this is a premium product, but we’re confident hardcore fitness enthusiasts will appreciate its value.”
If Ultrahuman was to target a specific audience, Stamurai’s setting was down to personal struggles and filling a void that needed to be looked at seriously. You may know that stuttering is a real problem that many people deal with. Anshul Agarwal was one of them. He along with two other friends started Stamurai, an app meant to help people who suffer from stuttering and other speech problems. Aggarwal says, “I used to stammer since childhood and it affected everything I did.” An IIT-Delhi graduate and his colleague Meet Singhal observed that there are about 4,000 accredited speech therapists in the country. An estimated 60 million people suffer from speech disorders. stamurai He wants to fill that gap. Over the years, the app has seen over 200,000 downloads, a third of them from India. Since its inception, the app has come a long way. There are practitioners who are part of the team and supported with Apple’s App Accelerator. Aggarwal says, “Apple has helped us improve the app in many ways in terms of UI and design.
In My Shadow is one of those indie games that really gets you thinking. Nakul Verma runs an indie studio based in Gurgaon and gaming has been his “thing” for a while. He worked as a data analyst but knew deep down that gaming was his true calling. He went on to create In My Shadow. Back in 2018, he applied for the India Game Developer Conference and moved to San Francisco. “That’s when things really changed because I met developers who were doing some crazy things.” He came back, quit the job and worked on the game.
In My Shadow is available on Steam, app Store, PlayStation as well as Xbox. “My dream was to get my game featured on the App Store as Game of the Day,” he says. He got in touch with Apple and they liked the game. “I was offered support, suggestions and feedback to make it better.” And soon the game ended up on the App Store as Game of the Day.