- Exodigo | Solving the underground with technology
Exodigo is the leading underground mapping solution for non-intrusive discovery Our platforms combine multi-sensor fusion, 3D imaging, and AI to create complete, accurate underground maps that enable confident decision-making for customers across the built world
- Exodigo’s underground mapping technology draws attention with $96m . . .
Jerusalem Post Business Innovation Exodigo’s underground mapping technology draws attention with $96m series B funding boost The IDF has been working for years and even had a brigade-size
- Rising from the depths: Exodigo’s journey through war and . . . - ctech
Exodigo's clients include international companies managing the world’s largest projects in transportation, energy, planning, and engineering in Israel, the United States, and Europe
- Technology Report 2022 - Exodigo - Common Ground Alliance
Exodigo is a startup and innovator combining advances in 3D imaging, sensors, and AI, to effectively map the underground, from man-made pipes and cables to soil layers, rocks, minerals, and even groundwater under any terrain
- Exodigo Closes $105 Million Series A to Lead Underground Mapping Revolution
As the only subsurface imaging company to put AI-interpreted signal processing into practice, Exodigo solves a massive, longstanding problem for industries where what lies underground matters
- Exodigo raises $96 million to expand AI underground mapping for U. S . . .
Exodigo's technology focuses on mapping buried pipes, wires and utility assets, to make designing and constructing new buildings, highways, subways, and other massive infrastructure projects safer and avoid unnecessary excavation
- Exodigo Technology | Multi-sensor underground mapping software
Exodigo scans with the most advanced sensors across multiple fields of physics This approach compensates for limitations of individual sensor types and ensures that all buried assets - regardless of material and properties - are detected
- Exodigo - Cemex Ventures
Exodigo is the new gold standard for non-intrusive discovery Every year, companies and governments spend more than $100 billion on excavation and drilling to discover what’s underground
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