Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Lumafield makes the Voyager industrial CT scanner with cloud-based Neptune software, bringing X-ray CT imaging to engineering teams at a fraction of traditional cost; raised $120M+ including a $75M Series C in 2024 led by Kleiner Perkins;
Lumafield is an industrial technology company founded in 2019 by Eduardo Torrealba and Joseph DeSimone (co-founder of Carbon, the 3D printing unicorn), headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The company makes industrial X-ray computed tomography (CT) scanning accessible to engineering teams at mainstream manufacturing companies — a technology previously limited to specialized labs due to prohibitive cost ($500K–$3M+ for traditional CT systems) and complexity. Lumafield's Voyager CT scanner is priced at a monthly subscription starting around $4,500–$6,000/month, paired with its Neptune cloud software platform that provides AI-assisted 3D visualization, defect detection, and measurement tools accessible from a browser without specialized training.
Santa Clara semiconductor equipment (NASDAQ: AMAT) ~$27.2B FY2024 revenue; world's largest semiconductor equipment company, HBM advanced packaging for AI GPUs, 50,000+ tools worldwide competing with ASML and Lam Research.
Applied Materials, Inc. is a Santa Clara, California-based semiconductor and display equipment company — publicly traded on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: AMAT) as an S&P 500 Information Technology component — providing manufacturing equipment, services, and software used to fabricate virtually every chip and advanced display in the world through approximately 35,000 employees serving foundries, integrated device manufacturers, and memory makers in 24 countries. Applied Materials is the world's largest semiconductor equipment company by revenue, supplying deposition (CVD, PVD, ALD), etch, ion implant, chemical mechanical planarization (CMP), metrology and inspection, and advanced packaging equipment to leading chipmakers including TSMC, Samsung, Intel, SK Hynix, and Micron. In fiscal year 2024 (ending October 2024), Applied Materials reported revenue of approximately $27.2 billion, with strong demand driven by leading-edge foundry investments at TSMC and Samsung for AI accelerator chips and advanced memory for HBM (high-bandwidth memory) stacks used in NVIDIA and AMD AI GPUs. The company's Semiconductor Systems segment commands the largest market share of any equipment category, while the Applied Global Services (AGS) segment generates recurring spare parts and service revenue from the installed base of 50,000+ tools operating worldwide. CEO Gary Dickerson has led Applied Materials' strategy of expanding beyond commodity deposition and etch into advanced packaging, gate-all-around transistor manufacturing, and materials engineering — where Applied's breadth of materials deposition capabilities creates competitive differentiation.
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