Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Consumer humanoid robotics unicorn at $1.15B after $165M Series B; Memo household robot with Skill Capture Glove enabling 2K+ developers to build new robot skills; App Store-style platform model for household humanoid capability development and distribution.
Sunday Robotics is a consumer and household robotics company developing the Memo, a humanoid robot designed to assist with everyday tasks in the home. Founded with the vision that humanoid robots will eventually become as common as smartphones, Sunday Robotics is building both the hardware and the developer ecosystem needed to make household robots a practical reality. The company takes a developer-first approach, creating tools that allow third-party developers to build new skills and applications on top of its robot platform — analogous to the App Store model that made smartphones broadly useful.\n\nThe Memo robot is designed for domestic environments, with a form factor optimized for navigating homes, interacting with household objects, and working alongside people safely. Sunday Robotics has also developed the Skill Capture Glove, a hardware accessory that allows non-technical users to teach the robot new tasks through physical demonstration rather than programming. The glove has attracted a community of 2,000+ developers who are building and sharing new robot capabilities, creating a flywheel of expanding functionality.\n\nSunday Robotics achieved unicorn status with a $1.15B valuation after closing a $165M Series B in March 2026 — a remarkable milestone for a household robotics company still in early commercial deployment. The valuation reflects investor conviction that the household humanoid robot market will be enormous once cost and reliability barriers are crossed, and that Sunday's developer platform strategy gives it a defensible moat beyond hardware alone. With 2,000+ developers active on its platform, Sunday is building the content layer needed to make its robot genuinely useful in diverse home environments.
Boston industrial CAD/PLM software (NASDAQ: PTC); FY2025 8.5% ARR growth, Kepware/ThingWorx IoT divested to TPG (Nov 2025) under new CEO Neil Barua competing with Siemens Teamcenter for discrete manufacturer PLM.
PTC Inc. is a Boston, Massachusetts-based industrial software company — publicly traded on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: PTC) as an S&P 500 component — providing computer-aided design (CAD), product lifecycle management (PLM), application lifecycle management (ALM), service lifecycle management (SLM), and industrial IoT software to manufacturers across aerospace, defense, automotive, medical devices, and industrial machinery. In FY2025 (fiscal year ended September 30, 2025), PTC reported 8.5% ARR growth and 16% free cash flow growth, with Q4 FY2025 revenue up 39% in constant currency and 18% year-over-year. CEO Neil Barua took over from long-tenured CEO James Heppelmann in February 2024 and introduced the "Barua Blueprint" refocusing PTC on its core CAD/PLM/ALM/SLM strengths. In November 2025, PTC announced the divestiture of its industrial IoT assets — Kepware and ThingWorx — to TPG, sharpening its portfolio around design and lifecycle management software. PTC's product portfolio includes Creo (3D parametric CAD for mechanical engineers), Windchill (PLM for product data and process management), Onshape (cloud-native CAD platform), and Arena (cloud-native PLM/QMS).
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