In an interview with The Huffington Post, Chowdhary stated that he believed "Oswald (Labs) can enable a Web 4.0, a web centered around accessibility and equality".[7][8] Oswald Labs is named in honor of Oswald Berkhan, the German physician who first identified dyslexia in 1881.[9]
History
Chowdhary and Gadihoke started working together as students at The Mother's International School, as part of their computer club, MINET, which Chowdhary presided over.[10] Chowdhary shared his idea of developing an accessibility tool with Gadihoke, and they decided to develop the extension during the AngelHackHackathon Delhi in 2016.
After the development of the tool, Chowdhary and Gadihoke purchased the domain oswald.foundation on 14 August 2016 and founded Oswald Labs as Oswald Foundation on 15 August 2016 along with Mahendra Singh Raghuwanshi, Chowdhary's partner in previous ventures.[11] Oswald Labs won an award at Startup India Rocks in Bengaluru and is a part of IBM's Global Entrepreneur Program.[12][13] They are also incubated in the London- and Berlin-based EyeFocus Accelerator, a startup accelerator program for companies developing for living with visual impairment.[14]
On 8 April 2017, the organization qualified to the finals of The Economic Times's Catapoolt Changemakers Challenge after winning the first round in Delhi.[15] On 17 and 18 June 2017, they organized BharatHacks, a hackathon to solve India-specific problems, in collaboration with DigitalOcean, IBM, the Delhi-NCR chapter of Facebook Developer Circles, HackerEarth, and other technology companies.[16][17] In June 2017, they raised ₹100,000 in a crowdfunding campaign.[18][19]
In September 2017, the firm moved parts of their operation to Enschede, Netherlands[20] and in December 2017, Oswald Foundation was renamed to Oswald Labs to focus on research and development.[21][22] In December 2017, they launched a startup accelerator for early-stage startups.[23]
In October 2018, Oswald Labs exhibited smartphone apps for people with disabilities at the Dutch Design Week, in collaboration with 4TU, the consortium of Dutch technical universities.[24][25]
In 2020, Chowdhary stepped down as CEO to start a new Swiss company Koj that offers a furniture subscription service with Carlo Badini, former CEO of Cleverclip.[26]
The word Augmenta11y is a portmanteau of Augmented Reality and a11y, the numeronym for accessibility. In a research study, it was found that using Augmenta11y reduces reading times for school students with dyslexia by 21%.[49][50]
Valmiki
Valmiki, formerly known as Oswald, is a browser extension based on independent research by the British Dyslexia Association and the World Wide Web Consortium to allow people with dyslexia or visual impairment access the web.[51][52] Users with dyslexia can change the typeface to Open Dyslexic and colors to dyslexia-friendly colors, and visually impaired users can listen to the content available on a webpage.[53] It also allows users to customize a webpage's typography and design based on their reading preferences.[54][55] It is a free and open-source software available in the Chrome Web Store.[56]
Accelerator
In early 2018, the organization announced Oswald Labs Accelerator, a startup accelerator for early-stage startups.[57][58] The program is equity-free and offers coworking spaces, legal support, business development and technology consultancy, and partnerships with universities and companies. Oswald Labs has partnered with Amazon Web Services to offer cloud credits.[59]