
At Osmo, we envision a future where the sense of smell is fully digitized, seamlessly integrated into the digital landscape like vision and sound. We are dedicated to transforming olfaction into an accessible and programmable medium, enabling revolutionary advancements across health, consumer experience, and industry.
Our mission is to unlock the hidden language of scent through groundbreaking AI and olfactory science. By developing technologies that decode and reproduce smells with superhuman precision, we aim to empower innovation in fragrance creation, product authentication, and public health solutions that improve lives globally.
Fueled by a fusion of advanced machine learning, chemistry, and neuroscience, we are building the foundational tools and infrastructure necessary to democratize digital smell, opening new frontiers for how humans and machines perceive and interact with the world.
Our Review
We'll be honest — when we first heard about a company trying to "digitize smell," we were skeptical. After all, plenty of startups promise to revolutionize entire industries with flashy AI claims. But Osmo isn't your typical overhyped tech venture, and their approach to olfactory intelligence genuinely caught our attention.
Founded by Alex Wiltschko, a Harvard-trained neuroscientist who spent years leading Google's digital olfaction team, Osmo emerged from serious research pedigree. That $60 million Series A from heavy hitters like Lux Capital and Google Ventures doesn't hurt their credibility either.
What Actually Makes Sense
Here's where Osmo gets interesting: they're not trying to build consumer smell-o-vision gadgets right out of the gate. Instead, they're focusing on B2B applications where the technology can actually deliver value today — fragrance and flavor companies that desperately need better ingredient discovery tools.
Their AI platform, called Olfactory Intelligence, can predict how molecules will smell with what they claim is "superhuman accuracy." We've seen the research backing this up, including their Primary Odor Map — essentially the world's first comprehensive scent map. It's the kind of foundational work that makes us think they're onto something real.
The Bill Gates Factor
What really sold us on Osmo's potential was learning about their work developing safer alternatives to DEET, backed by a Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation grant. They've reportedly created insect repellents that are more effective than DEET but safer for humans — exactly the kind of practical application that shows this isn't just academic research.
The fact that they can design new molecules from scratch, predict their scent properties, and then synthesize compounds that outperform existing solutions? That's genuinely impressive technology with clear commercial value.
Reality Check
Of course, we're not completely sold on everything. Osmo talks about "scent teleportation" and eventually enabling computers to smell like they see or hear. While they've demonstrated some proof-of-concept work, the hardware challenges for miniaturizing scent reading and writing technology are massive.
The fragrance industry is also notoriously traditional and relationship-driven. Breaking into that world with AI-generated formulations won't be easy, even with superior technology. But with partnerships already forming and a team of 70 experts spanning machine learning, chemistry, and actual perfumery, they seem to understand the challenges ahead.
Feature
AI-driven molecular discovery for scent prediction and design
Formulation automation platform
Primary Odor Map (POM) for digital scent mapping
Ability to digitally capture and reproduce odors
Applications in fragrance, flavor, public health, and product authentication






