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Company type | Private |
---|---|
Founded | 1999 |
Founder | Raymond C. Kurzweil |
Headquarters | , |
Website | fatkat |
FatKat, Inc. is a privately held company founded in 1999 by Raymond C. Kurzweil, an author, inventor, and futurist. He's perhaps best known for creating an optical character recognition system that – in conjunction with a flatbed scanner and text-to-speech synthesizer – reads text aloud to the sight-impaired. FatKat is an acronym derived from "financial accelerating transactions from Kurzweil Adaptive Technologies". The aforesaid company is one of a total of nine Kurzweil companies.[1]
The purpose of FatKat as listed with the Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth Corporations Division is "investment software".[2] Kurzweil, who specializes in artificial intelligence coupled with pattern recognition, has created software that uses quantitative methods to pick stocks for investment purposes.[3]
Although selecting stocks based on software-generated recommendations is not new, FatKat's approach was unique at the time because of its "nonlinear decision making processes more akin to how a brain operates". The software can evolve by creating different rules, letting them compete, and using (or combining) the best outcomes. After FatKat's inception, other investment and/or software companies rushed to develop software based on this and similar Darwinist evolutionary principles, using genetic algorithms.[3]
In 2005, Kurzweil reported that the FatKat software was "doing very well – 50% to 100% returns for the last two years".[1] But as of December 2008, FatKat does not offer its software for sale.