Smart Access Secures $12 Million Series A Funding to Scale Workforce Management Platform
AI SummaryTaproot Edmonton2h agoUnited States
Image: Taproot Edmonton
β’Edmonton-born startup Smart Access raised $12 million in Series A funding from Bay Area investors Lobby Capital, Aspenwood Ventures, and Coelius Capital to expand its digital workforce management platform.
β’The company, co-founded by Tim Regnier and John White, helps large distribution operations optimize training, safety programs, and adherence to standard operating procedures across their workforce.
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Smart Access, which relocated its operating base to San Francisco while maintaining Edmonton roots since its 2015 founding, plans to scale deployments across North America using the new capital.
β’The funding round builds on earlier investment from Accelerate Fund II and prior 2022 support of $250,000 from Prairies Economic Development Canada.
β’ Baker Hughes announced a collaboration with Google Cloud on March 24, 2026, to develop AI-enabled power optimization and sustainability solutions for data centers.
β’ The Houston-based initiative targets efficiency in high-demand AI computing environments using advanced cloud technology.
β’ This partnership addresses growing energy challenges in U.S. data centers powering AI workloads.
β’ CompTIA's State of the Tech Workforce 2026 report, released March 24, predicts net U.S. tech employment growth of 1.9%, creating 185,499 new jobs to reach nearly 9.8 million workers.
β’ Texas leads with 32,238 jobs added, followed by California (16,949), Florida (14,453), and New York (13,566); all states expect gains.
β’ High-growth roles include data scientists (420% over 10 years), cybersecurity analysts (346%), and software developers (188%), driven by AI impact.
β’ Samsung began rolling out Quick Share with AirDrop interoperability on Galaxy S26 devices and additional models on March 24, 2026, enhancing cross-platform sharing for U.S. users.
β’ The update improves file transfer compatibility between Android and iOS ecosystems.
β’ This move strengthens Samsung's position in the competitive U.S. smartphone market.
β’ Lumen Technologies was named to Fast Company's 2026 list of the World's Most Innovative Companies, announced on March 24, 2026.
β’ The recognition highlights Lumen's advancements in networking and edge computing solutions amid U.S. tech infrastructure demands.
β’ This accolade underscores Lumen's role in supporting AI and cloud growth through innovative fiber and digital services.
β’ Broadcom announced supply chain bottlenecks across the tech sector, particularly at TSMC, due to skyrocketing demand for AI chips on March 24, 2026.
β’ The constraints affect networking, custom silicon, and data-center hardware critical for AI infrastructure beyond major model developers.
β’ This highlights the AI hardware race creating opportunities for startups to innovate in chip manufacturing tools amid industry-wide shortages.
β’ The National Science Foundation awarded $45 million over three years to the NSF Energy Storage Engine, led by Binghamton University, entering its second phase on March 24, 2026.
β’ The Upstate New York initiative, partnering with Cornell, RIT, Syracuse, and others, aims to make the region America's battery tech capital.
β’ Phase one funded over 15 battery startups, securing $20 million in follow-on funding and national awards like Battery Manufacturer of the Year.
β’ NASA's X-59 Quesst low-boom supersonic demonstrator had its second flight on March 20, 2026, cut short after just 9 minutes due to a cockpit warning light.
β’ The aircraft returned to base immediately, marking another delay for the already behind-schedule program.
β’ NASA plans a speedy return to flight testing to advance quiet supersonic technology over land.
β’ FANUC America announced a $90 million investment on March 24, 2026, to build production-ready capacity for robot manufacturing in Rochester Hills, Michigan.
β’ The project, targeting completion in late 2027, will create 225 new jobs and boost engineering for automation solutions including physical AI and digital twins.
β’ This brings FANUC's US investments since 2019 to nearly $300 million, expanding facilities to 3 million sq. ft. and creating over 700 jobs.
β’ The US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) updated its Covered List on March 24, 2026, to include all consumer-grade routers produced outside the US due to national security risks.
β’ China controls at least 60% of the US home router market; the ban prohibits new FCC equipment authorizations for these devices, though existing models remain unaffected.
β’ Malicious actors exploited vulnerabilities in foreign routers for cyberattacks like Volt, Flax, and Salt Typhoon targeting US infrastructure, enabling espionage and IP theft.
β’ Sony's PlayStation Network experienced a brief outage on March 23, 2026, disrupting online services for PS5 and PS4 users across the U.S.
β’ The downtime affected multiplayer gaming, account access, and store functions for several hours.
β’ Service restoration completed by evening, with Sony attributing issue to network overload.
β’ The Trump administration published a national AI policy framework on March 20, 2026, calling for unified federal principles over state-level regulations.
β’ The plan seeks to remove innovation barriers, assign oversight to existing agencies, and streamline AI infrastructure permitting.
β’ Proposal faces Democratic criticism for potentially weakening consumer protections and state oversight.