Tech Roundup
May 26, 2026
The door is open for artificial-intelligence investment — you just need to know the right way to walk in, experts said during Upper Bound, which filled the Edmonton Convention Centre with researchers, entrepreneurs, investors, and interested observers from May 19 to 22. "Investors love to invest in lines, not dots," said Cam Linke, CEO of the Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute, which put on the sold-out conference. "Investors want to see proof-point of momentum, and that might be momentum in an area of research that you're the best in the world at, and you're driving forward … it might be momentum with a customer whose problem you're solving."
Linke made the point shortly after a reverse-pitch by investors from Sprout Fund, Yaletown Partners, Flying Fish Ventures, SOSV HAX, Graphite Ventures, and Panache Ventures on why they need prospects as much as entrepreneurs need investment. "You want to understand the VC a little bit, but I think you also want to understand how these conversations go," Pat Lor of Panache told Taproot. "Understand that you're going to be asked about go-to-market, understand that you're going to be asked about founder-market fit and product-market fit. Understanding those terms, understanding that you're going to be thrown those questions, and understanding how to provide a quick 60-second answer to those is really important."
On the government funding side of things, announcements at Upper Bound included $6.8 million for AI innovation and commercialization, including $3 million for the University of Alberta's Canadian AI Compute Vault and support for Darkhorse Emergency, NTWIST, and Vertical City. The federal government pledged $24 million for 42 Canada CIFAR AI chairs, most of them based in Edmonton. Alberta announced a $10-million partnership with Amii to launch a Health Innovation Lab; Amii also launched AI Literacy for Everyone, a collaboration with the University of Alberta. Mayor Andrew Knack said Edmonton's AI ecosystem is helping the city build a global reputation for innovation, citing Upper Bound's 11,000 attendees and the economic boost from related events.
Headlines
- Startup TNT has narrowed down the companies pitching in the May 28 Edmonton investment summit finale to Fairly Staffing, RNARevive, hi finance, Innovative Coating Technology Systems, and T.rex AI.
- BetaKit's Most Ambitious list, which spotlights Canadian companies, researchers, and community builders strengthening the nation's autonomy, security, and prosperity, includes Wyvern, Wandering Shepherd, Matrix Gemini, and Zero Point Cryogenics, along with Gem Shoute of Zinite.
- The province has committed $21 million to the University of Alberta's DEFENDS initiative, which aims to connect researchers, businesses, and the Canadian Armed Forces on dual-use technology. The university said the investment is meant to build an Alberta-wide defence innovation network anchored in part by Edmonton's manufacturing base and Canadian Forces Base Edmonton.
- Scott Lilwall, science communicator at the Alberta Machine Intelligence Institute, said Upper Bound showed him that reinforcement learning is moving into real-world use through work on water treatment, satellite data, plant growth, and manufacturing scheduling. He also noted that creators are asking for AI that offers trust, transparency, and fair credit for training data.
- A panel at Upper Bound explored how to responsibly use AI with prostheses. Bailey Kacsmar and Afari Darfoor of the University of Alberta's PUPS Lab and Patrick Pilarski of the BLINC Lab discussed how technological advancements have changed prosthetic devices such as cochlear implants and bionic limbs.
- Alberta is anticipating significant developments in AI data centres by 2026, with plans for major infrastructure expansion expected in the coming months. At Upper Bound, Technology and Innovation Minister Nate Glubish and Beacon Data Centers CEO David Lane highlighted potential investments and projects that could elevate Alberta to Canada's "compute capital." Two European companies aim to invest over $1.2 billion in four data centres, while Alberta aims to attract $100 billion in five years. Concerns include jobs, water usage, and power, with requirements for self-sufficient energy generation.
- Edmonton Tech Thursdays posted takeaways from a panel on chatbots, consent, and authenticity in AI marketing. The discussion argued that companies stay responsible for what their bots promise and that disclosure matters most when an AI interaction affects a person's rights or money.
- When it comes to AI adoption, Punchcard Systems aims to create a "psychologically safe environment" where employees can take risks and try new tools, co-founder Sam Jenkins told The Globe and Mail. The company has built an internal chat interface so employees can experiment without risking client work. "The real skill today is not prompting ChatGPT," he said. "It's knowing when not to trust the output. Without that, we get AI slop at scale."
- Innovation strategist Shawn Kanungo talked about disruption, high agency, and why the gap is widening between leaders who are all in on AI and those who are still dabbling on the Barney's Tavern podcast hosted by Chris LaBossiere. Kanungo will host a Perplexity meetup in Edmonton on June 4, offering a $500 prize for the best use case.
- Cole Christianson of Pulmvita, Tanay Kumar of Aqtiva, Anthony Ness of AIR BioSolutions, and Soroush Mirkiani of RISE NeuroProsthetics are the latest recipients of the Innovation Catalyst Grant at the University of Alberta. They will each receive up to $250,000 over two years to commercialize science-based products or services.
- RUNWITHIT Synthetics has been accepted into the inaugural MaRS Adaptech Accelerator to further its work on climate change adaptation.
- Justin Riemer from Emissions Reduction Alberta and Nir Katchinskiy of PulseMedica have joined the board of Edmonton Unlimited.
- Alberta Innovates said it will pause new applications for some startup and SME programs on May 29 while it redesigns them around a more connected, user-friendly system, following a broader strategic review.
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Jobs and opportunities
- Future Fields is hiring a protein scientist.
- Motiversity is hiring a director of media operations.
Happenings
Here are some events coming up over the next seven days:
- May 26: ERIN Community Initiatives Session #3 starting at 12pm online
- May 27: In The Loop: A Social Innovation Mixer for Edmonton's Circular Economy starting at 4:30pm at Brighton Block
- May 27: Alberta Women Entrepreneurs Connect Event starting at 7pm at Heavy Metal Place
- May 27-28: CIC Forum: Built by People, Powered by Technology at University of Alberta
- May 27-28: Nisku Energy Show at Silent Ice Centre
- May 28: Coffee with the Chamber starting at 8:30am in St. Albert
- May 28: The Future of Cybersecurity: Securing trust in the age of LLMs starting at 5pm at Edmonton Unlimited
- May 28: Startup TNT Edmonton Summit Finale starting at 5pm at Edmonton Unlimited
- May 28-29: Power Up Leadership Summit at Edmonton Chamber of Commerce
And here are some upcoming events to keep in mind:
- June 4: Voices of Alberta Entrepreneurs with Aaron Tong online
- June 8: Health Innovators Breakfast: Innovating for Diabetes at Matrix Hotel
- June 12: ScaleUP Breakfast Social at Edmonton Unlimited
Visit the Taproot Edmonton Calendar for many more events in the Edmonton region.
This roundup was sponsored by Edmonton Unlimited.
Now is the time for us, Edmonton's innovators, and our city. Headquartered in Alberta's capital city, Edmonton Unlimited harnesses the power of possibility and brings the very best of Edmonton to the world.