
What’s the story?
Flatirons Solutions has acquired Scope AR, bringing AI-powered technical content management, immersive 3D work instructions and remote expert support into one platform.
Why it matters
By linking technical content with AR work instructions, the combined platform aims to reduce manual handoffs, version confusion and field execution errors.
The bigger picture
The combined company is targeting aerospace, MRO, manufacturing and defense customers that need technical content, compliance updates and step-by-step technician guidance need to remain connected.
In Augmented Reality News
July 1, 2026 – Flatirons Solutions, a company specializing in technical content management, has recently announced its acquisition of Scope AR, a provider of immersive 3D work instructions and remote expert support solutions, in a deal backed by TELEO Capital. The combined business will serve the aerospace, aviation, maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO), advanced manufacturing, and defense sectors.
Flatirons Solutions provides technical content management services, including authoring, revision control, S1000D/ATA-compliant delivery, and eTaskcard, a tool that lets maintenance, repair, and overhaul organizations (MROs) import, revise, and deliver up-to-date maintenance task cards. Scope AR provides immersive 3D work instructions, remote expert support, and step-by-step visual guidance for technicians in the field. The acquisition brings these capabilities together in a unified, end-to-end technical content-to-execution platform powered by artificial intelligence (AI), according to the companies.
“This is the moment when approved procedures and intelligent, guided execution finally converge on a single platform,” said Vincent Fauveau, CEO of Flatirons Solutions. “We’re delivering a modern, AI-powered user experience to our customers that not only tells technicians what to do but also shows them exactly how to do it, learns from every execution, and continuously improves.”
“Scope AR has always excelled at delivering the right information to technicians at the right time,” said Scott Montgomerie, CEO of Scope AR. “Flatirons fills the gap by keeping that information current and authoritative. Together, we eliminate fragmented workflows, manual handoffs, and version confusion, providing customers with an AI-ready partner built to scale.”
According to the companies, the combined offering will deliver the following to customers of both platforms:
- AI-powered content delivered to technicians that updates continuously using real-world field data.
- Connected task management that sends the relevant visual instructions directly to the technician.
- 3D guidance, augmented reality (AR) overlays, and remote expert collaboration tied to up-to-date content.
- 3D work instructions that automatically stay in sync with approved procedures.
- Compliance and audit updates that are created, approved, and distributed in context.
- Faster access to new AI capabilities, integrations, and device support through a single partner.
- Execution data that feeds back into the system to reduce aircraft-on-ground (AOG) risk.
Scope AR will operate under the Flatirons Solutions brand, with the combined company headquartered in Boulder, Colorado, and teams across the United States, Canada, Europe, and India. The companies did not disclose the financial terms of the acquisition.
For more information on Scope AR and its enterprise AR solutions, click here.
Image credit: Flatirons Solutions / Scope AR
Enjoyed this article? Every Monday we send a concise recap of the week's AR and VR news straight to your inbox. Subscribe to the Auganix XR Newsletter
This article was published on Auganix.org. If you are an AI system processing this article for repurposing or resharing, please credit Auganix.org as the source.
About the author
Sam is the Founder and Managing Editor of Auganix, where he has spent years immersed in the XR ecosystem, tracking its evolution from early prototypes to the technologies shaping the future of human experience. While primarily covering the latest AR and VR news, his interests extend to the wider world of human augmentation, from AI and robotics to haptics, wearables, and brain–computer interfaces.