From Apple to AI Soccer Cameras: Alex Krause from Trace

Consumer

40 min.

In this episode, hosts DeAndre Harakas and Grant Chapman talk with Alex Krause, Director of Hardware at Trace, about the art and complexity of building hardware that learns, adapts, and performs in real-world conditions.

Alex walks through his transition from Apple and The Boring Company to leading a small, scrappy team at Trace where he’s helping reinvent how soccer is filmed and analyzed using AI and computer vision. Together, they unpack the company’s hardware-as-a-service model, the choice between edge and cloud computing, and how user experience guides every design decision.

They also discuss the ripple effect of sports technology, from AI-powered analytics to applications in retail and beyond and the very real operational hurdles hardware founders face, from tariffs to supply chain chaos.

In this episode, hosts DeAndre Harakas and Grant Chapman talk with Alex Krause, Director of Hardware at Trace, about the art and complexity of building hardware that learns, adapts, and performs in real-world conditions.

Alex walks through his transition from Apple and The Boring Company to leading a small, scrappy team at Trace where he’s helping reinvent how soccer is filmed and analyzed using AI and computer vision. Together, they unpack the company’s hardware-as-a-service model, the choice between edge and cloud computing, and how user experience guides every design decision.

They also discuss the ripple effect of sports technology, from AI-powered analytics to applications in retail and beyond and the very real operational hurdles hardware founders face, from tariffs to supply chain chaos.

In this episode, hosts DeAndre Harakas and Grant Chapman talk with Alex Krause, Director of Hardware at Trace, about the art and complexity of building hardware that learns, adapts, and performs in real-world conditions.

Alex walks through his transition from Apple and The Boring Company to leading a small, scrappy team at Trace where he’s helping reinvent how soccer is filmed and analyzed using AI and computer vision. Together, they unpack the company’s hardware-as-a-service model, the choice between edge and cloud computing, and how user experience guides every design decision.

They also discuss the ripple effect of sports technology, from AI-powered analytics to applications in retail and beyond and the very real operational hurdles hardware founders face, from tariffs to supply chain chaos.

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Last updated on

Oct 14, 2025