Enterprise

EnCharge AI emerges from stealth with $21.7M to develop AI accelerator hardware

Comment

Computer chip in circuit board
Image Credits: Science Photo Library – PASIEKA. / Getty Images

EnCharge AI, a company building hardware to accelerate AI processing at the edge, today emerged from stealth with $21.7 million in Series A funding led by Anzu Partners, with participation from AlleyCorp, Scout Ventures, Silicon Catalyst Angels, Schams Ventures, E14 Fund and Alumni Ventures. Speaking to TechCrunch via email, co-founder and CEO Naveen Verma said that the proceeds will be put toward hardware and software development as well as supporting new customer engagements.

“Now was the right time to raise because the technology has been extensively validated through previous R&D all the way up the compute stack,” Verma said. “[It] provides both a clear path to productization (with no new technology development) and basis for value proposition in customer applications at the forefront of AI, positioning EnCharge for market impact … Many edge applications are in an emerging phase, with the greatest opportunities for value from AI still being defined.”

Encharge AI was ideated by Verma, Echere Iroaga and Kailash Gopalakrishnan. Verma is the director of Princeton’s Keller Center for Innovation in Engineering Education while Gopalakrishnan was (until recently) an IBM fellow, having worked at the tech giant for nearly 18 years. Iroaga, for his part, previously led semiconductor company Macom’s connectivity business unit as both VP and GM.

EnCharge has its roots in federal grants that Verma received in 2017 alongside collaborators at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. An outgrowth of DARPA’s ongoing Electronics Resurgence Initiative, which aims to broadly advance computer chip tech, Verma led an $8.3-million effort to investigate new types of non-volatile memory devices.

In contrast to the “volatile” memory prevalent in today’s computers, non-volatile memory can retain data without a continuous power supply, making it theoretically more energy efficient. Flash memory and most magnetic storage devices, including hard disks and floppy disks, are examples of non-volatile memory.

DARPA also funded Verma’s research into in-memory computing for machine learning computations — “in-memory,” here, referring to running calculations in RAM to reduce the latency introduced by storage devices.

EnCharge was launched to commercialize Verma’s research with hardware built on a standard PCIe form factor. Using in-memory computing, EnCharge’s custom plug-in hardware can accelerate AI applications in servers and “network edge” machines, Verma claims, while reducing power consumption relative to standard computer processors.

In iterating the hardware, EnCharge’s team had to overcome several engineering challenges. In-memory computing tends to be sensitive to voltage fluctuations and temperature spikes. So EnCharge designed its chips using capacitors rather than transistors; capacitors, which store an electrical charge, can be manufactured with greater precision and aren’t as affected by shifts in voltage. 

EnCharge also had to create software that let customers adapt their AI systems to the custom hardware. Verma says that the software, once finished, will allow EnCharge’s hardware to work with different types of neural networks (i.e. sets of AI algorithms) while remaining scalable.

“EnCharge products provide orders-of-magnitude gains in energy efficiency and performance,” Verma said. “This is enabled by a highly robust and scalable next-generation technology, which has been demonstrated in generations of test chips, scaled to advanced nodes and scaled-up in architectures. EnCharge is differentiated from both digital technologies that suffer from existing memory- and compute-efficiency bottlenecks and beyond-digital technologies that face fundamental technological barriers and limited validation across the compute stack.”

Those are lofty claims, and it’s worth noting that EnCharge hasn’t begun to mass produce its hardware yet — and doesn’t have customers lined up. (Verma says that the company is pre-revenue.) In another challenge, EnCharge is going up against well-financed competition in the already saturated AI accelerator hardware market. Axelera and GigaSpaces are both developing in-memory hardware to accelerate AI workloads. NeuroBlade last October raised $83 million for its in-memory inference chip for data centers and edge devices. Syntiant, not to be outdone, is supplying in-memory, speech-processing AI edge chips.

But the funding it has managed to secure so far suggests that investors, at least, have faith in EnCharge’s roadmap.

“As Edge AI continues to drive business automation, there is huge demand for sustainable technologies that can provide dramatic improvements in end-to-end AI inference capability along with cost and power efficiency,” Anzu Partners’ Jimmy Kan said in a press release. “EnCharge’s technology addresses these challenges and has been validated successfully in silicon, fully compatible with volume production.”

EnCharge has roughly 25 employees and is based in Santa Clara.

More TechCrunch

Featured Article

Spyware found on US hotel check-in computers

Several hotel check-in computers are running a remote access app, which is leaking screenshots of guest information to the interne

1 hour ago
Spyware found on US hotel check-in computers

Gavet has had a rocky tenure at Techstars and her leadership was the subject of much controversy.

Techstars CEO Maëlle Gavet is out

The struggle isn’t universal, however.

Connected fitness is adrift post-pandemic

Featured Article

A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

The tech layoff wave is still going strong in 2024. Following significant workforce reductions in 2022 and 2023, this year has already seen 60,000 job cuts across 254 companies, according to independent layoffs tracker Layoffs.fyi. Companies like Tesla, Amazon, Google, TikTok, Snap and Microsoft have conducted sizable layoffs in the first months of 2024. Smaller-sized…

3 hours ago
A comprehensive list of 2024 tech layoffs

HoundDog actually looks at the code a developer is writing, using both traditional pattern matching and large language models to find potential issues.

HoundDog.ai helps developers prevent personal information from leaking

The changes are designed to enhance the consumer experience of using Google Pay and make it a more competitive option against other payment methods.

Google Pay will now display card perks, BNPL options and more

Few figures in the tech industry have earned the storied reputation of Vinod Khosla, founder and partner at Khosla Ventures. For over 40 years, he has been at the center…

Vinod Khosla is coming to Disrupt to discuss how AI might change the future

AI has already started replacing voice agents’ jobs. Now, companies are exploring ways to replace the existing computer-generated voice models with synthetic versions of human voices. Truecaller, the widely known…

Truecaller partners with Microsoft to let its AI respond to calls in your own voice

Meta is updating its Ray-Ban smart glasses with new hands-free functionality, the company announced on Wednesday. Most notably, users can now share an image from their smart glasses directly to…

Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses now let you share images directly to your Instagram Story

Spotify launched its own font, the company announced on Wednesday. The music streaming service hopes that its new typeface, “Spotify Mix,” will help Spotify distinguish its own unique visual identity. …

Why Spotify is launching its own font, Spotify Mix

In 2008, Marty Kagan, who’d previously worked at Cisco and Akamai, co-founded Cedexis, a (now-Cisco-owned) firm developing observability tech for content delivery networks. Fellow Cisco veteran Hasan Alayli joined Kagan…

Hydrolix seeks to make storing log data faster and cheaper

A dodgy email containing a link that looks “legit” but is actually malicious remains one of the most dangerous, yet successful, tricks in a cybercriminal’s handbook. Now, an AI startup…

Bolster, creator of the CheckPhish phishing tracker, raises $14M led by Microsoft’s M12

If you’ve been looking forward to seeing Boeing’s Starliner capsule carry two astronauts to the International Space Station for the first time, you’ll have to wait a bit longer. The…

Boeing, NASA indefinitely delay crewed Starliner launch

TikTok is the latest tech company to incorporate generative AI into its ads business, as the company announced on Tuesday that it’s launching a new “TikTok Symphony” AI suite for…

TikTok turns to generative AI to boost its ads business

Gone are the days when space and defense were considered fundamentally antithetical to venture investment. Now, the country’s largest venture capital firms are throwing larger portions of their money behind…

Space VC closes $20M Fund II to back frontier tech founders from day zero

These days every company is trying to figure out if their large language models are compliant with whichever rules they deem important, and with legal or regulatory requirements. If you’re…

Patronus AI is off to a magical start as LLM governance tool gains traction

Link-in-bio startup Linktree has crossed 50 million users and is rolling out the beta of its social commerce program.

Linktree surpasses 50M users, rolls out its social commerce program to more creators

For a $5.99 per month, immigrants have a bank account and debit card with fee-free international money transfers and discounted international calling.

Immigrant banking platform Majority secures $20M following 3x revenue growth

When developers have a particular job that AI can solve, it’s not typically as simple as just pointing an LLM at the data. There are other considerations such as cost,…

Unify helps developers find the best LLM for the job

Response time is Aerodome’s immediate value prop for potential clients.

Aerodome is sending drones to the scene of the crime

Granola takes a more collaborative approach to working with AI.

Granola debuts an AI notepad for meetings

DeepL, which builds automated text translation and writing tools, has raised a $300 million round led by Index Ventures.

AI language translation startup DeepL nabs $300M on a $2B valuation to focus on B2B growth

Praktika has secured a $35.5M Series A round to apply AI-powered avatars to language-learning apps.

Praktika raises $35.5M to use AI avatars to make learning languages feel more natural

Humane, the company behind the hyped Ai Pin that launched to less-than-glowing reviews last month, is reportedly on the hunt for a buyer.

Humane, the creator of the $700 Ai Pin, is reportedly seeking a buyer

India’s Oyo, once valued at $10 billion, has withdrawn its IPO application from the market regulator for the second time.

Oyo, once valued at $10 billion, shelves IPO plans for second time

Ore Energy emerged from stealth today with €10 million in seed funding. The company hopes to make grid-scale batteries that are cheaper and longer lasting.

Ore Energy emerges from stealth to build utility-scale batteries that last days, not hours

Paytm, a leading financial services firm in India, said its net loss widened in the fourth quarter as it grappled with a regulatory clampdown.

Paytm warns of job cuts as losses swell after RBI clampdown

Government officials and AI industry executives agreed on Tuesday to apply elementary safety measures in the fast-moving field and establish an international safety research network. Nearly six months after the…

In Seoul summit, heads of states and companies commit to AI safety

Copilot, Microsoft’s brand of generative AI, will soon be far more deeply integrated into the Windows 11 experience.

Microsoft wants to make Windows an AI operating system, launches Copilot+ PCs

Some startups choose to bootstrap from the beginning while others find themselves forced into self funding by a lack of investor interest or a business model that doesn’t fit traditional…

VCs wanted FarmboxRx to become a meal kit, the company bootstrapped instead