Founded in 2019 by Pratap Ranade and Engin Ural, Arena builds AI to accelerate hardware innovation. Arena publicly launched Atlas, an AI hardware engineer that accelerates testing, debugging, and optimization for the world’s most advanced hardware. Grounded in applied physics, and equipped to learn from the real-world environment, Atlas operates at every layer of the hardware stack, starting with electrical engineering.
“While software has defined the last fifty years, the next big breakthroughs – from nuclear fusion to space colonization – require us to reimagine how we approach hardware development. Today, hardware innovation is slow, difficult, and expensive. Each build, test, and iterate loop takes orders of magnitude longer than it does for software. These are the same challenges I faced a decade ago as an experimental physicist – the rate limiter wasn’t the physics, it was building the hardware for the experiment and making it work properly. Today, with LLMs, and tremendous advances in deep learning, we can reimagine the hardware development workflow — making it faster and easier than ever before,” said Pratap Ranade, CEO of Arena.
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In the last 12 months, Atlas has been deployed in production and at scale with Fortune 500 companies like AMD, Bausch & Lomb, and other leading hardware engineering teams. Arena’s customer base includes major aerospace, automotive, and defense companies. Users are seeing a 35% reduction in engineering man-hours, multi-month acceleration in time to market, and >3% improvement in product quality.
Arena has raised $62M in funding from investors, most recently a $30M Series B. Arena’s investors include Fifth Down Capital, Initialized, Goldcrest Capital, Founders Fund, Shield Capital, Garuda Ventures, Peter Thiel, General David Petraeus, Qasar Younis, Michael Seibel, and Flexport.
Source: PRNewswire