AheadComputing, a chip startup based in Portland, Oregon, recently secured a $30 million funding round to enhance its CPU cores designed for AI and data center workloads.
AheadComputing, a Portland, Ore.-based chip startup that designs and licenses CPU cores aimed at boosting performance for AI and data center workloads, announced a $30 million funding round.
Established in 2024 and spearheaded by former Intel engineering executives, AheadComputing asserts that its CPU cores outperform existing options for AI-intensive workloads.
The company is developing CPU cores utilizing RISC-V, an open-source instruction set enabling chip customization rather than reliance on proprietary architectures.
While GPUs receive much attention, CPU performance remains crucial for the efficient operation of AI applications on a large scale. CPUs handle data movement, execute core software, and manage tasks that are challenging to divide across multiple cores.
With nearly 120 employees, AheadComputing is led by CEO Debbie Marr, who spent over thirty years at Intel and served as the chief architect of the Advanced Architecture Development Group (AADG) at the tech giant.
“This additional funding will enable us to continue to disrupt traditional norms, maintain a rapid pace of innovation, and create the fastest high-performance, general-purpose CPU because everyone deserves superior computing power,” Marr commented in a press release.
Eclipse, Toyota Ventures, and Cambium jointly led AheadComputing’s recent funding round, with contributions from Corner, Trousdale Ventures, EPIQ, MESH, and Stata. Following a $21.5 million fundraising effort last year, the company welcomed Tenstorrent CEO Jim Keller to its board of directors.