San Diego Union-Tribune

GIGAIO RAISES NEARLY $15M TO HELP COMPANIES USE AI

Company’s platform adds flexibilit­y to data intensive computing

- BY MIKE FREEMAN

Carlsbad’s GigaIO, which developed technology aimed at making high-performanc­e computing more accessible to more companies so they can tap into artificial intelligen­ce, has raised $14.7 million in a second round of venture capital funding.

Founded in 2012, GigaIO’s FabreX is a hardware and software network platform that increases flexibilit­y and efficiency for data intensive computing jobs, enabling faster results. In simple terms, it turns disparate computer servers, graphics processing units (GPUs), accelerato­rs, memory, storage and other gear into something akin to Lego bricks: The pieces snap together and work without losing performanc­e, and they can be unplugged and reconfigur­ed to fit the next job.

“We connect together all of the various equipment in the data center or out on the edge fast enough that people can arrange any one of those pieces however they want,” said Alan Benjamin, president and chief executive of GigaIO. “A number of companies have tried the concept that we are doing, and nobody has ever cracked the nut on how to do it.”

Venture capitalist­s once told Benjamin what GigaIO was trying to do “couldn’t be done,” said Mike Krenn, head of Connect/San Diego Venture Group, in a social media post. “A few years later, a $15 million Series B in the bank. Love this!”

With the venture money, GigaIO plans to accelerate sales and marketing. Those efforts were hamstrung during the pandemic because it was difficult to perform hardware testing in computing facilities.

But interest has picked up recently, particular­ly as more companies work to analyze data so they can develop artificial intelligen­ce algorithms. This summer, the San Diego Supercompu­ter Center was awarded a $5 million grant from the National Science Foundation to develop a Prototype National Research Platform for

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