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Groq, A Stealthy Startup Founded By Google’s TPU Team, Is Raising $60M

An posted late Wednesday shows that a stealthy Silicon Valley AI chip company is most of the way through raising a big round of outside funding.

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, a company with and some intellectual heft behind it, is at least $52.27 million into a targeted $60 million fundraise, according to the filing. At least 16 investors have contributed to the round so far.

In this initial filing, there’s no change in the listed board members from , dated December 2017. Groq’s board members include:

  • , avid amateur poker player and current CEO of
  • , a former Google hardware engineer.
  • Douglas Wightman, a former Google software engineer.

Ross and Wightman were foundational members of Google’s TPU team. The is a custom application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) chip designed to run the TensorFlow algorithm. Google uses the TPU to accelerate machine learning in products including translation, photo management, and search.

ASIC chips are optimized for efficiency over flexibility. They’re designed to do one set of computations very quickly and efficiently. In the TPU’s case, it’s crunching the multivariate math of machine learning.

Back in March 2017, Social Capital’s Chamath Palihapitiya appeared on Squawk Box and that he’d spent 1.5 years recruiting the engineers behind the TPU at Google. “But,” he said, “we were able to take them out. And we have eight of the 10 original people that built that chip building the next generation chip now [at Groq].”

About a month after the cable news appearance, news broke that Palihapitiya led in Groq.

[irp posts=”15097″ name=”Artificial Intelligence Continues Its Fundraising Tear In 2018″]

And apart from a of stories about the company hiring a former Xilinix executive as its chief operating officer, there hasn’t been much press coverage about the company.

The only publicly-facing announcements from the company are in the form of simple, numbers-driven graphs posted to (which, for now, is also its homepage).

A posted in November 2017 says the company plans to ship its first machine learning product, a “single chip,” in 2018. The graphic says Groq’s first chip can perform 400 trillion operations (tera-operations) per second. As far as efficiency goes, Groq’s silicon performs 8 trillion operations per watt of electricity used.

The most recent update to the company’s blog, , promises an “open platform” and “performance without lock-in.”

There are stealthy startups, and then there are stealthy startups. Although the silicon business isn’t exactly an open book, other AI chip companies have been slightly more forthcoming. With tens of millions in fresh capital and plans to debut its tech sometime in the next four months, Groq should start making some noise. After all, that same graphic promises that its first product is coming this year.

There are only so many months left.

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