Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Have money, will travel: a16z’s hunt for the next European unicorn

    February 16, 2026

    How Ricursive Intelligence raised $335M at a $4B valuation in 4 months

    February 16, 2026

    NASA’s Curiosity Rover Finds Organic Molecules on Mars That Meteorites Can’t Explain

    February 16, 2026
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • Tech
    • Gadgets
    • Spotlight
    • Gaming
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    iGadgets TechiGadgets Tech
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Gadgets
    • Insights
    • Apps

      Google Uses AI Searches To Detect If Someone Is In Crisis

      April 2, 2022

      Gboard Magic Wand Button Will Covert Your Text To Emojis

      April 2, 2022

      Android 10 & Older Devices Now Getting Automatic App Permissions Reset

      April 2, 2022

      Spotify Blend Update Increases Group Sizes, Adds Celebrity Blends

      April 2, 2022

      Samsung May Improve Battery Significantly With Galaxy Watch 5

      April 2, 2022
    • Gear
    • Mobiles
      1. Tech
      2. Gadgets
      3. Insights
      4. View All

      NASA’s Curiosity Rover Finds Organic Molecules on Mars That Meteorites Can’t Explain

      February 16, 2026

      Hubble Captures a Dying Star Cracking Open the Egg Nebula

      February 16, 2026

      This Simple Brain Exercise May Protect Against Dementia for 20 Years

      February 16, 2026

      This Unexpected Ingredient Makes Bread Much Healthier

      February 16, 2026

      March Update May Have Weakened The Haptics For Pixel 6 Users

      April 2, 2022

      Project 'Diamond' Is The Galaxy S23, Not A Rollable Smartphone

      April 2, 2022

      The At A Glance Widget Is More Useful After March Update

      April 2, 2022

      Pre-Order The OnePlus 10 Pro For Just $1 In The US

      April 2, 2022

      Sony LinkBuds Clip Review: Solid Buds, Premium Price

      February 16, 2026

      Inside the App Where Queer Gooners Run Free

      February 16, 2026

      Amazon Props Up Misleading, Junky Laptops No One Should Buy

      February 16, 2026

      Saatva Memory Foam Hybrid Mattress Review: Going for Gold and Good Sleep

      February 16, 2026

      Latest Huawei Mobiles P50 and P50 Pro Feature Kirin Chips

      January 15, 2021

      Samsung Galaxy M62 Benchmarked with Galaxy Note10’s Chipset

      January 15, 2021
      9.1

      Review: T-Mobile Winning 5G Race Around the World

      January 15, 2021
      8.9

      Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra Review: the New King of Android Phones

      January 15, 2021
    • Computing
    iGadgets TechiGadgets Tech
    Home»Spotlight»How Ricursive Intelligence raised $335M at a $4B valuation in 4 months
    Spotlight

    How Ricursive Intelligence raised $335M at a $4B valuation in 4 months

    adminBy adminFebruary 16, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Ricursive Intelligence founders
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    The co-founders of startup Ricursive Intelligence seemed destined to be co-founders.

    Anna Goldie, CEO, and Azalia Mirhoseini, CTO, are so well-known in the AI community that they were among those AI engineers who “got those weird emails from Zuckerberg making crazy offers to us,” Goldie told TechCrunch, chuckling. (They didn’t take the offers.) The pair worked at Google Brain together and were early employees at Anthropic.

    They earned acclaim at Google by creating the Alpha Chip — an AI tool that could generate solid chip layouts in hours — a process that normally takes human designers a year or more. The tool helped design three generations of Google’s Tensor Processing Units.

    That pedigree explains why, just four months after launching Ricursive, they last month announced a $300 million Series A round at a $4 billion valuation led by Lightspeed, just a couple of months after raising a $35 million seed round led by Sequoia.

    Ricursive is building AI tools that design chips, not the chips themselves. That makes them fundamentally different from nearly every other AI chip startup: they’re not a wannabe Nvidia competitor. In fact, Nvidia is an investor. The GPU giant, along with AMD, Intel, and every other chip maker, are the startup’s target customers.

    “We want to enable any chip, like a custom chip or a more traditional chip, any kind of chip, to be built in an automated and very accelerated way. We’re using AI to do that,” Mirhoseini told TechCrunch. 

    Their paths first crossed at Stanford, where Goldie earned her PhD as Mirhoseini taught computer science classes. Since then, their careers have been in lockstep. “We started at Google Brain on the same day. We left Google Brain on the same day. We joined Anthropic on the same day. We left Anthropic on the same day. We rejoined Google on the same day, and then we left Google again on the same day. Then we started this company together on the same day,” Goldie recounted.

    Techcrunch event

    Boston, MA
    |
    June 23, 2026

    During their time at Google, the colleagues were so close they even worked out together, both enjoying circuit training. The pun wasn’t lost on Jeff Dean, the famed Google engineer who was their collaborator. He nicknamed their Alpha Chip project “chip circuit training” — a play on their shared workout routine. Internally, the pair also got a nickname: A&A. 

    The Alpha Chip earned them industry notice, but it also attracted controversy. In 2022, one of their colleagues at Google was fired, Wired reported, after he spent years trying to discredit A&A and their chip work, even though that work was used to help produce some of Google’s most important, bet-the-business AI chips.

    Their Alpha Chip project at Google Brain proved the concept that would become Ricursive — using AI to dramatically accelerate chip design.

    Designing chips is hard

    The issue is, computer chips have millions to billions of logic gate components integrated on their silicon wafer. Human designers can spend a year or more placing those components on the chip to ensure performance, good power utilization and any other design needs. Digitally determining the placement of such infinitesimally small components with precision is, as you might expect, hard. 

    Alpha Chip “could generate a very high-quality layout in, like, six hours. And the cool thing about this approach was that it actually learns from experience,” Goldie said. 

    The premise of their AI chip design work is to use “a reward signal” that rates how good the design is. The agent then takes that rating to “update the parameters of its deep neural network to get better,” Goldie said. After completing thousands of designs, the agent got really good. It also got faster as it learned, the founders say.

    Ricursive’s platform will take the concept further. The AI chip designer they are building will “learn across different chips,” Goldie said. So each chip it designs should help it become a better designer for every next chip.

    Ricursive’s platform also makes use of LLMs and will handle everything from component placement through design verification. Any company that makes electronics and needs chips is their target customer.

    If their platform proves itself, as it seems likely to do, Ricursive could play a role in the moonshot goal of achieving artificial general intelligence (AGI). Indeed, their ultimate vision is designing AI chips, meaning the AI will essentially design its own computer brains. 

    “Chips are the fuel for AI,” Goldie said. “I think by building more powerful chips, that’s the best way to advance that frontier.” 

    Mirhoseini adds that the lengthy chip-design process is constraining how quickly AI can advance. “We think we can also enable this fast co-evolution of the models and the chips that basically power them,” she said. So AI can grow smarter faster. 

    If the thought of AI designing its own brains at ever increasing speeds brings visions of Skynet and the Terminator to mind, the founders point out that there’s a more positive, immediate and, they think, more likely benefit: hardware efficiency.  

    When AI Labs can design far more efficient chips (and, eventually all the underlying hardware), their growth won’t have to consume so much of the world’s resources. 

    “We could design a computer architecture that’s uniquely suited to that model, and we could achieve almost a 10x improvement in performance per total cost of ownership,” Goldie said. 

    While the young startup won’t name its early customers, the founders say that they’ve heard from every big chip making name you can imagine. Unsurprisingly, they have their pick of their first development partners, too. 

    TC,Hardware,AI,AI chips,Ricursive IntelligenceAI chips,Ricursive Intelligence#Ricursive #Intelligence #raised #335M #valuation #months1771264430

    335M AI chips Intelligence Months raised Ricursive Ricursive Intelligence valuation
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    admin
    • Website
    • Tumblr

    Related Posts

    Have money, will travel: a16z’s hunt for the next European unicorn

    February 16, 2026

    Flapping Airplanes on the future of AI: ‘We want to try really radically different things’

    February 16, 2026

    After all the hype, some AI experts don’t think OpenClaw is all that exciting

    February 16, 2026
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Editors Picks

    FedEx tests how far AI can go in tracking and returns management

    February 3, 2026

    McKinsey tests AI chatbot in early stages of graduate recruitment

    January 15, 2026

    Bosch’s €2.9 billion AI investment and shifting manufacturing priorities

    January 8, 2026
    8.5

    Apple Planning Big Mac Redesign and Half-Sized Old Mac

    January 5, 2021
    Top Reviews
    9.1

    Review: T-Mobile Winning 5G Race Around the World

    By admin
    8.9

    Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra Review: the New King of Android Phones

    By admin
    8.9

    Xiaomi Mi 10: New Variant with Snapdragon 870 Review

    By admin
    Advertisement
    Demo
    iGadgets Tech
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
    • Home
    • Tech
    • Gadgets
    • Mobiles
    • Our Authors
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by WPfastworld.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.