Close Menu
    What's Hot

    How Fonseca upset Djokovic — and what it means for the French Open

    China’s Rise in Drug Development Looms Over U.S.

    ICE agent arrested over shooting of Venezuelan man in US immigration raid | Civil Rights News

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • How Fonseca upset Djokovic — and what it means for the French Open
    • China’s Rise in Drug Development Looms Over U.S.
    • ICE agent arrested over shooting of Venezuelan man in US immigration raid | Civil Rights News
    • AI agents are entering their rebuild era as enterprises confront the reliability problem
    • Four Income ETFs For Rising Rates
    • Brendon McCullum exclusive: England coach on Ben Stokes, how side will evolve after Ashes and new opener Emilio Gay | Cricket News
    • Vaibhav Sooryavanshi: Teenage wonderkid becomes second fastest player to reach 1,000 IPL runs but falls short of century | Cricket News
    • At $549, Lenovo’s Legion Go S gaming handheld is suddenly a good deal
    interluknewsinterluknews
    • Home
    • Business
      • Corporate News
      • Industry Insights
      • Startups & Entrepreneurship
      • Technology & Innovation
    • Economy
      • Economic Policy
      • Financial Analysis
      • Inflation & Interest Rates
      • Trade & Markets
    • Global
      • Conflicts & Security
      • Diplomacy
      • Global Trends
      • International Affairs
    • Lifestyle
      • Fashion
      • Food & Dining
      • Personal Development
      • Travel
    • Opinion
      • Columns
      • Editorials
      • Expert Opinions
      • Reader Voices
    • More
      • Politics
        • Elections
        • Government & Policy
        • International Relations
        • Political Analysis
      • Sports
        • Cricket
        • Football / Soccer
        • International Sports
        • Local Sports
      • Technology
        • Artificial Intelligence
        • Cybersecurity
        • Gadgets & Reviews
        • Tech News
      • South Africa News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    interluknewsinterluknews
    Tech News

    This chip startup just raised $135M on a bet that AI’s biggest bottleneck isn’t compute — it’s memory

    adminBy adminMay 29, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    This chip startup just raised 5M on a bet that AI’s biggest bottleneck isn’t compute — it’s memory
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Every time you ask ChatGPT a question, your request triggers a data relay race. Information leaves memory, passes through a CPU for preprocessing, travels to a GPU for heavy computation, and then makes its way back — and that entire journey repeats for every single word the AI generates.

    The bottleneck is structural — it means routing through some of the most expensive and power-intensive chips in the industry on every single request. That inefficiency is exactly what XCENA, a startup with offices in South Korea and the U.S., is trying to solve. The four-year-old startup has designed a chip that places compute capabilities much closer to DRAM — the fast, short-term memory chips that store data a processor is actively using — allowing routine data operations to be handled near memory, without the costly round trips between CPUs, GPUs, and memory.

    If it works at scale, the implications for AI infrastructure costs could be significant, which largely explains investor enthusiasm around the country. Indeed, XCENA just raised $135 million in a Series B at a valuation of $570 million, bringing its total raised to $185 million.

    XCENA CEO Jin Kim co-founded the startup in 2022 alongside CTO Dohun Kim and CPO Harry Juhyun Kim, all veterans of Samsung and SK Hynix, the memory giants that supply chips powering Nvidia’s GPUs. “CPUs and GPUs have both gotten smarter over the decades. Memory never did. XCENA wants to change that,” Kim said in an interview with TechCrunch. “The recent rise in memory prices and related stocks points to a broader shift in AI infrastructure toward memory-centric architectures,” he added. (This month, the three companies that dominate the global memory chip market — Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron — each crossed a trillion-dollar valuation for the first time.)

    XCENA is betting its business on the thesis that “inference isn’t just a compute problem; it’s increasingly a memory scaling problem,” said Kim.

    XCENA’s chip, the MX1, connects to the CPU through CXL (Compute Express Link) — essentially a dedicated express lane between the processor and memory — processing data before it ever needs to leave the memory module. It brings compute to the data, not the other way around. The company claims that what used to require 10 servers could potentially run on just one.

    “While GPUs excel at matrix multiplication — the heavy math behind AI model training — much of the surrounding data orchestration, including preprocessing, KV cache management [the system that stores prior conversation context so a model doesn’t have to reprocess it], and data caching, still runs on CPUs. Our chip handles those tasks directly within the memory module itself,” Kim said.

    Demand for memory solutions has surged since the second half of last year, and the company believes the timing is working in its favor.

    Conversations with several global memory vendors are in early stages, though Kim declined to name them. The company’s ideal customers are hyperscalers spending tens of billions a year on AI infrastructure, where even a small gain in memory efficiency can mean hundreds of millions in savings.

    The MX1 is still a prototype. Mass production chips are scheduled to roll off Samsung’s foundry lines by the end of 2026, with the company expecting to generate revenue starting in 2027.

    While neural processing unit (NPU) makers are competing to challenge Nvidia for training workloads, XCENA is targeting the memory-intensive layer that sits underneath all of it.

    XCENA’s closest rivals include Astera Labs and Marvell, both Nasdaq-listed companies working on next-generation memory connectivity. Marvell is a large, established player already working in the same space, Kim said, adding that the differentiator comes down to intellectual property. “We have thousands of cores,” Kim said. Based on public specs, Marvell’s approach relies on a handful of general-purpose cores by comparison.

    Those cores are built on RISC-V — an open-source chip design blueprint — and optimized specifically for data processing, with each core deliberately kept small and efficient. Beyond the cores themselves, XCENA designs its own internal memory hierarchy, interconnect bus, and DRAM controller — a level of vertical integration that most chip companies, including larger rivals, typically outsource.

    Seoul-based VC firms Altinum and IMM Investment co-led the Series B round, along with Corstone Asia and existing investors SBI Investment and Mirae Asset Capital. The company, which has more than 90 staff across offices in Pangyo, a tech hub outside Seoul, and in Sunnyvale, is also in conversations with international investors about additional funding.

    When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.

    135M AIs bet biggest bottleneck chip Compute isnt Memory raised Startup
    Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
    Previous ArticleAdobe’s conversational AI agent is a mediocre design intern
    Next Article Prix Du Jockey Club: Montreal fancied to land French Derby for Aidan O’Brien | Racing News
    admin
    • Website

    Related Posts

    At $549, Lenovo’s Legion Go S gaming handheld is suddenly a good deal

    May 30, 2026

    Point spread betting: What it is, how to bet and best strategies in 2026

    May 30, 2026

    Founders seize on Indian court ruling to revive criticism of Google’s ad business

    May 30, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Latest Posts

    How Fonseca upset Djokovic — and what it means for the French Open

    China’s Rise in Drug Development Looms Over U.S.

    ICE agent arrested over shooting of Venezuelan man in US immigration raid | Civil Rights News

    AI agents are entering their rebuild era as enterprises confront the reliability problem

    Latest Posts

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Advertisement
    Demo

    We are a digital news platform delivering timely, accurate, and insightful coverage of politics, global affairs, business, economy, sports, and more. Our mission is to keep readers informed with reliable news, clear analysis, and stories that truly matter.
    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube

    Subscribe to Updates

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

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

    Powered by
    ...
    ►
    Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
    None
    ►
    Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
    None
    ►
    Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
    None
    ►
    Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
    None
    ►
    Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
    None
    Powered by