No Result
View All Result
  • Private Data
  • Membership options
  • Login
  • COUNTRY
    • ITALY
    • IBERIA
    • FRANCE
    • UK&IRELAND
    • BENELUX
    • DACH
    • SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS
  • PRIVATE EQUITY
  • VENTURE CAPITAL
  • PRIVATE DEBT
  • DISTRESSED ASSETS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FINTECH
  • GREEN
  • PREMIUM
    • ItaHubHOT
      • ItaHub Legal
      • ItaHub Tax
      • ItaHub Trend
    • REPORT
    • INSIGHT VIEW
    • Private Data
Subscribe
  • COUNTRY
    • ITALY
    • IBERIA
    • FRANCE
    • UK&IRELAND
    • BENELUX
    • DACH
    • SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS
  • PRIVATE EQUITY
  • VENTURE CAPITAL
  • PRIVATE DEBT
  • DISTRESSED ASSETS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FINTECH
  • GREEN
  • PREMIUM
    • ItaHubHOT
      • ItaHub Legal
      • ItaHub Tax
      • ItaHub Trend
    • REPORT
    • INSIGHT VIEW
    • Private Data
Home COUNTRY DACH

Brain-inspired AI chip startup Gemesys raises €8.6m pre-seed round

Siftedby Sifted
November 19, 2024
Reading Time: 4 mins read
in DACH, GREEN, VENTURE CAPITAL
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Ruhr-based Gemesys, which is designing chips that “mimic the behaviour of the human brain”, has raised €8.6m in pre-seed funding. It plans to use the money to more than double its headcount and for R&D efforts.

Atlantic Labs and Apex Ventures led the round and were joined by NRW.Bank, Sony Innovation Fund and Plug and Play. The round also included a grant from the German government through the country’s EXIST ‘transfer of research’ programme, which backs research-based companies. CEO Dennis Michaelis declined to comment on the split between equity and grant funding.

What does Gemesys do?

Gemesys is designing chips that allow AI models to be trained and run directly on devices like smartphones and hearing implants. This eliminates the need to transmit any raw data to a data centre and reduces the energy use associated with traditional model training.

Advertisement

Central to the company’s technology is the use of memristors — electrical components that allow artificial neural networks to resemble biological synaptic functions (the way the human brain processes and acts on information) — on its chips.

Memristors give the potential to develop a “neuro-inspired type of computer”, Michaelis says. “The human brain is the best processor for intelligence that we know, a million times more efficient than any AI chip on the market,” he adds.

A brain-inspired chip has the potential to get around a key bottleneck in the training of AI, Michaelis tells Sifted. According to him, current chip architecture is limited because where the data is stored and where it’s processed on the chip are separated. “Whenever you want to do a computation you have to read the data from the memory, load it into the processor, compute and then write the result back. The problem is you have to shift data along at every step,” he says. This data shifting slows down the response time and uses more energy than is needed to complete a task.

“Such a bottleneck doesn’t exist in the human brain,” Michaelis says. “It’s not separated into two units […] it all happens in the same place.”

Gemesys’s chips could have two main benefits. One is that by reducing the energy consumption associated with AI by doing most of the work on the device, they reduce the role of data centres. Research by Goldman Sachs predicts that power demand in data centres because of the AI boom will increase by 160% by 2030 — meaning data centres will contribute 3-4% of global power demand, up from 1-2% today.

The other benefit is that they aim to give users better data privacy. By doing the training and running the model on the device, you don’t need to send any raw data to the cloud.

“You can design models that are a lot smaller and have fewer parameters to do the same task,” Michaelis says. “We’re aiming for 10k times less energy use.”

The chip architecture is based on research Michaelis did at Germany’s Ruhr University Bochum with one of the company’s cofounders and chief scientific officer Enver Solan. The company’s other cofounders are CFO Moritz Schmidt and CTO Daniel Krüger.

The company counts Dr Christian Wenger, professor for semiconductor materials at Brandenburg University of Technology, and Jamie Urquhart, cofounder and former COO of Arm, as advisors. Its board is made up of Quentin Calleja from Atlantic Labs, Ion Hauer from Apex Ventures and Massi Ali Ahmadi from NRW.Bank. 

How will it make money?

The company plans to go to market with a business model similar to chip giant Arm. It’ll design its chips in-house and then outsource the manufacturing to semiconductor manufacturers like TSMC. It wants to sell to original equipment manufacturers like Bosch, Apple and Siemens, which it sees using its chips in their products.

Advertisement

Gemesys is currently working with three pilot customers — one in the energy grid sector, one that works on cochlear implants (electronic devices that help people who are deaf or hard-of-hearing to hear) and another that does security. Michaelis says use cases extend to any company working on IoT devices.

What’s next?

Gemesys is planning to more than double headcount in the next few years, from 19 staff. It has seven open positions across its hardware development, concept and research teams. Hiring will be the company’s “biggest expense” in the next couple of years, Michaelis says.

Attracting talent can be a problem in Europe, especially for companies that want the best people working on chip hardware. They tend to be concentrated around the biggest chip manufacturing plants, which are currently in North America and Asia, Michaelis says.

The company mainly needs to hire in its software team though, which Michaelis says shouldn’t be a problem. “We have a lot of great computer scientists in Germany, and in Europe,” he says. “That’s really good.”

Read the orginal article: https://sifted.eu/articles/ai-chip-startup-gemesys-raise-news/

Gateways to Italy

Gateways to Italy – Offer your services to funds and investors willing to explore opportunities in Italy. Become a partner!

Gateways to Italy – Offer your services to funds and investors willing to explore opportunities in Italy. Become a partner!

by Partner
June 6, 2023

Sign up to our newsletter

SIGN UP

Related Posts

DACH

NTT to launch and list data center REIT in Singapore

May 9, 2025
SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS

Northvolt founder Peter Carlsson joins new AI startup

May 9, 2025
FRANCE

Alice & Bob to build $50m quantum computing lab in Paris

May 9, 2025

ItaHub

Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

November 4, 2024
Italy’s SMEs export toward 260 bn euros in 2025

Italy’s SMEs export toward 260 bn euros in 2025

September 9, 2024
With two months to go before the NPL Directive, in Italy the securitization rebus is still to be unraveled

With two months to go before the NPL Directive, in Italy the securitization rebus is still to be unraveled

April 23, 2024
EU’s AI Act, like previous rules on technology,  looks more defensive than investment-oriented

EU’s AI Act, like previous rules on technology, looks more defensive than investment-oriented

January 9, 2024

Co-sponsor

Premium

Funds vying for management consulting firm BIP, a CVC portfolio company. All deals in the sector

Funds vying for management consulting firm BIP, a CVC portfolio company. All deals in the sector

March 6, 2025
Private equity, Italy 2024 closes with 588 deals as for investments and divestments from 549 in 2023. Here is the new BeBeez’s report

Private equity, Italy 2024 closes with 588 deals as for investments and divestments from 549 in 2023. Here is the new BeBeez’s report

February 10, 2025
Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

Crypto-assets supervision rules in Italy, Banca d’Italia will supervise payment systems and Consob on market abuse

November 4, 2024
Venture capital investments top €1.3bn in 208 rounds as of Sep30  in Italy. They were €1.5 in all 2023. The new BeBeez Report

Venture capital investments top €1.3bn in 208 rounds as of Sep30 in Italy. They were €1.5 in all 2023. The new BeBeez Report

October 28, 2024
Next Post

Investment Migration Emerges as Key Climate Finance Solution at COP29

Helsinki-based Serviceform raises €2.45 million to expand as Go-To Marketing Suite for SMEs

EdiBeez srl

C.so Italia 22 - 20122 - Milano
C.F. | P.IVA 09375120962
Aut. Trib. Milano n. 102
del 3 aprile 2013

COUNTRY

Italy
Iberia
France
UK&Ireland
Benelux
DACH
Scandinavia&Baltics

CATEGORY

Private Equity
Venture Capital
Private Debt
Distressed Assets
Real Estate
Fintech
Green

PREMIUM

ItaHUB
Legal
Tax
Trend
Report
Insight view

WHO WE ARE

About Us
Media Partnerships
Contact

INFORMATION

Privacy Policy
Terms&Conditions
Cookie Police

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • COUNTRY
    • ITALY
    • IBERIA
    • FRANCE
    • UK&IRELAND
    • BENELUX
    • DACH
    • SCANDINAVIA&BALTICS
  • PRIVATE EQUITY
  • VENTURE CAPITAL
  • PRIVATE DEBT
  • DISTRESSED ASSETS
  • REAL ESTATE
  • FINTECH
  • GREEN
  • PREMIUM
    • ItaHub
      • ItaHub Legal
      • ItaHub Tax
      • ItaHub Trend
    • REPORT
    • INSIGHT VIEW
    • Private Data
Subscribe
  • Login
  • Cart