NUVIA: Former Apple chip executives found company to take on Intel, AMD

 NUVIA Inc co-founders John Bruno, Gerard Williams III and Manu Gulati pose at the company’s Santa Clara, California headquarters, U.S., in this undated handout photo released on November 15, 2019. Courtesy NUVIA Inc/Handout via REUTERS

NUVIA Inc co-founders John Bruno, Gerard Williams III and Manu Gulati pose at the company’s Santa Clara, California headquarters, U.S., in this undated handout photo released on November 15, 2019. Courtesy NUVIA Inc/Handout via REUTERS

NUVIA Inc was founded by former Apple employees Gerard Williams III, Manu Gulati, and John Bruno in early 2019 and is developing a processor code-named Phoenix.

Stephen Nellis for Reuters:

The company on Friday said it raised $53 million from Dell Technologies Capital and several Silicon Valley firms, which will help it expand from 60 employees to about 100 by the end of this year.

Williams left Apple this spring after more than nine years as chief architect for all Apple central processors and systems-on-a-chip. Gulati spent eight years at Apple working on mobile systems-on-a-chip, and Bruno spent five years in Apple’s platform architecture group.

At NUVIA, the group’s goal is to take the lessons learned designing powerful chips for small, battery-powered devices such as iPhones and apply them to large, electricity hungry data center servers… Patrick Moorhead, an analyst at Moor Insights & Strategies, said NUVIA could prove a formidable new entrant based on its founding team’s track record. He said the team made “unprecedented” performance gains with each new generation of chips at Apple.

MacDailyNews Take: We look forward to NUVIA’s IPO as the company is definitely led by extremely capable co-founders.

7 Comments

  1. Consider if the performance of Apple’s processors could be applied to the industry as a whole. I believe that’s what we’re looking at here. I don’t know if they’re going with ARM or creating their own, but as long as they’re developing the compiler/IDE alongside it, there could be a lot of interest in this.

    They may reach maturity just as Intel stumbles again 🙂

  2. I do not know what too make of this news; Were the tree sandbagging at Apple in order to use their knowledge to found their own enterprise or was Apple management holding back their efforts leading them to leave in frustration?

    And what about Apple’s intellectual properties which they can’t use without permission?

Reader Feedback

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.