
Fractile
Founded Year
2022Stage
Angel | AliveTotal Raised
$23.9MMosaic Score The Mosaic Score is an algorithm that measures the overall financial health and market potential of private companies.
+10 points in the past 30 days
About Fractile
Fractile develops chips for AI model inference, focusing on large language models. The company aims to reduce the time and cost of processing by addressing bottlenecks in existing hardware through the integration of computation and memory. Fractile was formerly known as Neu Edge. It was founded in 2022 and is based in Newbury, United Kingdom.
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Expert Collections containing Fractile
Expert Collections are analyst-curated lists that highlight the companies you need to know in the most important technology spaces.
Fractile is included in 2 Expert Collections, including Semiconductors, Chips, and Advanced Electronics.
Semiconductors, Chips, and Advanced Electronics
7,494 items
Companies in the semiconductors & HPC space, including integrated device manufacturers (IDMs), fabless firms, semiconductor production equipment manufacturers, electronic design automation (EDA), advanced semiconductor material companies, and more
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
14,221 items
Companies developing artificial intelligence solutions, including cross-industry applications, industry-specific products, and AI infrastructure solutions.
Latest Fractile News
Nov 13, 2025
Thu 13 Nov 2025 13.26 EST Last modified on Thu 13 Nov 2025 13.38 EST The UK is in a uniquely promising position, far too little understood, to play a lucrative role in the coming era of artificial intelligence – but only if it also grabs the opportunity to start making millions of computer chips. AI requires vast numbers of chips and we could supply up to 5% of world demand if we get our national act together. Our legacy in chip design is world-class, starting with the first general-purpose electronic computer, the first electronic memory and the first parallel computer. And now Cambridge-based Arm, a quiet titan designing more than 90% of the chips powering phones and tablets globally. With such a pedigree, it is not idle daydreaming for UK companies to win a significant chunk of the AI chip market; 5% is a conservative, achievable ambition. World-class universities, a thriving foundational AI company in DeepMind, and a robust ecosystem for innovation give the UK the practical tools it needs to compete. The rewards of success are staggering. By 2033, the global AI chip market is projected to reach $700bn (£620bn) a year, outstripping the whole of today’s semiconductor market. Capturing that 5% means $35bn (£31bn) in new revenue and thousands of high-paying jobs. AI will reshape not only our economy but also our society and its security. Yet so many misunderstand where its true value and strategic power lie. In today’s gold rush, the real fortunes belong to those who build the shovel, not just those digging for digital gold. I saw this first-hand when I was on the Intel board in California between 1997 and 2006 as Gordon Moore and Andy Grove built that company. They built the “back end” of tech’s first revolution just as Nvidia is building the much bigger “back end” now. British engineers, British brains, British business and British investors are world class at this stuff. But we will need government to get on board. Consumer eyes are dazzled by OpenAI’s generative marvels. But it really is Nvidia, the company that supplies the advanced chips that make such feats possible, that reaps the market’s largest rewards. OpenAI looks like it’s worth only a 10th of Nvidia. AMD, a semiconductor company that designs chips, is a distant second, while startups such as Cerebras and Tenstorrent jostle for a small piece of the pie. Every AI model and application, from autonomous robots to real-time translation tools, depends on advances in chip technology. Chips are the new oil in the digital economy, determining how quickly and efficiently future applications come to life. At present, the only truly profitable giants in the AI sector are chipmakers . Some fear that China will commoditise AI chips just as it did with solar technology, causing prices to crater and incumbents to fall. The reality is more nuanced. US export controls prevent China from accessing the world’s advanced chip manufacturing technology for the next decade, severely limiting the country’s capacity to dominate high-end AI chip markets. For now, this leaves the US as the key player, with strong opportunities for Britain as its closest ally adept at chip design. The UK has already generated a few companies such as Fractile, Flux and Oriole working in this space. But we lack the scale to match the opportunity. We should not compete with Nvidia for the compute power of datacentres but in specialised applications that break new ground: robotics, factory automation, medical devices and autonomous vehicles. These sectors offer open terrain for innovative architectures and fresh competition.
Fractile Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
When was Fractile founded?
Fractile was founded in 2022.
Where is Fractile's headquarters?
Fractile's headquarters is located at 2 Communications Road, Newbury.
What is Fractile's latest funding round?
Fractile's latest funding round is Angel.
How much did Fractile raise?
Fractile raised a total of $23.9M.
Who are the investors of Fractile?
Investors of Fractile include Pat Gelsinger, The Advanced Research and Invention Agency, Oxford Science Enterprises, Inovia Capital, NATO Innovation Fund and 8 more.
Who are Fractile's competitors?
Competitors of Fractile include d-Matrix, Groq, FuriosaAI, Upmem, Axelera AI and 7 more.
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