News
Startup Linux Cluster Company SiCortex Receives $21 Million
Will Use The Funds Toward Continued Product Development, To Expand Sales And Marketing
Oct. 6, 2006 01:00 AM
SiCortex, a startup that makes Linux computer clusters, announced that it has closed a $21 million round of funding, led by Chevron Technology Ventures through its venture capital arm, CTTV Investments LLC. The funding will go toward expansion of sales and marketing efforts and continued product development.
“Heat is the limiting factor in reliability and performance among computing systems climbing the list at www.top500.org,” said Bob Metcalfe, SiCortex chairman, Polaris partner, and Ethernet inventor. “SiCortex begins with orders of magnitude lower heat per 64-bit processor and aims to make teraflop performance ubiquitous.” The company has now raised a total of $42 million in two rounds of funding. All four of the first-round investors participated in the second round: Polaris Venture Partners, which led the first round, Flagship Ventures, JK&B Capital, and Prism Venture Partners.
“The oil and gas industry has always been an early and aggressive adopter of high performance computers,” said Bill Seifert, Managing Partner, Prism Venture Partners. “Chevron Technology Ventures’ participation in this funding round reinforces our belief that high performance computing users need a solution to the heat and power issues limiting their ability to scale up their HPC systems.”
“We are energized by the investment from Chevron Technology Ventures,” said John Mucci, SiCortex CEO. “Chevron has a long history of HPC as a core competency. Their significant investment in SiCortex along with our existing investors is a huge vote of confidence in our strategy as we prepare to enter the market.”
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