For more than 50 years, the semiconductor industry has relied on the Tomasulo algorithm, brought through IBM in 1967, to create processors, GPUs and other chips adapted to express computing tasks.
Now, Ubitium, a hardware startup founded by semiconductor veterans, has developed a universal RISC-V processor that consolidates all computing workloads on a single chip.
This generation is especially vital for embedded systems and robotics, where the load on hardware limits the deployment of complex computing solutions.
Ubitium’s universal processor is designed to be scalable, supporting a portfolio of chips of different lengths but sharing the same microarchitecture and software stack, ensuring that consumers have the ability to scale their programs without changing their progression processes.
The processor’s workload-agnostic design makes it suited to any computing task and helps to simplifying hardware requirements.
Ubitium has raised $3. 7 million in seed funding, which will fuel the progression of initial chip prototypes and progression kits, with plans to launch the first processors through 2026.
“The $500 billion processor industry is built on restrictive boundaries between computing tasks,” noted Hyun Shin Cho, CEO of Ubitium.
“We’re erasing those boundaries. Our Universal Processor does it all – CPU, GPU, DSP, FPGA – in one chip, one architecture. This isn’t an incremental improvement. It is a paradigm shift. This is the processor architecture the AI era demands.”
Cho further stated the company envisions a future where a single processor design can handle tasks ranging from small embedded systems to high-performance computing without specialized hardware modifications.
“For too long we’ve accepted that making devices smart means making them complex. Multiple processors or processor cores, progression teams, endless integration challenges – today that’s changing,” he added.
Efosa has been writing about generation for over 7 years, first driven by interest and now driven by a strong hobby in this field. He has a master’s degree and a doctorate of science, which gave him a solid foundation in analytical thinking. Efosa has developed a voluntary interest in generation policy, in particular exploring the intersection of privacy, security, and politics. His studies focus on how technological advances influence regulatory frameworks and social standards, knowledge coverage and cybersecurity. By joining TechRadar Pro, in addition to privacy and generation, you also focus on B2B security products. Efosa can be reached at this email: udinmwenefosa@gmail. com
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