Filing: PowerLattice Technologies, a secretive startup with connections to Intel, is raising cash

A stealthy new company based in Southwest Washington called PowerLattice Technologies is raising cash, according to new SEC filings. The company filed two forms this week that show more than $22 million raised. PowerLattice is “bringing paradigm shift in power delivery solutions for AI, datacenter and high performance compute processors,” according to its website. The startup lists its headquarters at a co-working space in Camas, Wash. We’ve reached out to the company for more details. Former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is listed a director on one of the filings. Gelsinger spent more than three decades at Intel, more recently as… Read More

May 29, 2025 - 15:48
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Filing: PowerLattice Technologies, a secretive startup with connections to Intel, is raising cash
Former VMware CEO Pat Gelsinger speaks at VMworld 2018. (VMware Photo)

A stealthy new company based in Southwest Washington called PowerLattice Technologies is raising cash, according to new SEC filings.

The company filed two forms this week that show more than $22 million raised.

PowerLattice is “bringing paradigm shift in power delivery solutions for AI, datacenter and high performance compute processors,” according to its website.

The startup lists its headquarters at a co-working space in Camas, Wash.

We’ve reached out to the company for more details.

Former Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is listed a director on one of the filings. Gelsinger spent more than three decades at Intel, more recently as its CEO from 2021 to December 2024. He previously led VMWare as CEO for more than eight years.

Steve Fu, a semiconductor industry vet and a partner at Silicon Valley VC firm Celesta, is also listed as a director. Celsta’s founding partner Lip-Bu Tan is the current CEO at Intel.

The executives listed on the filings are Peng Zou, Sujith Dermal, and Gang Gen.

A search on LinkedIn for those names shows potential connections to NUVIA, a chip design startup acquired by Qualcomm in 2021.

The Oregonian reported on the filings on Tuesday.