When most people talk about hurricanes, they talk about the storm itself—the dark, swirling experience of watching trees fall from the right side of a glass hurricane window.
But I’m from Florida and I’m here to tell you: The hurricane doesn’t end when the storm ends—it ends when the power and gas comes back on. When I was a kid, latency was part of that process. My siblings and I would play Candyland in the sweaty Miami dark, while utilities providers and companies scrambled to figure out who needed help.
What do my childhood Candyland games have to do with startups and venture capital? Well, power outages are still a problem (perhaps more so as warming oceans fuel more hurricanes), and solutions to problems are what the startup game is all about.
Dan Wright, the cofounder and CEO of Armada, believes that extreme situations like hurricanes reinforce the need for “edge” computing, the practice of processing data locally rather than sending it back to the cloud “Lots of oil and gas companies are really very concerned about these types of disasters,” Wright says. “You can’t have any latency. You have to be able to respond in real-time.”
Disaster response is the obvious application, but Wright and the Armada crew believe edge technology also has a big role to play in all sorts of remote environments where uninterrupted data access is critical. Think: Real-time safety monitoring at high-risk worksites, real-time emissions tracking for oil rigs, and automated operations for mines. The company collaborates with Starlink, and has recently launched partnerships with companies like Halliburton and Skydio.
Armada came out of stealth in 2023, and has so far raised $100 million, having just announced its Series A in December. And now, Fortune can exclusively report, it has scored another $40 million from Microsoft’s venture fund, M12. Along with the funding, Armada’s products will become available in Microsoft Azure’s marketplace.
It’s a natural fit, says Pradeep Nair, Armada’s founding CTO and a 10-year veteran of Microsoft’s Azure business. “If you look at all of these customers we’re hitting—oil, gas, and mining—these guys are legacy, traditional customers and Microsoft is their biggest vendor,” he says. The partnership with Microsoft “opens up the whole pipeline, without us needing to go through the whole procurement process.”
The company declined to disclose any metrics or the number of current customers. A source familiar with the matter said that the company’s valuation jumped with this extension. Still, it’s a rare thing right now to see investors dazzled by a young company that’s not expressly an AI startup. Sure, Armada’s deploying AI, but it’s not the point. So, what’s resonating?
“People are thinking a lot about edge [computing], because even in highly-populated environments, there’s this recognition of the difficulties around power,” says Founders Fund partner Trae Stephens. “People are really and increasingly concerned about how we get enough power to the edge. How do we use the data that we’re pulling off the edge?”
Founders Fund, which has been involved with Armada since the very beginning, is among a group of existing Armada investors that includes Lux Capital, Felicis, Valor Equity Partners, 8VC, and Shield Capital. The startup’s mission, Stephens said, began with the relatively vague idea around disconnected compute.
“I feel like every good business has kind of a funny narrative for all of the ideas that it bubbles up at the beginning,” Stephens says. “Then, you’re popping all of the bubbles, getting down to the thing that has real product-market fit.”
“There are 100 potential use cases,” added Stephens.
Many of these use cases seem to be oriented around high-stakes environments, where a well-timed safety alert can make the difference between life and death. (That’s especially the case, say, on a fire-prone offshore oil rig.)
Is that the deliberate focus?
“The problems that matter the most can only be solved if you bridge the digital divide and bring connectivity, compute, and AI to the data – wherever it is,” Wright says.
See you tomorrow,
Allie Garfinkle
Twitter: @agarfinks
Email: alexandra.garfinkle@fortune.com
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Joe Abrams curated the deals section of today’s newsletter.
VENTURE DEALS
– Skild AI, a Pittsburgh, Pa. and San Francisco-based developer of AI robotics designed for physical work, raised $300 million in Series A funding. Lightspeed Venture Partners, Coatue, Softbank Group, and Jeff Bezos led the round and were joined by Felicis Ventures, Sequoia, Menlo Ventures, General Catalyst, CRV, and others.
– Hayden AI Technologies, a San Francisco-based developer of an AI vision platform designed for city traffic enforcement, raised $90 million in Series C funding. The Rise Fund led the round and was joined by the Drawdown Fund, Autotech Ventures, and others.
– X-Bow Systems, an Albuquerque, N.M.-based manufacturer of solid rocket motors and hypersonic technology for the defense, security, and space industries, raised $70 million in Series B funding. Razor’s Edge led the round and was joined by Lockheed Martin Ventures, Boeing Ventures, Crosslink Capital, and Balerion Space Ventures.
– Regard, a Los Angeles, Calif.-based platform designed for automating clinical tasks, raised $61 million in Series B funding. Oak HC/FT led the round and was joined by Cedars-Sinai Health Ventures and existing investors TenOneTen, Calibrate Ventures, and Techstars.
– Nagish, a New York City-based AI-powered platform designed to provide real-time captioning for phone calls, raised $11 million in Series A funding. Canaan led the round and was joined by existing investors K5 Global, Tokyo Black, Cardumen Capital, and others.
– Vee, a New York City-based AI-powered nonprofit management platform, raised $7 million in seed funding. TLV Partners led the round and was joined by SOMV, Oryzn Capital, Meitav Dash, Disruption Ventures, and existing investors.
– Arkion, a Stockholm, Sweden-based analytics platform for power grids, raised $4 million in funding. Subvenio Invest led the round and was joined by Neptunia Invest and Antler.
– Granta Autonomy, a Vilnius, Lithuania-based developer of autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles for intelligence and surveillance missions, raised €1 million ($1.1 million) in seed funding. Scalewolf VC led the round and was joined by Brolls Defence and HFL Holdings.
PRIVATE EQUITY
– Madison River Capital recapitalized JDC Power Systems, an Armonk, N.Y.-based provider of electrical equipment and services to data centers, for $190 million.
– Apex Waste Solutions, a portfolio company of Kinderhook Industries, acquired Twin Enviro Services, a Denver, Colo.-based waste management company. Financial terms were not disclosed.
– AQUA Dermatology, backed by Gryphon Investors and GTCR, acquired First Coast Mohs, a Jacksonville, Fla.-based group of dermatology and skin care specialists. Financial terms were not disclosed.
– National Safety Apparel, a portfolio company of Blue Point Capital Partners, acquired Tri-Star Glove, a Plainville, Ind.-based personal apparel manufacturer. Financial terms were not disclosed.
– PrecisionX Group, a portfolio company of CORE Industrial Partners, acquired National Manufacturing, a Piscataway, N.J.-based metal components manufacturer. FInancial terms were not disclosed.
– Revelation Pharma, backed by Osceola Capital Management, acquired Taylors Pharmacy, a Winter Park, Fla.-based pharmacy, and Key Compounding Pharmacy, a Federal Way, Wash.-based pharmacy. Financial terms were not disclosed.
– Summit Partners acquired a minority stake in Revizto, a Lausanne, Switzerland-based developer of collaboration software for the architecture engineering, construction, and operation industry. Financial terms were not disclosed.
OTHER
– Honeywell (Nasdaq: HON) agreed to acquire the liquefied natural gas business of Air Products (NYSE: APD), an Allentown, Pa.-based industrial gasses company, for a total cash consideration of $1.81 billion.
– AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) agreed to acquire Silo AI, a Helsinki, Finland-based private AI lab, for approximately $665 million in cash.
– D2L acquired H5P Group AS, a Tromsø, Norway-based developer of interactive content creation software for educators and organizations, for up to $33 million.
FUNDS + FUNDS OF FUNDS
– Index Ventures, a San Francisco, New York City, and London, U.K.-based venture capital firm, raised $2.3 billion across a venture and growth fund focused on AI and tech companies.
– AE Industrial Partners, a Boca Raton, Fla.-based private equity firm, raised $1.28 billion for its third fund focused on the aerospace and defense supply chains.
– Sovereign Capital, an Atlanta, Ga.-based venture capital firm, raised $60 million for their fourth venture capital fund focused on seed and Series A stage technology companies led by faith-driven founders.
PEOPLE
– Titanium Ventures, a San Francisco and Sydney, Australia-based venture capital firm, promoted Albert Bielinko to general partner, Jonathan Serfaty to partner, head of data, and Eugin Lee to vice president.