![]() When he met Gomez, he realised that it's not just physics. He would go on to earn his Ph.D for his pioneering work in the field of Neuromorphic Photonics. He thought at the time that the solution to building the next AI supercomputer was to come up with a way of using physics to build new devices to build new technologies. “I came to Princeton to learn how to build the next supercomputer,” says Nahmais. Nahmias grew up in the heart of Silicon Valley in Menlo Park, California, but left California to attend college at Princeton in New Jersey to walk the same halls as the college’s most famous lecturer and scientist, Albert Einstein. And when Nahmais showed him what he had been working on, it was immediately apparent that if they could pull off anything remotely close to what he had been working on, it would be step change in artificial intelligence. He had been doing various types of artificial intelligence work for about a decade at this point. But when he came to Silicon Valley, he was disappointed and frustrated because the gap between what he thought was possible and what was actually happening on the ground was still too big. “I didn't get my driver's licence until I was 22 because I was so sure that self driving cars would be readily available,” says Gomez. He graduated from Stanford with a degree in computer science and then worked in the field of artificial intelligence, both during his degree work and later for Google before meeting Nahmias in 2018 when they came together to form Luminous Computing. He was inspired by Steve Jobs’ admonition to think big and came to Silicon Valley to attend Stanford because he wanted to work on solving foundational human problems and artificial intelligence was supposed to be the bedrock on which next step innovations would come from. My exposure to cutting edge technology was through pop science magazines,” says Gomez. “Growing up I didn't really have exposure to technology. They settled in a small farm town in Minnesota. Gomez is the son of Indian immigrants who came to the US with less than $1,000 to their name. ![]() ![]() Investors include Modern Venture Partners, Horsley Bridge Partners, Third Kind Venture Capital, 8090 Partners, Bill Gates, Neo, Alumni Partners, Strawberry Creek Ventures, Gigafund and others. Their latest A round was raised on Mafor $105 million. The company has attracted $126 million in funding to date, according to Gomez. However, the promise of the concept and the pedigree and progress the founders and their growing team of engineers have made to date has allowed the company to attract the level of venture capital required to build and produce a new photonics-based supercomputer. ![]() Four years into the creation of Luminous, the company is still about 20 months away from production, though Gomez says that the company already has customers ready to go once they do. ![]()
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