Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Open-source modular robot platform; $5.5M seed; 100+ units deployed to NVIDIA GEAR Lab (April 2026); reduces hardware barriers for embodied AI research; extensible and ROS-compatible
Anvil Robotics is an open-source robotics hardware company building modular robotic platforms designed to accelerate research, development, and deployment of embodied AI systems. Founded with a mission to reduce the hardware barriers that slow AI robotics research, Anvil provides a standardized, extensible physical robot platform that researchers and developers can customize for their specific use cases rather than building bespoke hardware from scratch. The company's open-source approach is philosophically aligned with how software tooling accelerated the broader AI revolution.\n\nAnvil's modular robot design allows teams to swap components, add sensors, and integrate custom end-effectors without the mechanical engineering overhead typically required for robot customization. The platform is designed to be simulation-compatible and easy to deploy in real environments, bridging the sim-to-real gap that challenges many robotics AI teams. Its software stack is open-source and built for integration with common robot learning frameworks, making it accessible to the broad AI research community.\n\nWith a $5.5M seed round, Anvil has achieved notable early traction: 100+ units have been deployed to organizations including NVIDIA's GEAR robotics lab and 50+ academic and research institutions as of April 2026. NVIDIA's adoption is a significant signal — GEAR is one of the world's leading robot learning research groups, and their selection of Anvil's platform validates its technical quality and research-grade utility. Anvil is positioned to become foundational infrastructure for the next generation of embodied AI research, similar to how certain open-source software frameworks became standard building blocks in machine learning.
Boston industrial CAD/PLM software (NASDAQ: PTC); FY2025 8.5% ARR growth, Kepware/ThingWorx IoT divested to TPG (Nov 2025) under new CEO Neil Barua competing with Siemens Teamcenter for discrete manufacturer PLM.
PTC Inc. is a Boston, Massachusetts-based industrial software company — publicly traded on NASDAQ (NASDAQ: PTC) as an S&P 500 component — providing computer-aided design (CAD), product lifecycle management (PLM), application lifecycle management (ALM), service lifecycle management (SLM), and industrial IoT software to manufacturers across aerospace, defense, automotive, medical devices, and industrial machinery. In FY2025 (fiscal year ended September 30, 2025), PTC reported 8.5% ARR growth and 16% free cash flow growth, with Q4 FY2025 revenue up 39% in constant currency and 18% year-over-year. CEO Neil Barua took over from long-tenured CEO James Heppelmann in February 2024 and introduced the "Barua Blueprint" refocusing PTC on its core CAD/PLM/ALM/SLM strengths. In November 2025, PTC announced the divestiture of its industrial IoT assets — Kepware and ThingWorx — to TPG, sharpening its portfolio around design and lifecycle management software. PTC's product portfolio includes Creo (3D parametric CAD for mechanical engineers), Windchill (PLM for product data and process management), Onshape (cloud-native CAD platform), and Arena (cloud-native PLM/QMS).
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