Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Lightmatter (MIT spinout, $4.4B, $850M raised) replaces copper chip-to-chip links with photonic interconnects; M1000 Passage delivers 114 Tbps bandwidth for AI clusters.
Lightmatter is a photonic computing company spun out of MIT with a mission to overcome the fundamental bandwidth and energy bottlenecks that are constraining AI hardware scaling. As AI models have grown to require thousands of interconnected chips, the copper-based interconnects between chips have become a critical chokepoint — slow, power-hungry, and thermally limited. Lightmatter's founding insight was that light-based data interconnects could solve this problem by transmitting data at the speed of light with dramatically lower energy consumption.\n\nLightmatter's primary product is Passage, a photonic interconnect technology that replaces electrical chip-to-chip communication with optical links. The M1000 implementation delivers 114 terabits per second of aggregate bandwidth, enabling AI clusters to scale with far less latency and energy overhead than electrical alternatives. Passage is designed to be compatible with existing chip architectures and manufacturing processes, allowing hyperscalers and AI hardware vendors to integrate photonic interconnects without redesigning their entire stack.\n\nLightmatter has raised $850 million and achieved a valuation of $4.4 billion, making it one of the most highly capitalized companies in the AI infrastructure hardware space. The company's investors include Google, HPE, and a range of deep-tech focused funds. As AI training and inference workloads continue to scale, the demand for high-bandwidth, low-latency chip interconnects is expected to grow substantially, positioning Lightmatter at a critical node in the global AI compute supply chain.
AI photo/video editing platform with 150M+ MAUs and 2.5B lifetime downloads; $195M total funding at $1B+ valuation; launched AI Playground with 90+ models
Picsart is a global AI-powered photo and video editing platform founded in 2011 by Hovhannes Avoyan in Armenia, now headquartered in Miami. The company was built on a community-first model that combined editing tools with a social sharing layer, allowing creators to discover, remix, and build on each other's work. Over 13 years, Picsart evolved from a mobile photo editor into a comprehensive creative platform that serves both individual creators and enterprise customers across photo editing, video editing, design, and generative AI tools. The company has accumulated 2.5 billion lifetime downloads across its mobile and web applications.\n\nPicsart's platform now includes an AI Playground with 90+ generative AI models covering image generation, background removal, object replacement, style transfer, video editing, and design automation. The company positions itself as an accessible alternative to Adobe Creative Cloud for creators who need powerful AI-enhanced tools without a professional design background. Enterprise products target marketing and creative teams at brands and agencies who need to produce visual content at scale. Picsart's AI features are built on a combination of proprietary models and integrations with third-party foundation models.\n\nPicsart has 150M+ monthly active users and raised $195M in total funding at a $1B+ valuation, with investors including Sequoia Capital Armenia, SoftBank Vision Fund 2, and Insight Partners. The company's scale in developing markets — particularly in Southeast Asia, Latin America, and Eastern Europe — differentiates it from Western-focused creative tools and gives it a diverse global creator base. Picsart is navigating the generative AI transition by integrating AI capabilities directly into its existing user workflows rather than launching a separate AI product.
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