According to techcrunch.com, startup Era has raised $11 million in funding to build a software platform enabling hardware makers to develop AI-powered consumer gadgets — bypassing traditional app-based interfaces.
Funding and Investor Backing
The $11 million total includes a $9 million seed round led by Abstract Ventures and BoxGroup, with participation from Collaborative Fund and Mozilla Ventures. Earlier, Era secured $2 million in pre-seed funding from Topology Ventures and Betaworks. Notable angel investors include Flickr co-founder Caterina Fake, iPhone keyboard creator Ken Kocienda, OAS founder Tony Wang, Little Guy co-founder Daniel Kuntz, Sandbar co-founder Mina Fahmi, former Rabbit CPO ShaoBo Z, and Poetry Camera creator Kelin Zhang.
Founding Team and Technical Vision
Era was founded last year by CEO Liz Dorman, CTO Alex Ollman, and CPO Megan Gole. Dorman previously worked at Humane on AI orchestration and joined HP following its acquisition of Humane. Ollman developed agentic frameworks for enterprises at HP. Gole contributed to the Jony Ive and Sam Altman io project at Sutter Hill Ventures before joining Era.
Platform Capabilities and Scale
The platform supports over 130 LLMs from more than 14 providers, enabling multimodal AI functions across diverse form factors — including glasses, jewelry, home speakers, and experimental devices like AI-powered souvenirs or air quality monitors. According to the report, Era’s architecture is designed to scale across millions of devices and dynamically route tasks across models while managing real-world constraints such as intermittent connectivity.
Strategic Differentiation and Ecosystem Approach
Era investor Casey Caruso of Topology Ventures emphasized that the platform stands out due to its dynamic model routing and handling of physical-world limitations. CEO Liz Dorman articulated the company’s mission: to replace the app layer with an intelligence layer accessible to non-Silicon Valley creators. She stated:
“I think one of the incredible things that we can do with these AI models today is that you can replace that app layer. So what we’re building is the intelligence layer to allow anyone to create these types of intelligent objects, intelligent devices. And what we really believe is that the future of tech should not be made by people in San Francisco… It should not be people in their high fortresses who are so out of touch with reality, making devices and forcing them onto everyone. I want a choice over my devices again.” — Liz Dorman, CEO, Era
Industry Context for Supply Chain Professionals
For global supply chain professionals, Era’s platform signals a shift toward decentralized, software-defined hardware ecosystems — where intelligence resides in the platform layer rather than embedded in proprietary silicon or locked-in OS stacks. This reduces dependency on vertically integrated device manufacturers (e.g., Humane, Rabbit) and opens opportunities for contract manufacturers, component suppliers, and regional OEMs to rapidly prototype and deploy AI-enabled products without rebuilding AI infrastructure from scratch. As noted in the source, Era plans to engage the open-source and maker communities — a move that mirrors broader industry trends seen with platforms like Raspberry Pi OS and Arduino’s ecosystem, which have accelerated hardware innovation cycles and diversified supplier bases. Unlike legacy electronics supply chains anchored around rigid bill-of-materials and long lead times, AI gadget development increasingly hinges on agile software integration, model portability, and privacy-preserving memory architectures — all of which impact sourcing strategies for edge AI chips, low-power sensors, and secure storage components. The absence of a proven commercial model in AI hardware — with Humane acquired by HP and Rabbit inactive — underscores both risk and opportunity: early adopters who integrate Era’s platform may gain first-mover advantage in emerging form factors like wearables, ambient home devices, and industrial edge tools.
Source: TechCrunch
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










