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Serve Robotics Announces Second Quarter 2024 Results

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Manufacturing activities commenced on 2,000-robot fleet deployment following entry into manufacturing agreement with Magna and amendment to lidar supply agreement with Ouster Cash position bolstered by proceeds of $40 million equity offering, as well as post-quarter $15 million private placement transaction

SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 13, 2024 /PRNewswire/ — Serve Robotics Inc. (the “Company” or “Serve”) (Nasdaq: SERV), a leading autonomous sidewalk delivery company, today announced financial results for the second quarter 2024 ended June 30, 2024.

“We are pleased to report another strong quarter, extending our 30-month track record of double-digit month-over-month growth and improvements in key operational metrics,” said Dr. Ali Kashani, Serve’s Co-founder and CEO. “This quarter, we expanded into Koreatown in Los Angeles, signed important agreements with Magna International Inc. (“Magna”) and expanded  on our supply agreement with Ouster Inc. (“Ouster”), and appointed our Chief Hardware & Manufacturing Officer to spearhead our fleet expansion efforts. I am particularly pleased to announce that Serve has completed the design of our third-generation robot.  Looking ahead, we are focused on executing Serve’s fleet expansion plan to deploy at least 250 additional robots in Los Angeles by the end of Q1 2025. We believe our continued execution of this plan through year end 2025 will position Serve to deploy all 2,000 robots under our Uber Eats agreement, which at full utilization is expected to generate $60 to $80 million in run-rate revenue annually.”

Second Quarter 2024 and Recent Highlights 

Public Offering & Follow-on Transaction: On April 18, 2024, Serve completed a successful public equity offering, which generated $40.0 million in gross proceeds, and through which Serve’s common stock began trading on The Nasdaq Capital Market under the ticker symbol “SERV”.  Post quarter-end, the company also completed a private placement transaction with gross proceeds of $15.0 million.Operational Performance: Serve averaged 385 daily supply hours during the second quarter 2024, a 106% increase year-over-year and a 28% increase quarter-over-quarter. The Company also achieved an 85% increase in daily active robots year-over-year and a 23% increase quarter-over-quarter. Los Angeles Expansion: In June 2024, Serve announced the expansion of its delivery operations into Koreatown and began onboarding new local merchants through its partnership with Uber Eats. The coverage expansion  represents execution of Serve’s long-term plan to broaden its geographic reach in Los Angeles and across the U.S. Manufacturing activities commenced following Magna and Ouster agreements: In the second quarter Serve commenced manufacturing activities on its 2,000-robot fleet, led by Euan Abraham, the Company’s newly promoted Chief Hardware & Manufacturing Officer. Serve also entered into a purchase and production agreement with Magna, under which Magna will become the contract manufacturer of Serve’s delivery robots, and signed an amendment expanding its supply agreement with Ouster to equip its next-generation robots with upgraded sensors for enhanced performance.

Second Quarter Financial Highlights

Second quarter revenue was $0.47 million, including $0.30 million of software service revenue derived from the Company’s software services agreement with Magna. As forecasted, Serve’s services contract with Magna was significantly completed during the second quarter, and the Company does not anticipate material software services revenue in Q3 2024.As of June 30, 2024, the Company had $28.8 million of cash and cash equivalents.As of June 30, 2024, the Company had 36.5 million shares of common stock outstanding, and 42.6 million shares outstanding on a fully diluted basis. Following the Company’s July 2024 private placement, the Company had approximately 48.2 million shares outstanding on a fully diluted basis.

Quarterly Conference Call

Company management will host a conference call and webcast today at 2:00 p.m. PT / 5:00 p.m. ET to discuss the financial results and provide a corporate update. A live webcast and replay can be accessed from the investor relations page of Serve’s website at investors.serverobotics.com.

Individuals interested in listening to the conference call may do so by dialing (646) 968-2525 and referencing conference ID#: 1640108.

About Serve

Serve develops advanced, AI-powered, low-emissions sidewalk delivery robots that endeavor to make delivery sustainable and economical. Spun off from Uber in 2021 as an independent company, Serve has completed tens of thousands of deliveries for enterprise partners such as Uber Eats and 7-Eleven. Serve has scalable multi-year contracts, including a signed agreement to deploy up to 2,000 delivery robots on the Uber Eats platform across multiple U.S. markets.

For further information about Serve  (Nasdaq: SERV), please visit www.serverobotics.com or follow us on social media via X (Twitter), Instagram, or LinkedIn @serverobotics.    

Supplemental Financial Information

The key metrics and financial tables outlined below are metrics that provide management with additional understanding of the drivers of business performance and the Company’s ability to deliver stockholder return. Investors should not place undue reliance on these metrics as indicators of future or expected results. The Company’s presentation of these metrics may differ from similarly titled metrics presented by other companies and therefore comparability may be limited. 

Table 1: Key Metrics

Three Months Ended

Six Months Ended

June 30, 2024

March 31, 2024

June 30, 2023

June 30, 2024

June 30, 2023

Key Metrics

(Unaudited)

(Unaudited)

(Unaudited)

(Unaudited)

(Unaudited)

Daily Active Robots (1)

48

39

23

44

25

Daily Supply Hours (2)

385

300

152

342

169

(1)

Daily Active Robots: The Company defines daily active robots as the average number of robots performing daily deliveries during the period. 

(2)

Daily Supply Hours: The Company defines daily supply hours as the average number of hours the Company’s robots are ready to accept offers and perform daily deliveries during the period.

Table 2: Revenue

Three Months Ended

Six Months Ended

June 30, 2024

March 31,

June 30, 2023

June 30, 2024

June 30, 2023

Revenue

(Unaudited)

(Unaudited)

(Unaudited)

(Unaudited)

(Unaudited)

Software services

$         296,035

$      851,101

$                     –

$      1,147,136

$                     –

Delivery services

75,540

51,760

32,467

127,300

57,719

Branding fees

96,800

43,850

29,542

140,650

44,542

$         468,375

$      946,711

$           62,009

$      1,415,086

$         102,261

Forward Looking Statements
 
This press release contains “forward-looking statements,” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward- looking statements may be identified by the context of the statement and generally arise when we or our management are discussing our beliefs, estimates or expectations. Such statements generally include the words “believes,” “plans,” “intends,” “targets,” “may,” “could,” “should,” “will,” “expects,” “estimates,” “suggests,” “anticipates,” “outlook,” “continues,” or similar expressions. These statements are not historical facts or guarantees of future performance, but represent management’s belief at the time the statements were made regarding future events which are subject to certain risks, uncertainties and other factors, many of which are outside of our control. Actual results and outcomes may differ materially from what is expressed or forecast in such forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements include, without limitation, statements regarding the Company’s partnership with Magna, timing of the Company’s robot deployment, the Company’s ability to expand to additional markets, and the Company’s timing and ability to scale to commercial production.

The forward-looking statements contained in this release are also subject to other risks and uncertainties, including those more fully described in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), including in the sections entitled “Risk Factors” and “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended June 30, 2024 that will be filed following this earnings release, and in our subsequent SEC filings. We can give no assurance that the plans, intentions, expectations or strategies as reflected in or suggested by those forward-looking statements will be attained or achieved. The forward-looking statements in this release are based on information available   3 to us as of the date hereof, and we disclaim any obligation to update any forward-looking statements, except as required by law. These forward-looking statements should not be relied upon as representing our views as of any date subsequent to the date of this press release.

Contacts

Aduke Thelwell, Head of Communications & Investor Relations
Serve Robotics
aduke.thelwell@serverobotics.com
347-464-8510

Investor Relations 
investor.relations@serverobotics.com    

 

Serve Robotics Inc.
Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
As of June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023
(unaudited)

June 30,
2024

December 31,
2023

ASSETS

Current assets:

   Cash

28,780,034

$           6,756

   Accounts receivable

93,132

2,955

   Inventory

709,289

774,349

   Prepaid expenses

1,119,995

676,969

   Escrow Receivable

180,000

      Total current assets

30,882,450

1,461,029

Property and equipment, net

819,244

48,422

Right of use asset

552,143

782,439

Deposits

512,659

512,659

      Total assets

32,766,496

$    2,804,549

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY (DEFICIT)

Current liabilities:

Accounts payable

1,387,559

$   2,050,605

Accrued liabilities

46,079

255,849

Deferred revenue

52,863

Note payable, current

750,000

1,000,000

Note payable – related party

70,000

Right of use liability, current portion

413,800

496,963

Lease liability, current portion

1,617,224

2,363,807

      Total current liabilities

4,267,525

6,237,224

Note payable, net of current portion

230,933

Restricted stock award liability

158,617

Right of use liability

35,230

211,181

      Total liabilities

4,302,755

6,837,955

Stockholders’ equity (deficit):

Preferred stock, $0.0001 par value, 10,000,000 shares authorized, no shares issued or outstanding as of both June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023

Common stock, $0.0001 par value; 300,000,000 shares authorized, 36,642,064 and 24,832,814 shares issued and 36,529,574 and 24,508,795 shares outstanding as of both June 30, 2024 and December 31, 2023

3,651

2,450

Additional paid-in capital

114,869,809

64,468,141

Subscription receivable

(169,616)

Accumulated deficit

(86,409,719)

(68,334,381)

      Total stockholders’ equity (deficit)

28,463,741

(4,033,406)

      Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity (deficit)

$   32,766,496

$    2,804,549

 

Serve Robotics Inc.
Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Operations
For the Three and Six Months Ended June 30, 2024 and 2023; and Three Months Ended March 31, 2024
(unaudited)

Three Month Ended

Six Months Ended

June 30, 2024

March 31, 2024

June 30, 2023

June 30, 2024

June 30, 2023

Revenues

$       468,375

$          946,711

$         62,009

$      1,415,086

$         102,261

Cost of revenues

326,013

352,438

391,367

678,451

758,628

      Gross profit (loss)

142,362

594,273

(329,358)

736,635

(656,367)

Operating expenses:

  General and administrative

1,873,320

1,008,071

970,819

2,881,392

1,986,806

  Operations

871,211

540,974

592,648

1,412,185

1,114,335

  Research and development

5,787,906

6,638,441

2,125,685

12,426,347

4,208,634

  Sales and marketing

165,612

118,236

83,136

283,848

362,718

      Total operating expenses

8,698,049

8,305,722

3,772,288

17,003,772

7,672,493

Loss from operations

(9,055,688)

(7,711,449)

(4,101,646)

(16,267,137)

(8,328,860)

Other income (expense), net:

  Interest expense, net

(260,120)

(1,326,522)

(496,862)

(1,586,642)

(538,606)

  Change in fair value of derivative liability

(221,560)

(221,560)

  Change in fair value of simple agreements for future equity

(367,748)

(1,236,912)

      Total other income (expense), net

(481,680)

(1,326,522)

(864,610)

(1,808,202)

(1,775,518)

Provision for income taxes

Net loss

$   (9,037,367)

$     (9,037,971)

$   (4,966,256)

$   (18,075,339)

$    (10,104,378)

Weighted average common shares outstanding – basic and diluted

33,795,009

24,556,343

6,678,372

29,176,370

6,678,372

Net loss per common share – basic and diluted

$            (0.27)

$              (0.37)

$            (0.74)

$               (0.62)

$               (1.51)

 

Serve Robotics Inc.
Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
For the Six Months Ended June 30, 2024 and 2023
(unaudited)

Six Months Ended
June 30,

2024

2023

Cash flows from operating activities:

Net loss

$     (18,075,338)

$    (10,104,378)

Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash used in

  Depreciation

27,500

931,279

  Stock-based compensation

7,735,469

200,872

  Amortization of debt discount

1,677,942

466,706

  Loss on conversion of note payable

221,560

  Change in fair value of simple agreements for future equity

1,236,912

  Interest on recourse loan

(2,504)

  Changes in operating assets and liabilities:

      Accounts receivable

(90,177)

23,697

      Inventory

65,060

(4,704)

      Prepaid expenses

(443,026)

16,253

      Escrow receivable

(180,000)

      Accounts payable

(663,046)

704,870

      Accrued liabilities

(120,232)

(36,045)

      Deferred revenue

52,863

      Right of use liabilities, net

(28,818)

(23,163)

           Net cash used in operating activities

(9,820,242)

(6,590,205)

Cash flows from investing activities:

Purchase of property and equipment

(798,322)

      Net cash used in investing activities

(798,322)

Cash flows from financing activities:

Proceeds from simple agreement for future equity

2,666,953

Proceeds from convertible notes payable

4,844,625

2,798,410

Proceeds from note payable, related party

399,000

Exercise of warrants

5,907

Exercise of options

8,757

Proceeds from issuance of common stock pursuant to offering, net of offering costs

35,849,136

Repayments of note payable

(500,000)

(500,000)

Repayments of notes payable, related party

(70,000)

Deferred offering costs

(352,617)

Repayment of lease liability financing

(746,583)

(1,118,348)

      Net cash provided by financing activities

39,391,842

3,893,398

Net change in cash and cash equivalents

28,773,277

(2,696,807)

Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of period

6,756

2,715,719

Cash and cash equivalents at end of period

$     28,780,033

$           18.912

 

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SOURCE Serve Robotics Inc.

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Saxon Unmanned Selects IGCS International and Lacks Enterprises for its High-Volume USA Manufacturing Partner for its Platforms

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DALLAS, May 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Saxon Unmanned has selected IGCS International and its strategic partner Lacks Enterprises to deliver high-volume, 100% USA-made production of its flagship UAV platforms: Monitor VTOL, VIPER, Atlas, and Titan.

This strategic partnership immediately accelerates output at IGCS’s fully domestic Grand Rapids, Michigan facilities — an 80,000 ft² advanced composites center, seven injection molding plants with 115+ machines (250–4,400 tons), four electroplating lines, and three high-volume painting & finishing facilities producing over 60,000 parts per day. The result: dramatically faster production rates, significantly lower costs, and uncompromising Made-in-America quality.

Pairing Saxon Unmanned’ s rugged, long-endurance airframe designs with IGCS’s world-class composites, molding, plating, and finishing expertise, the alliance is now scaling delivery for multiple UAV platforms.

“Saxon Unmanned chose IGCS and Lacks for one reason: they deliver the fastest, highest-volume USA production in the industry,” said John Ferguson of Saxon Unmanned. “We will be manufacturing the Monitor VTOL, VIPER, Atlas, and Titan at scale — lighter, stronger, more affordable, and 100% American-made.”

“This partnership fulfills the requirements of USA MADE for America’s Drone Dominance program with rapid, reliable domestic manufacturing,” added Russ Spears, President of IGCS International. “IGCS and Lacks are proud to serve as Saxon’s high-volume production engine — and we have massive available capacity ready for more partners. We invite every forward-thinking drone manufacturer to bring your designs to our Grand Rapids facilities and scale production faster and more affordably than ever before.”

The alliance strengthens U.S. supply chain security, reinforces American manufacturing supremacy, and meets the urgent demand for unmatched unmanned aircraft superiority. IGCS International and Lacks Enterprises are actively seeking additional unmanned systems partners ready to launch at full speed with proven, high-capacity domestic manufacturing.

About IGCS International IGCS International delivers advanced manufacturing solutions to the Department of War and prime contractors. All operations are 100% USA-based in Grand Rapids, Michigan. www.igcsintl.com

About Lacks Enterprises Founded in 1961, Lacks Enterprises is a advanced manufacturing powerhouse with deep expertise in electroplating, high-tonnage injection molding, advanced composites, and high-performance painting & finishing. Operating multiple state-of-the-art facilities in Grand Rapids, Michigan, Lacks delivers Tier-1 quality, high-volume capacity, and unmatched surface engineering capabilities — all 100% Made in America. lacksenterprises.com

About Saxon Unmanned McPherson, Kansas-based designer and manufacturer of rugged, long-endurance UAV systems. saxonunmanned.com

KCR Management provides strategic advisory services and assists qualified companies in accessing financing solutions, including through Bank of America Government Contracting (BofA Gov Con), to support rapid scaling, compliance, and growth.

Media Contact: Russ Spears,
President, IGCS International
Email: russ@igcsintl.com www.igcsintl.com

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NVIDIA Founder, CEO Jensen Huang to Carnegie Mellon University Graduates: ‘Shape What Comes Next’

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Visionary leader behind AI tech delivers keynote, receives honorary doctorate

PITTSBURGH, May 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Carnegie Mellon University conferred more than 5,800 undergraduate and graduate degrees at its 128th Commencement ceremony on Sunday, May 10. Bridging the gap between technological innovation and the transformative power of the arts, these new alumni are ready to address society’s most urgent needs with the bold, collaborative spirit that defines the Carnegie Mellon experience.

Founder and CEO of NVIDIA Jensen Huang, received an honorary Doctor of Science and Technology degree and delivered an inspiring keynote address, articulating lessons learned and offering advice to graduates entering a world of accelerating change.

“You are entering the world at an extraordinary moment. A new industry is being born. A new era of science and discovery is beginning. AI will accelerate the expansion of human knowledge and help solve problems once beyond our reach,” he said. “No generation has entered the world with more powerful tools — or greater opportunities — than you. We are all standing at the same starting line. This is your moment to help shape what comes next. So run. Don’t walk.”

Huang, who has earned a spot on multiple “most influential people” lists in recent years, shared stories from his more than three decades at NVIDIA — a powerhouse underpinning the world’s most advanced AI and accelerated computing. He met with a group of Carnegie Mellon University students prior to the ceremony to learn about their interests and to see research projects they’ve helped to develop during their time at CMU. In his address, Huang encouraged graduates to stay dedicated to their pursuits with unwavering determination.

“Carnegie Mellon has a motto I love: My heart is in the work. So, put your heart in the work. Build something worthy of your education, your potential, and the people who believed in you long before the world did,” he said. “We have the opportunity to close the technology divide — and bring the power of computing and intelligence to billions of people for the very first time. To reindustrialize America and restore our capacity to build. And to help create a future more abundant, more capable, and more hopeful than the world you inherited.”

Carnegie Mellon University President Farnam Jahanian introduced Huang, praising him for continuing to advance a vision of technology as a powerful tool for amplifying what people can create, discover and achieve.

“His influence extends far beyond the technology sector, with tools and platforms that are empowering researchers, practitioners, students, creators and entrepreneurs around the globe to tackle increasingly complex challenges and unlock new possibilities,” Jahanian said.

Inspired by the late Carnegie Mellon professor and Nobel laureate Herb Simon, Jahanian urged graduates to be actors, not spectators, and to shape the future through lifelong learning, open dialogue and faith in humanity.

He went on to offer a parting charge before congratulating members of the Class of 2026 on their accomplishments.

“When the landscape shifts beneath you, make the world your classroom; your canvas; your laboratory; and your stage,” Jahanian said. “Consider all the people who have contributed to your success today and remember to enrich the lives of others in the same way.”

Simi Olusola-Ajayi, a graduating master’s student in Human-Computer Interaction who represented her class at the ceremony, exemplifies Jahanian’s charge. In her remarks, she shared her story about discovering a new path at Carnegie Mellon and exploring the middle — “the space between who we thought we would be and who we are becoming right now.”

“I do not know what middles we will find ourselves navigating next. What rooms we will walk into. What adventures we will stumble into or charge into headfirst. But we get to do so with a masterclass subscription that never expires,” Olusola-Ajayi said. “We get to show up in every room, in every middle, in ways only a Carnegie Mellon education could have prepared us for.”

Her words resonated with Keenan Norton, a newly minted alumnus and Fulbright Scholar with a degree in chemical engineering, environmental and sustainability studies, and Hispanic studies.

“I am equipped with the cultural and political humility that will be required of the engineers of the future to fight for good in ways that are meaningful for and considerate of all stakeholders,” Norton said.

Beverly Da Costa, the first recipient of Carnegie Mellon’s Bachelor of Science in Robotics degree, joined the group of students who met with Huang on Sunday morning.

As graduation approached, she reflected on her time at CMU forging her own new path for the future.

“Problem-solving has been baked into every single class here, and I don’t just mean math problems. I mean resourcefulness,” she said of her CMU experience.

She noted lab research exposed her to the full complexity of real robotic systems — from wiring and electronics to code, testing and failures — while her classes reinforced those lessons through hands-on, experiential learning rather than theory alone.

“That bakes the memories and lessons into your brain in a way that sticks, especially the mistakes,” she said. “I feel ready for what’s next.”

In addition to celebrating its newest alumni, Carnegie Mellon University recognized four prominent leaders during the ceremony. CMU Provost James H. Garrett Jr. conferred honorary degrees upon Huang, as well as 2026 Tony Awards Nominee Broadway producer and CMU alumna Jamie deRoy, International Poetry Forum founder Samuel Hazo and Nobel laureate in economic sciences Thomas Sargent.

About Carnegie Mellon University
Carnegie Mellon is a private, internationally ranked research university with acclaimed programs spanning the sciences, engineering, technology, business, public policy, humanities and the arts. Our diverse community of scholars, researchers, creators and innovators is driven to make real-world impacts that benefit people across the globe. With an unconventional, interdisciplinary and entrepreneurial approach, we do the work that matters.

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MICROIP Unveils “Software-Driven Hardware” Strategy at EEC 2026, Partnering with Poland to Build a Resilient Edge AI & ASIC Supply Chain

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KATOWICE, Poland, May 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — At the 2026 European Economic Congress (EEC 2026), MICROIP Chairman Dr. James Yang participated in a high-level dialogue at the “Poland-Taiwan Economic Cooperation Forum.” Joined by Ambassador Liu Yong-jian and HCG Vice Chairman Michael Chiu, Dr. Yang advocated leveraging Taiwan’s semiconductor prowess to propel Poland into a strategic hub for European Edge AI.

Addressing the “Last Mile” of AI deployment, Dr. Yang noted that global adoption is hindered by fragmented end-user demands and the high cost of general-purpose chips. “MICROIP advocates a ‘Software-Driven Hardware’ approach,” Yang stated, emphasizing translating domain expertise into silicon reality. By utilizing mainstream chip platforms alongside MICROIP’s low-power Customized ASIC Design Services (CATS) and AIVO No-Code platform, engineers can transform specific industry knowledge into specialized applications with minimal barriers. This model has already demonstrated commercial success in autonomous UAV navigation—tracking objects without internet access—and in smart cities, where on-device processing protects privacy while saving critical bandwidth.

The forum highlighted the synergy between Poland’s “Soft Intelligence” and Taiwan’s “Hard Foundations”. Michael Chiu of HCG identified Poland as a core innovation partner for Taiwan’s security industry. Dr. Yang noted that combining Europe’s software talent with Taiwan’s hardware creates a “resilient supply chain,” establishing Poland as an “AI Hardware-Software Innovation Hub”. Furthermore, MICROIP collaborates with its sister company, Arculus System, to provide professional EDA services. This strategic partnership significantly reduces the ASIC R&D-to-mass-production cycle, allowing MICROIP to co-define global AIoT standards while providing European clients with the most cost-effective solutions to meet localized market needs.

“Talent is the ultimate currency of the AI industry; we invest where the talent is,” Yang concluded. Success will be measured by a deep symbiosis of technology and talent, moving beyond simple trade to a thriving industrial ecosystem. This strategic alignment positions MICROIP to bridge technical value with international capital markets, opening a new chapter for the global ASIC and AI software design service industry.

About MICROIP

MICROIP is a Taiwan-based leader in ASIC design services, AI software, and IP licensing. Through its CATS (Custom ASIC Technology & Solutions) and CAPS (Cross-platform AI Processing Service) platforms, it accelerates real-world AI deployment and shortens development cycles. Visit www.micro-ip.com.

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