Kalray

[8][9] In May 2023, the IP-CUBE project that is led by Kalray won the "Technological Maturation and Demonstration of Embedded Artificial Intelligence Solutions" label under the "France Relance 2030 – Future Investments" plan.

On 22 June 2015, Kalray began the distribution of data center acceleration board families: TurboCard and KONIC,[13] for networking and storage applications, both of which can be programmed with either standard C or C++.

However each chip is called a "MPPA" for "massively parallel processor array": Produced in 2013 in CMOS 28HP technology from TSMC, this SoC (or System-on-Chip) runs at 400 MHz and contains 256 VLIW processing cores.

Produced in 2015 with the same CMOS 28HP technology from TSMC, this SoC running at 550 MHz was enhanced to increase the floating-point performance of the VLIW cores, to natively support the Linux operating system, and to process high-speed Ethernet (up to 80 Gbit/s).

[22] The Coolidge2 DPU Processor was released in 2023 and is aimed at LLMs, with an additional focus on efficient usage of NVME storage.

[23] In 2017, ahead of the launch of Kalray's third-generation microprocessor, Safran[24] and Pengpai joined the company's historical investors (mainly CEA Investissement, ACE, INOCAP).