Sunday, January 12

Tessl raises $125M at $500M+ valuation to build AI that writes and maintains code

videobacks.net

Many and larger have taken crack at artificial to . Now, another is coming out of shadows to throw its into the , with a to fix the many that arise when humans and those AIs are all code together.

Tessl is building what it describes as an “ native” that and their can use to create and maintain software, and it opened up a waitlist for those interested in trying it out. 

say “is building” for a good reason: Tessl' has yet to , and the plan is to have it ready early next . But the -based startup is now a more about what it's doing with some fanfare: Tessl has quietly raised $125 million across a and a , both being announced for the first . The latest round is led by , with , GV, and Boldstart participating. GV (aka Ventures) and Boldstart co-led the seed round.

has confirmed with multiple sources that Tessl's is of $500 million.

As you might have surmised, one reason why a without nor a shipped product is getting this kind of from -shelf VCs is because of who is building it. 

Tessl's and is Guy Podjarny, a whisperer of sorts. His last startup was Snyk, a that was last valued (in 2022) at $7.4 . Before that, he was the CTO of , a role he took after Akamai acquired his first startup, Blaze, which focused on speeding up loading times. 

“Podjarny is incredibly and thoughtful about his ,” said Carlos Gonzalez-Cadenas, the at Index who led the . “He's very, very good [at ] developer and building developer-oriented businesses.”

Podjarny said in an that the for Tessl arose from his at Snyk. 

Snyk focuses on detecting (and fixing) in code, and Podjarny observed that a similar issue was becoming more urgent with code and software overall — in particular because of the rapid of code written automatically by AIs. 

“What is AI doing to software ?” he recalled asking himself. The answer was: speeding it up, but also creating much more of it automatically. The process of maintaining and to that code would the complexity and of . This ends up having a lot of bad implications (security, , , ) for . “The more that formed in my , the more knew I would build this,” he said.

The startup's name, Tessl, is a reference to “,” Podjarny said, as it aims to sure that software and the code behind it neatly together, rather than exist in a messy,

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