London-based deeptech startup Computle has raised £500,000 in a pre‑seed round led by British cloud entrepreneur Mark Boost, bringing the company’s lifetime funding to £700,000. According to the original report and the company’s announcement, the capital will be used to accelerate international expansion and scale Computle’s subscription service of high‑performance remote cloud workstations for creative, architectural and engineering teams.

Computle was founded in 2020 and offers virtual workstations that the company says reproduce the responsiveness and throughput of on‑premise high‑end machines for compute‑heavy tasks such as 3D rendering, CAD and animation. Industry reporting notes the startup has been used on projects ranging from national infrastructure planning to major television productions and award‑winning architecture, positioning the firm in sectors that increasingly favour cloud‑first workflows driven by hybrid working and globally distributed talent.

In its announcement Computle states the product is configurable across CPU and GPU profiles and supports dual‑4K endpoints, and the company highlights partnerships with storage providers and adherence to ISO 27001 security standards as part of its commercial offering. The company also named deployment regions including London, New York and Singapore and claims its approach can deliver cost reductions versus alternative arrangements.

“Computle is tackling a real challenge with impressive ingenuity,” said investor Mark Boost in Computle’s announcement. Jake Elsley, the founder and CEO, added in comments to Tech.eu that “Mark instantly recognised the future we’re building,” and argued Boost’s experience in scalable infrastructure will help the startup redefine workflows in the architecture, engineering and construction sector.

The raise comes against a backdrop in which general‑purpose cloud remains concentrated among a handful of hyperscalers. Industry analysis summarised by CRN, drawing on Synergy Research Group data, shows Amazon Web Services still commanding roughly a third of global cloud market share, with Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud following — a concentration that leaves room for specialised, vertical providers to target niche, performance‑sensitive workloads. At the same time, demand for GPU capacity and AI‑driven services is expanding the addressable market for infrastructure that can be tightly optimised for graphics and simulation tasks.

That optimisation often leans on GPU‑accelerated virtual workstation technology. Vendor materials from NVIDIA describe how virtual workstation software pairs data‑centre GPUs with virtualisation to deliver performance comparable to physical workstations, enabling remote real‑time collaboration, graphics‑intensive simulation and virtual production workflows — the very capabilities Computle says it delivers to designers and visual‑effects professionals.

Market moves by specialist providers underscore that vertical approach. Recent industry coverage of CoreWeave’s acquisition of Conductor Technologies, for example, highlights how GPU‑focused infrastructure combined with orchestration tools can simplify cloud rendering pipelines and reduce time‑to‑render compared with generic hyperscaler setups — a commercial rationale that mirrors Computle’s proposition to studios and engineering teams.

Computle’s new capital and a strategic backer with a track record in cloud and hosting services give it runway to expand globally, but the competitive landscape is crowded. The company claims advantages in low latency, pre‑configured stacks and sector integrations; realising those at scale will require continued engineering work, partnerships with GPU and storage vendors, and a sales push into firms that remain cautious about migrating high‑value, compute‑intensive workloads to the cloud.

If Computle can convert its early case studies into repeatable customer wins, it will join a growing cohort of niche cloud providers that aim to supplement — rather than supplant — the large hyperscalers by offering purpose‑built experiences for design, simulation and content creation. For now, the investment signals investor appetite for infrastructure plays that underpin creative and engineering pipelines even as much of the venture spotlight in 2025 has centred on generative AI and software‑first startups.

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Source: Noah Wire Services