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§ Private Profile · San Jose, CA, USA
Provides hyperconverged infrastructure appliances optimized for Kubernetes and containerized applications, solving networking and storage challenges.
Based in West Palm Beach, Florida, Diamanti develops hyperconverged infrastructure appliances optimized for Kubernetes and containerized applications to address complex networking and storage challenges in enterprise datacenters. The company sells its purpose-built bare-metal platforms exclusively through channel partners, enabling rapid deployment and scalability across the energy, financial services, and cloud computing sectors. Operating with approximately 30 employees during its early growth phase, the enterprise technology firm has secured $78 million in total venture funding, which includes a $35 million Series C round completed in November 2019. Diamanti is backed by prominent institutional investors including Goldman Sachs, CRV, and ClearSky, while maintaining strategic distribution partnerships with technology resellers like CDW and Presidio. Originally operating under the name Datawise.io, the infrastructure company was founded in 2014 by Jeff Chou alongside a team of container technology veterans.
Diamanti has raised $66.0M across 3 funding rounds.
Diamanti has raised $66.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Diamanti has raised $66.0M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Diamanti's investors include Arbor Ventures, CRV, Flex Capital, Team Builder Ventures, Andy Rankin, Goldman Sachs, GSR Ventures, Northgate Capital, Threshold Ventures, Thorsten Claus, DFJ, Translink.
Diamanti has raised $66.0M across 3 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $35.0M Series C in November 2019.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 1, 2019 | $35M Series C | — | Arbor Ventures, CRV, Flex Capital, Team Builder Ventures, Andy Rankin, Goldman Sachs, GSR Ventures, Northgate Capital, Threshold Ventures | Announced |
| Feb 1, 2017 | $18M Series B | Thorsten Claus | Arbor Ventures, CRV, Flex Capital, Team Builder Ventures, Andy Rankin, DFJ, GSR Ventures, Translink | Announced |
| Aug 1, 2014 | $13M Series A | — | Arbor Ventures, Cota Capital, CRV, Engineering Capital, Flex Capital, Foundation Capital, Streamlined Ventures, Team Builder Ventures, Think + Ventures, Andy Rankin, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, Goldman Sachs, GSR Ventures | Announced |
Diamanti is a software development company that builds an enterprise-grade Kubernetes platform for managing container-based hybrid cloud environments. Its core product is a complete Kubernetes stack deployed as a scale-out hyperconverged x86-based appliance (D20), featuring intelligent storage, networking, and orchestration with built-in security, high availability, and resilience[1][2][3]. The platform solves the complexity of transitioning from legacy IT to modern containerized applications, enabling simplified deployment, scaling, and monitoring of Kubernetes workloads on-premises, in hybrid/multi-cloud setups, or with specialized tools like Diamanti TurboAI for ML/LLM models and Ultima Accelerator for high-performance I/O[3][4]. It serves enterprises in finance, healthcare, government, education, manufacturing, and telecom—including clients like the FBI, University of California Berkeley, Alibaba Cloud, and Experian—delivering operational efficiency, cost savings (e.g., over 40% in grid software), and optimized performance like 2.4M+ IOPS at 100µs latency[1][5]. Growth stems from its focus on enterprise-scale Kubernetes adoption, with patented acceleration tech driving digital transformation[4][8].
Diamanti was founded in 2014 in San Jose, California, by a team of technology leaders ahead of the Kubernetes curve—recognizing the shift to cloud-native apps before Google donated Kubernetes to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation in 2015[2][8]. Key figures include CEO Chris Hickey, Principal Architect Alex Bahel, SVP Operations Amandeep S, CFO Arnaldo Perez, and others like Founding Engineer Abhay Singh, with deep expertise in software engineering, operations, platform architecture, and storage[1][7]. The idea emerged from solving container-hybrid cloud challenges; early contributions included the FlexVolume plugin and Kubernetes storage/network scheduler extensions to open-source in 2016, establishing credibility and paving the way for rapid enterprise traction[8].
Diamanti stands out in the Kubernetes space through purpose-built infrastructure and innovations tailored for enterprise demands:
These features outperform generalist platforms like Docker or Platform9 by prioritizing enterprise-grade storage/networking without virtualization overhead[2].
Diamanti rides the explosive growth of Kubernetes as the de facto standard for cloud-native apps, addressing enterprise pain points in hybrid/multi-cloud adoption amid rising microservices, edge computing, and AI demands[1][3][8]. Timing is ideal post-2015 Kubernetes open-sourcing, as firms ditch legacy VMware-like setups for cost-efficient, resilient containers—fueled by market forces like digital transformation, NERC-CIP compliance in energy, and ML scaling needs[3][4]. It influences the ecosystem via open-source contributions (e.g., FlexVolume), enabling faster Kubernetes maturity while competing with Platform9 and Docker through specialized hyperconverged hardware-software stacks[2][8]. This positions Diamanti as a key enabler for sectors like government and finance, where security and on-premises control matter amid public cloud hype.
Diamanti's trajectory points to expanded AI/ML dominance via TurboAI and deeper hybrid integrations, capitalizing on Kubernetes' ubiquity and rising edge/5G workloads. Trends like sovereign clouds, stricter compliance, and GPU-native containers will amplify demand for its performant, appliance-based model, potentially boosting client wins in regulated industries. Influence may evolve toward ecosystem partnerships (e.g., with Alibaba, Lenovo) and acquisitions, solidifying its role in enterprise Kubernetes beyond hype—echoing its prescient founding vision of scalable, secure container platforms[1][3][8].