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§ Private Profile · Fremont, CA, USA
Tactus Technology is a technology company.
Tactus Technology develops a dynamic, haptic touchscreen interface that allows physical buttons to emerge from a flat surface. This technology integrates a transparent, microfluidic layer over display panels, which can be selectively inflated or deflated to create tactile shapes on demand. It provides users with tangible, physical feedback, enhancing interaction and improving accuracy for tasks like typing or navigating without looking at the screen.
The company was founded in 2008 by Craig Ciesla and Micah Yairi, driven by the insight that while touchscreens offered immense flexibility, they lacked the crucial tactile sensation of physical buttons. Their vision was to bridge this gap, offering the best of both worlds: the adaptability of a digital interface with the reassuring feel of physical controls. The founders aimed to overcome the limitations of purely visual touch interaction.
Tactus Technology’s solutions are intended for integration into a wide array of touchscreen devices, including mobile phones, tablets, and automotive systems, targeting users who benefit from improved tactile feedback. The company envisions a world where digital interactions are more intuitive and efficient, bringing a new dimension to human-device interaction by combining the versatility of software with the certainty of physical input.
Tactus Technology has raised $37.5M across 3 funding rounds.
Tactus Technology has raised $37.5M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Tactus Technology has raised $37.5M across 3 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $13.5M Other Equity in April 2014.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 17, 2014 | $13.5M Venture Round | Wistron | — | Announced |
| Jan 1, 2014 | $18M Series B | — | Redpoint Ventures, Thomvest Ventures, Tiemin Zhao | Announced |
| Dec 1, 2011 | $6M Series A | Thomvest Ventures | Tiemin Zhao | Announced |
Tactus Technology developed a groundbreaking tactile user interface for touchscreen devices, creating on-demand physical buttons that rise from a flat, transparent surface using microfluidic technology.[1][2][4] The company targeted device manufacturers for integration into smartphones, tablets, gaming devices, and more, solving the problem of flat touchscreens lacking tactile feedback for precise input like typing.[1][2] It raised $59.42M in unattributed VC funding, with the last round at $4M, but is now listed as a deadpooled startup.[1]
The product served consumers frustrated with virtual keyboards, offering customizable, stable buttons that appear and recede invisibly, enhancing usability without altering underlying displays or sensors.[2][4] Early demos in 2012 generated buzz for potential in mobile and automotive applications, but the company ceased operations, with its founding CEO later joining other tech firms.[1]
Tactus Technology emerged around 2012 from Fremont, California, as an innovator in user interfaces, co-founded by its CEO who invented the polymer morphing screen technology.[1][2] The idea stemmed from addressing touchscreen limitations—flat surfaces hard to use blindly or in low-light—leading to a demo video proclaiming the end of "flat" touchscreens.[2] Key early traction included unveiling the Tactus Tactile Layer at industry events, backed by over 22 patents (eventually 111 filed) in polymers, thermoplastics, and related fields, plus partnerships pitched to device makers.[1][2][4]
Pivotal moments featured microfluidic prototypes showing QWERTY keyboards rising on demand, positioning it for 2013 consumer electronics integration.[2][4] Despite funding and hype, the startup deadpooled, with its leader moving to roles at Kaiam and Illumina in photonics and microfluidics.[1]
Tactus rode the early 2010s touchscreen dominance wave post-iPhone, targeting haptic feedback as a key trend to bridge physical and virtual inputs amid complaints over virtual keyboards' imprecision.[2][4] Timing aligned with rising smartphone/tablet adoption, where market forces like fragile screens, battery drain, and sunlight readability amplified demand for tactile enhancements without bulk.[4] It influenced UI innovation by proving deformable surfaces feasible, inspiring later haptic tech in devices, though its deadpool left commercialization to successors in microfluidics and polymers.[1]
The startup highlighted ecosystem needs for better touch interaction, paving for integrations in gaming, navigation, and autos, even as competitors advanced vibration-based haptics.[2]
Tactus Technology's tactile breakthrough remains a visionary "what if" in UI evolution, but its deadpool status closes the chapter on commercial dynamic buttons.[1] Legacy lives in patents and alumni driving microfluidics at firms like Illumina and Lightwave Logic, potentially resurfacing in advanced displays or wearables.[1] Trends like foldables, AR glasses, and precise VR input could revive similar tech, evolving Tactus' influence from pioneer to foundational inspiration—echoing how its "now you feel it, now you don't" demo once promised to redefine touchscreens.[2][4]
Tactus Technology has raised $37.5M in total across 3 funding rounds.
Tactus Technology's investors include Wistron, Redpoint Ventures, Thomvest Ventures, Tiemin Zhao.