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§ Private Profile · São Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Vidia is a technology company.
Vidia Systems, Inc. provides technology solutions optimizing commercial operations for pharmaceutical and biotech companies. The firm specializes in configuring CRM platforms like Veeva and Salesforce, offering data mart and business intelligence services. It also develops custom web and dashboard designs, enabling life science clients to enhance operational efficiency and gain actionable insights.
Dave Johnson founded Vidia Systems in 2013, leveraging over two decades of industry experience. He identified a critical need in the life sciences sector for expert technical support in complex commercial processes. Johnson’s insight was to establish a firm applying deep domain knowledge to craft tailored solutions, addressing operational nuances for pharmaceutical and biotech organizations.
Vidia Systems serves diverse clients across pharmaceutical and biotech industries, assisting with commercial intricacies. The company envisions itself as an indispensable partner, continuously evolving its offerings. This commitment ensures life science enterprises achieve enhanced agility, precision, and commercial effectiveness.
Vidia has raised $2.8M across 2 funding rounds.
Vidia has raised $2.8M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Vidia has raised $2.8M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $2.0M Seed in September 2022.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 1, 2022 | $2M Seed | Caravela Capital | Andreessen Horowitz, NFX, Preface Ventures, Sand Hill Angels, Adam Gross, Charles Zedlewski, Nkechi Iregbulem, Robert Witoff, Spencer Kimball, Aimores Investimentos, Head And Heart Capital, K50 Ventures, NIU Ventures, Verve Capital | Announced |
| Jan 21, 2021 | $750K Venture Round | Canary Ventures | Aimor | Announced |
Nvidia (likely intended as "Vidia," a common misspelling of the company's name pronounced "en-VID-ee-ə") is an American multinational technology company and the global leader in accelerated computing, particularly graphics processing units (GPUs) for AI, gaming, data centers, professional visualization, and automotive applications.[1][3] It builds a full-stack platform including hardware like Blackwell and Rubin GPUs, networking (InfiniBand, Spectrum-X), software such as CUDA and NVIDIA AI Enterprise, and services like Omniverse for digital twins and NIMs (NVIDIA Inference Microservices) for easy AI deployment.[2][5] Nvidia serves hyperscalers, enterprises, game developers, automakers, and researchers, solving compute-intensive problems in AI training, inference, supercomputing, autonomous vehicles, and robotics—powering over 80% of AI GPUs and 75% of TOP500 supercomputers while generating $130.5 billion in FY2025 revenue, with data centers at ~90%.[1][3][4] Its growth momentum is explosive: 114% revenue rise in FY2025, leadership in agentic AI via Isaac GR00T and Cosmos, and projections for $1 trillion data center revenue by 2028.[1][2]
Nvidia was founded in 1993 by Jensen Huang (current CEO), Chris Malachowsky, and Curtis Priem over a meal at a Denny's in San Jose, California, initially to solve the "3D graphics problem" for the emerging PC gaming market.[1][2][3] The pivotal moment came in 1999 with the GeForce 256, marketed as the world's first GPU, which ignited the PC gaming boom and redefined computer graphics.[2][3] From gaming roots, Nvidia evolved in the early 2000s by investing over $1 billion in CUDA, enabling GPUs for parallel computing beyond graphics into AI, supercomputing, and professional visualization.[1] This shift accelerated with AI's rise, transforming Nvidia into a full-stack AI infrastructure powerhouse by 2025, as highlighted at GTC 2025 with Blackwell Ultra, Vera Rubin chips, and robotics models like Isaac GR00T.[1][6]
Nvidia rides the AI industrial revolution, re-architecting data centers into "AI factories" for intelligence manufacturing, amid exploding demand for agentic AI, humanoid robotics, and digital twins—fueled by hyperscaler buildouts and enterprise adoption.[1][5][6] Timing is ideal post-2025 Blackwell ramp and Rubin roadmap, as AI shifts from training to inference/agents, with Nvidia controlling 89% of compute/networking revenue growth (up from 55.9% in 2023).[4][5] Market forces like $100T industry digitalization, 6G telecom convergence, and on-premises AI (no data residency issues) favor its full-stack moat over rivals.[2][3][5] It influences the ecosystem profoundly: enabling 75% of supercomputers, powering Siemens/BMW factories in Omniverse, and sparking GPU-native networks, while its $4T+ market cap peaks underscore AI's platform shift.[1][5]
Nvidia's trajectory points to sustained dominance, with Rubin architecture in 2026 boosting agentic AI, robotics (GR00T expansions), and Omniverse as "Physical AI OS"—targeting $1T data center revenue by 2028 amid AI factories proliferating globally.[1][2] Trends like enterprise NIM adoption, 6G AI-RAN, and HBM4 memory will shape it, potentially evolving Nvidia from chip leader to AI infrastructure "power plant" for a $1T+ opportunity, despite volatility like its record $600B one-day loss in January 2025.[1][3][5] As the architect of intelligence, Nvidia remains pivotal for tech's next era, transforming industries from a gaming GPU pioneer into AI's indispensable engine.[2][6]
Vidia has raised $2.8M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Vidia's investors include Caravela Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, NFX, Preface Ventures, Sand Hill Angels, Adam Gross, Charles Zedlewski, Nkechi Iregbulem, Robert Witoff, Spencer Kimball, Aimores Investimentos, Head and Heart Capital.