
What’s the story?
Mojo Vision, formerly focused on smart contact lenses, raises USD $17.5M for its micro-LED AI infrastructure platform.
Why it matters
The approach offers higher bandwidth and lower power consumption for increasingly demanding AI systems.
The bigger picture
The micro-LED platform targets use cases beyond data centers, including distributed and orbital computing systems.
In General XR News
April 2, 2026 – Mojo Vision, a developer of a micro-LED platform designed to enable artificial intelligence (AI) applications, has recently announced that it has secured a USD $17.5 million strategic investment. The funding round was led by Future Ventures, a venture capital firm co-founded by Steve Jurvetson.
The investment follows last year’s USD $75 million financing round for the company and is intended to accelerate the development and commercialization of Mojo Vision’s micro-LED platform for next-generation AI infrastructure.
According to the company, as AI workloads scale, data center interconnects face bottlenecks where bandwidth density and power efficiency become limiting factors. Mojo Vision’s micro-LED technology is designed to enable a new class of optical I/O (input/output), delivering massively parallel connectivity with higher bandwidth density and lower energy per bit.
The architecture replaces lasers with dense arrays of micro-LEDs, allowing for thousands of optical channels to operate in parallel. Mojo Vision stated that this approach increases bandwidth density while lowering energy consumption. The company added that the technology offers a more scalable path than traditional interconnect methods, particularly for distributed and orbital computing systems where hardware weight and power efficiency are primary constraints.
The strategic investment builds upon a previously announced collaboration between Mojo Vision and Marvell. Together, the companies are working to develop high-density micro-LED connectivity solutions specifically for AI data center infrastructure.
“AI infrastructure is reaching fundamental limits in bandwidth density and power efficiency, and incremental improvements are no longer enough,” said Nikhil Balram, CEO of Mojo Vision. “Our micro-LED platform was purpose-built to overcome this tradeoff, enabling thousands of optical lanes in a compact footprint and unlocking major gains in bandwidth while lowering energy per bit. This investment accelerates our path to bringing a new class of optical interconnect solutions to market.”
Steve Jurvetson, Founder and Managing Director of Future Ventures, added: “Mojo Vision is rethinking optical interconnects from first principles. By replacing lasers with dense arrays of micro-LEDs, the company’s approach has the potential to deliver dramatic gains in bandwidth density while reducing energy per bit.”
To find out more about Mojo Vision and its micro-LED technology, please visit the company’s website.
Image credit: Mojo Vision
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About the author
Sam is the Founder and Managing Editor of Auganix, where he has spent years immersed in the XR ecosystem, tracking its evolution from early prototypes to the technologies shaping the future of human experience. While primarily covering the latest AR and VR news, his interests extend to the wider world of human augmentation, from AI and robotics to haptics, wearables, and brain–computer interfaces.