Dernière minute
FRIncendies dans les Pyrénées-Orientales : le feu n'est pas fixé, 4 900 hectares brûlés et des renforts aériens attendusFRFifa rejette le recours belge contre le repêchage de BalogunFRNouvelle vague de chaleur en France : le thermomètre s'affoleFRProcès de streameurs à Nice après le décès en direct de Jean PormanoveFRAccueil des enfants de l’ASE : un amendement de LFI voulait supprimer l’exclusion automatique des personnes fichées pour terrorisme, une députée LR «indignée»FRKylian Mbappé répond aux insultes racistes d'une sénatrice paraguayenneFRRéseaux sociaux : la loi française interdisant l'accès aux moins de 15 ans jugée non conforme au droit européenFRFrance's proposed ban on social media for under-15s clashes with EU lawFREmmanuel Macron en Syrie pour une visite inéditeFRLogement étudiant : la plupart des annonces en ligne enfreignent l'encadrement des loyersFRIncendies dans les Pyrénées-Orientales : le feu n'est pas fixé, 4 900 hectares brûlés et des renforts aériens attendusFRFifa rejette le recours belge contre le repêchage de BalogunFRNouvelle vague de chaleur en France : le thermomètre s'affoleFRProcès de streameurs à Nice après le décès en direct de Jean PormanoveFRAccueil des enfants de l’ASE : un amendement de LFI voulait supprimer l’exclusion automatique des personnes fichées pour terrorisme, une députée LR «indignée»FRKylian Mbappé répond aux insultes racistes d'une sénatrice paraguayenneFRRéseaux sociaux : la loi française interdisant l'accès aux moins de 15 ans jugée non conforme au droit européenFRFrance's proposed ban on social media for under-15s clashes with EU lawFREmmanuel Macron en Syrie pour une visite inéditeFRLogement étudiant : la plupart des annonces en ligne enfreignent l'encadrement des loyers
Newsgather
BackAI Notetaker Plaud Claims 2 Million Devices Sold, $100M ARR
AI Notetaker Plaud Claims 2 Million Devices Sold, $100M ARR
En développement
TechCrunch16.06.2026Tech2 dk okumaUnited States

AI Notetaker Plaud Claims 2 Million Devices Sold, $100M ARR

L'essentiel

  • AI hardware company Plaud reports selling over 2 million notetaking devices and achieving an annualized revenue run rate of over $100 million.
  • The company targets professionals by offering screenless gadgets that record and summarize meetings, differentiating itself from software-only AI solutions.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

Plaud is an AI hardware company focused on creating AI-powered notetakers for professionals, aiming to succeed in a market with few established hardware successes.

Taille de police

There aren’t many success stories to refer to when it comes to AI hardware. Plaud, which makes AI-powered notetakers, is trying to become one by targeting professionals who take a lot of meetings. The company said it has sold more than 2 million of its devices, including Plaud Pins and credit-card-styled gadgets that stick on the back of the phone. It also said that its subscription business has reached over $100 million in annualized revenue run rate.

Plaud pointed out that many AI companies often rely on digital documents and prompts typed from memories. Its argument is that its devices, which don’t have any screens, help people have conversations in real life and recall important points along with summaries and action items later.

“Most AI companies have scaled through software behind a screen. We took a different path. The conversations that actually move things forward don’t happen on a keyboard. We built the interface for the post-screen world. And the market validated it,” said Nathan Xu, co-founder and CEO of Plaud.

Last year, the company launched the $179 Plaud Pro, and this year, it added the new Plaud Pin S at a similar price. Besides hardware, the company has accelerated its software development, too. Earlier this year, it launched a desktop app that can take Granola-style notes via system audio for online meetings. Last month, it also introduced Plaud Teams with shared memory to target enterprises.

Plaud users can buy the hardware and get 300 minutes of transcription for free. However, if someone has many meetings a day, the free limit is likely to run out quickly. For extra minutes and other features, users can get monthly, annual, or add-on plans. Xu told TechCrunch that its revenue is largely powered by nearly 50% of the device users upgrading from the basic plan to the pro or unlimited plans.

The company doesn’t yet sell standalone software subscriptions. That means, typically, it’s the users who own a Plaud device who are buying its paid plans.

Questions ouvertes

  • Long-term sustainability of the hardware-centric model?
  • Market adoption beyond early adopters?
  • Competitive landscape evolution?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by TechCrunch.

Articles liés

Anthropic Removes Secret Tracker After Privacy Breach in Claude Code
En développement·30 dk önce

Anthropic Removes Secret Tracker After Privacy Breach in Claude Code

Anthropic removed a secret tracker from Claude Code after a researcher exposed it. The AI firm used "prompt steganography" to hide code that flagged Chinese users' timezone, proxy, and potential ties to Chinese AI labs accused of distillation attacks. Anthropic claims it was an experiment to prevent account abuse and distillation, but privacy advocates view it as a serious breach of trust.

Ars Technica
Plus sur ce sujetAI hardware