Long-range wireless power transmission for industrial and medical devices
Aeterlink commercializes long-range wireless power transmission (up to 17 meters) across factory automation, building management, and medical implants. The stack reveals hardware-software integration maturity: EDA tools (Synopsys, Cadence, Siemens, Keysight ADS) paired with embedded C/C++, cloud platforms (AWS, GCP, Azure), and observability (Prometheus, Grafana, ELK). Engineering dominates hiring (16 of 22 roles), with mid-to-senior seniority balance reflecting both product development and scaling challenges — the active project list shows concurrent effort on IC development, edge computing, mass production infrastructure, and certification, signaling a company racing to move from prototype to certified, manufacturable product.
Aeterlink is a Stanford-originated wireless power company headquartered in Tokyo with 51–200 employees, operating in Japan and Thailand. The product, AirPlug™, transmits power wirelessly up to 17 meters with low angle dependency and bidirectional data communication. Initially focused on medical implants, the company now targets factory automation (pursuing EU certification), building management (entering U.S. market), and medical devices. Current priorities center on mass production system buildout, reliability validation, and international regulatory certification—challenges typical of hardware companies transitioning from R&D to manufacturing scale.
Aeterlink develops AirPlug™, a long-range wireless power transmission technology capable of delivering power up to 17 meters with bidirectional data communication. It is designed for low angle dependency across factory automation, building management, and medical device applications.
Aeterlink uses Go, Python, C/C++, and Linux for software; Synopsys, Cadence, Siemens EDA, and Keysight ADS for hardware design; AWS, GCP, and Azure for cloud; Docker and Kubernetes for containerization; and Prometheus, Grafana, and ELK for monitoring.
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