Revel builds a full-stack hardware control platform combining a domain-specific language, command/control interface, and runtime environment. The tech stack reveals a deep embedded-systems focus: Rust, C/C++, industrial protocols (Modbus, EtherCAT, PROFINET, CAN, I2C), and hardware-in-the-loop testing infrastructure. Active hiring across engineering, security, and sales—with mid-to-senior engineers leading the charge—suggests they're scaling both the product (HALs, drivers, certification) and go-to-market in parallel.
Revel provides a hardware control platform for engineers building industrial equipment and embedded systems. The platform spans three layers: an intuitive command/control interface for operators, a specialized programming language for control logic, and a high-performance runtime that executes on edge devices. The engineering focuses on industrial protocol support (EtherCAT, PROFINET, Modbus, CAN), hardware abstraction layers, and hardware-in-the-loop testing systems. Customers deploy Revel systems at their sites to reduce development time and improve robustness. The company operates out of Los Angeles with 11–50 employees, primarily in the US, and is actively hiring across engineering, security, and sales roles.
Revel's tech stack includes Rust, C, and C++ for core platform development. Python also appears in their tooling. The company built a specialized hardware control language as part of its full-stack platform.
Revel supports Modbus, EtherCAT, PROFINET, CAN, TCP/IP, I2C, UART, RS-485, IO-Link, and EtherNet/IP. Projects include developing drivers for industrial protocols and hardware abstraction layers for industrial hardware.
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