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Find all the latest news about Phigi in the press, as well as our agenda.
Find all the latest news about Phigi in the press, as well as our agenda.
TechCrunch | Innovation of the Year | May 2025
Out of hundreds of applicants, we're thrilled to be among the top 30 startups recognized for pushing boundaries and redefining industries. This award celebrates bold and visionary startups, and we're honored to be in the running.
Traces Ecrites News | Tuesday, March 25th, 2025
La start-up nord-franc-comtoise continue à peaufiner la mise au point de ses robots miniatures. Prometteuse, la technologie recherche des usages commerciaux à haute valeur ajoutée dans l’univers du spatial.
L'Usine Nouvelle | Monday, March 17th, 2025
Aperçue au sommet Hello Tomorrow, la deeptech française Phigi conçoit des essaims de micro-robots dont la forme programmable pourrait assurer divers services pour les objets en orbite, dont les satellites.
Hello Tomorrow | Aerospace Track | Tuesday, Jan 2st, 2025
Phigi made it to the finals of the Hello Tomorrow Global Challenge!
From 4500 applications, our startup was selected as one of the 7 finalists in the ‘Aerospace’ track supported by Safran.
Le Trois | Special Issue #7 | April 2024
The Montbéliard start-up is working on a breakthrough technology. The company is developing a solution based on a programmable matter linked to digital tools. Thousands of micro-robots can be assembled and disassembled indefinitely.
L'Est Républicain | Thursday, May 23rd, 2024
Based at Numerica in Montbéliard, the four-employee start-up Phigi is working on a revolutionary programmable material, a kind of digital clay made of microbeads that could be of great service to industry in the future. Here's how it works.
L'Est Républicain | Monday, February 26, 2024
On the Montbéliard campus, Numerica offers digital training and tries to make the most out of its services for all types of businesses, including small and medium-sized businesses...
le Journal du Palais | January 23, 2024
Tiny robots that can be linked and assembled into any shape imaginable: that's the Phigi project, led by engineer Rémy Tribhout. Any resemblance to the Disney character Hiro Hamada from the 2015 animated film The New Heroes...