Building software used to be about writing code. Today, for engineering teams, it is often an exhausting exercise in chasing context. As products scale, the original intent behind a feature gets easily lost between planning boards, code repositories, and deployment pipelines. Good engineers end up spending hours untangling dependencies, fixing hidden breakages, and simply trying to figure out why a piece of code was written in the first place. It is a daily friction that drains the joy out of creating.
Cubyts is stepping in to bring that clarity back.
Founded in Bengaluru by Aurobinda Pradhan, Raghu Sarangarajan, and Shashank Deshpande, Cubyts is an intelligent platform that acts as a living memory for an engineering team’s entire software development journey.
Cubyts builds a real-time, semantic map of how everything connects — from the initial product requirement to the final code and release. It uses AI to constantly monitor this map. If a developer’s code starts drifting away from the original design intent, or if a small change might quietly break something downstream, the platform catches it early and offers the exact context needed to keep things aligned.
What makes Cubyts so special is its deep empathy for the builder’s workflow. It doesn’t force teams to abandon their current tools or learn heavy new processes. Instead, it quietly bridges the gaps across existing systems, preventing frustrating rework and protecting the momentum of the engineering team. It replaces daily guesswork with quiet confidence.
The market? Scaling tech companies and large enterprises that want to ship incredible products fast, without letting the complexity of their own systems slow their people down.
Aurobinda, Raghu, and Shashank are true change agents. They understand that at the heart of every great product is a team that needs focus, not operational headaches. Watching them take on the massive, complex puzzle of software delivery is a beautiful reminder of the sheer grit our homegrown founders possess. They are quietly taking on the larger agenda to ensure the future of engineering is built on alignment and trust.
Let’s celebrate the builders.
w/ Jay Ingle & Dikshant Joshi