Does anyone have a general idea of if $65m is typical, or larger or smaller than the usual funding amounts for these kinds of industry targeted "boring" software?
Despite the framing, I think Dyad's role is more to fill in the areas where Simulink is a pain to use and has been wrangled into shape for lack of better options, than to replace it. The agentic part can be a big pull though, if they can get it to reliably produce what the user, eg. the engineer, asked for, without having to spend more time correcting it than they'd have spent writing or laying it out. Seems plausible because this is a specialized niche-purpose AI, but still not 100% certain it can get there IMO.