Imagine youโre a Formula One driver hurtling down a race track at 200 miles per hour when your engineer comes on the radio and says โฆ something. You canโt make it out, but youโre also not going to spend a lap playing out that old Verizon commercial (โCan you hear me now?โ) with the race โ and your life โ on the line.
This is just one problem Norwegian startup Hance is solving with an impressively small and fast bit of audio processing software thatโs already attracted customers like Intel and Riedel Communications, the official radio supplier to F1. Hance is one of the 200 startups selected to show off its technology at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025, which runs October 27 through 29 at Moscone Center in San Francisco.ย ย
The outfit of around 10 employees boasts a wealth of audio industry experience. That includes co-founder Stian Aagedal, whoโs also the CEO of audio editing software company Acon Digital, and Peder Jรธrgensen, who runs sound effects library Soundly.
With artificial intelligence booming, Aagedal, Jรธrgensen, and the rest of the Hance team realized there was an opportunity to leverage these new technologies throughout the audio processing pipeline โ but especially in noise reduction and isolation. So a few years ago they started training their own models on Soundlyโs high-quality recordings, including everything from the roar of F1 cars to the crack-and-rumble of Icelandic volcanoes.
Since then, theyโve been able to shrink the Hance processing models to just 242 kB, meaning they can run on device instead of in the cloud, saving time and energy. Hance says these models can separate sounds, remove noise, echo, and reverb, and enhance speech clarity with just 10 milliseconds of latency.
While other companies offer similar audio processing software, Hanceโs tiny, energy-efficient models can process audio on devices of all sizes in real-time. That makes it great for the radios Riedel sells to F1 or FIFA, and also attractive to law enforcement and defense applications, CEO Joote Hika told TechCrunch in an interview.
Hika sees opportunity for Hanceโs audio processing to go in many more directions, too, now that it has lined up Intel as a partner. Hance has been working with the technology giant to adopt its models to work on different versions of its chips, including its latest โneural processing units.โ The startup is talking with other chipmakers, too, Hika said, and an undisclosed smartphone maker.
Techcrunch event
San Francisco
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October 27-29, 2025
Hika said these professional partnerships will likely last at least a few years and that theyโre non-exclusive. Thatโs good for the startupโs ability to scale, but he said Hance will have to keep developing at a rapid pace to stay ahead of the competition. The company has just brought on its first chief commercial officer, but Hika said he expects Hance to stay heavily focused on R&D, and that the company will preference โAI-capableโ workers to stay lean.
โWe know that we now have an advantage over our competitors, but we definitely have to keep that up, so weโre pushing fast,โ he said
If you want to learn more about Hance โ and dozens of other startups, hearing their pitches, and listening to guest speakers on four different stages โ join us at Disrupt, taking place October 27 to 29, in San Francisco.
Learn more about tickets and pricing here.ย


