Git-based hardware: electronics design trends video interview

AllSpice co-founder and CEO Valentina Ratner sat down with Supplyframe’s Majenta Strongheart on The BOM podcast. They covered AllSpice - what the solution is, how it came about, and hardware collaboration processes on the platform.

AllSpice.io team
| Co-Founder & CEO
| Co-Founder & CTO

,

| Co-Founder & CTO
| Co-Founder & CEO
January 2, 2026

Hardware video interview highlights

Can you give us a brief overview of AllSpice?

At a high level, AllSpice is a collaboration platform for electrical engineers, hardware engineers, and PCB designers. AllSpice uses git-based revision control through a central hub for collaboration – it features asynchronous design reviews, issue tracking, and releases, with analytics and automation. The solution is essentially Github, but made for engineering teams to develop electronics more efficiently – rather than text-based code, think PCB, schematics, and BOMs.

Tell us a bit more about your background, and what drove you and your co-founder to create the hardware development platform

Valentina has a mechanical engineering background and worked at Amazon as a project manager, while Co-founder, and CTO Kyle Dumont has an electrical engineering background with experience working at iRobot. Together, the pair makes “one full stack developer.” They met while completing a dual-degree program at Harvard University. After being exposed to the software world and its native tools, increased project quality, deceased timelines, and high employee satisfaction rates, it was clear that hardware workflows needed a boost in efficiency. And the use of PDFs, excel sheets, large email threads, post-it notes, and screenshots was due for a tune-up. So, Kyle and Valentina pushed to build better processes for hardware engineers.

Why was Git the right choice for automating the workflows of hardware engineers?

Allspice uses Git protocol to power their platforms’ revision control. They chose Git due to several factors. The first one is that the hardware industry was already beginning to shift to Git from SVN. The second reason is Git puts various teams into a shared infrastructure, making it easier to collaborate with, for example, firmware or software teams. It encourages a common language and methodology between the teams, creating a seamless experience. The last reason behind choosing Git was the desire to provide native integration for ECAD tools.

Why do you think a hardware development tool like AllSpice did not already exist?

Previously, in product development, most of the limitations resided in the manufacturing side, taking significant time to get products back – this made tools that may have the ability to operate faster inessential. The innovation that is currently occurring enables a quicker process – teams are prioritizing doing more with less, driving efficiency in the PCB Design process.

Another reason why a similar platform has not existed before AllSpice is the lack of resources. Recently, the AllSpice team ran a survey asking hundreds of engineers what the biggest blocker is for them when adopting Git for hardware, and several respondents were simply unsure of where they could learn about it.

Watch the full interview here:

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Headshot of a team member

Valentina Ratner

Co-Founder & CEO

At heart, I’m an engineer. I love building real world things and improving the way we build them. Early in my career, I watched capable teams build complex systems using archaic workflows that had not really evolved. AllSpice.io started as an effort to change that and bring modern software practices, and now AI, into hardware development. These days, I don’t build products hands-on anymore, but I get to see them come to live through the teams we support. Originally from Argentina, I moved to Boston for school and earned a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Boston University followed by an M.S. in Engineering with a focus on Computer Science and an MBA from Harvard. I now live in San Francisco with my husband, young son, and very sassy miniature schnauzer.

Headshot of a team member

Kyle Dumont

Co-Founder & CTO

I've always been obsessed with building, innovating, and finding novel solutions for emerging technologies. Since early in my career, I've loved the synthesis between physical hardware and digital integration electrical engineering offered, and spent many years taking hardware products from concept to mass-manufacturing. I started AllSpice.io to ensure hardware engineers have all of the data they need to make impactful decisions at their fingertips. I live in the Boston area, and hold a BS in Electrical Engineering from Northeastern University, a MS in Engineering with a focus on Computer Engineering and Machine Learning and an MBA from Harvard, and 5 patents in hardware system integration and sensor design.

Headshot of a team member

Valentina Ratner

Co-Founder & CEO

At heart, I’m an engineer. I love building real world things and improving the way we build them. Early in my career at Amazon, I watched capable teams build complex systems using archaic workflows that had not really evolved. AllSpice.io started as an effort to change that and bring modern software practices, and now AI, into hardware development. These days, I don’t build products hands-on anymore, but I get to see them come to live through the teams we support. Originally from Argentina, I moved to Boston for school and earned a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Boston University, an M.S. in Engineering (Computer Science), and an MBA from Harvard. I now live in San Francisco with my husband, young son, and very sassy miniature schnauzer.

Headshot of a team member

Kyle Dumont

Co-Founder & CTO

I've always been obsessed with building, innovating, and finding novel solutions for emerging technologies. Since early in my career, I've loved the synthesis between physical hardware and digital integration electrical engineering offered, and spent many years taking hardware products from concept to mass-manufacturing. I started AllSpice.io to ensure hardware engineers have all of the data they need to make impactful decisions at their fingertips. I live in the Boston area, and hold a BS in Electrical Engineering from Northeastern University, a MS in Engineering with a focus on Computer Engineering and Machine Learning and an MBA from Harvard, and 5 patents in hardware system integration and sensor design.

FAQs

Quick answers to common questions about this topic.

What is Git-based hardware development?

It is the use of Git workflows to manage hardware design files and collaboration.

Why is Git influencing hardware design?

Because it improves version control and aligns hardware with software practices.

What trends are emerging in hardware development?

Increased collaboration, integration with software workflows, and automation.

How do interviews help engineers?

They provide insights into real-world practices and industry trends.

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