There's a dirty secret inside every CAD tool running in every engineering org on the planet right now. Whether it's SolidWorks, CATIA, NX, Creo, or even the "modern" upstarts like Fusion 360 and Onshape — the geometric brain underneath all of them is a piece of software called a B-Rep kernel, and in most cases that kernel was written in the 1980s. Parasolid, the kernel inside SolidWorks and NX, shipped in 1988. ACIS, which powers Fusion 360 and AutoCAD, is from the same era. These are COBOL-era codebases lurking inside the tools your hardware team uses to design next-generation products.
Michael Baron looked at this situation — having spent years building Raptor combustion simulations and Dragon spacecraft guidance systems at SpaceX, then tuning GPU drivers at Apple — and decided the right move was to throw it all out and start over. Aurorin CAD (YC W2026) is his one-person attempt to do exactly that: a mechanical CAD system with a brand-new parametric B-Rep kernel, built from scratch for modern CPUs and GPUs, with an AI agent baked in at the architecture level rather than bolted on afterward.
This is either the most ambitious solo YC bet in the W2026 batch, or the most technically insane. Possibly both.
What They're Building
Aurorin CAD is a native desktop mechanical CAD application targeting hardware companies and design engineers. It runs on Mac and Windows, is free to download, and offers team licensing via contact. It does what every other CAD tool does — you model parts, define constraints, build assemblies — except it claims to do it dramatically faster and with AI assistance that isn't just an afterthought plugin.
The target customer is the mechanical engineer at a hardware startup who's been burned by SolidWorks licenses costing $4,000 per seat per year and has watched teammates lose half a day waiting for a complex assembly to open. Aurorin's pitch is blunt: a part that takes an experienced SolidWorks user 20 minutes to design takes seconds in Aurorin. YC's own framing is even more direct — they call it "Claude Code for mechanical engineers."
The business model is freemium with team upsell. Free solo tier gets you in the door. Team licensing (pricing undisclosed) scales with the org. The go-to-market is clearly land-and-expand: win the scrappy hardware startup that can't afford SolidWorks, then grow with them. The long-term prize — the Boeing procurement relationship — is years away and probably irrelevant to the near-term thesis.
How It Actually Works
There are two genuinely hard technical bets baked into Aurorin, and they compound on each other in interesting ways.
