Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Tag: online video

DEMO 09 – Interview With DEMO Presenter BitGravity

Graeme Thickins of Tech~Surf~Blog interviews Perry Wu, CEO of BitGravity, at the DEMO ’09 conference, which was held March 1-3, 2009, in Palm Desert, CA.

This interview was with a company that both presented on stage (for a second year running), and provided technology for the event — specifically, the video streaming technology behind the “DEMO Live” broadcast, which was enjoyed by a worldwide audience over the past two days. I managed to run down BitGravity’s CEO, Perry Wu, to tell us more about his growing content distribution startup.

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Download the MP3

More Good News re: Minnesota Startups

Another of our local startups has announced a $5-million early-stage funding. The Mpls/St. Paul Business Journal published this article online on December 1 (may require subscription to their print edition–booo!), about Swarmcast receiving an initial round of funding from Japanese VC firms. Why Japan, you might ask? Well, because there’s even higher interest in the company’s technology for downloading HD-quality video in that country than in the U.S., which is behind Japan in broadband technology and adoption.

I’d actually known about this funding for close to a year — which would make it the worst-kept secret in the Minnesota startup community. But I chose way back not to break any news about it, deferring to my friends at the company, who had some reason for delaying the announcement. Perhaps their thinking was they were way out in front of the market, anyway, so why not let it catch up a bit? Or maybe they picked up on the fact that BitTorrent was announcing its own financing on the same day — this one for $20 million — and decided they should synch up with that, for better PR value or something. [Note: regarding BitTorrent, the Business Journal article states that the swarming technology developed by SwarmCast’s predecessor company, Onion Networks, “has since been modified and used by popular peer-to-peer file-sharing company BitTorrent,” but that “the product Swarmcast now plans to launch is based on entirely new technology.”]

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Whatever, this is more great news for Minnesota’s startup community! It proves again that money finds us, and that such fundings don’t always mean startups have to move to either coast to get their growth-fueling booty. [You know I’ve been chronicling the determination of another startup, Flyspy, to also disprove this commonly held theory.]

SwarmCast’s funding comes on top of two other $5-million+ Series A rounds for MN companies, which were announced almost back-to-back in the early summer: Jumpnode and HotGigs. I blogged about both companies here. Which makes me think…let’s see, that means at least three pretty big deals were brewing as much as a year ago (such financings typically are in the works for months before they’re announced). And — with the vibrancy of the tech sector having picked up markedly all year — just what all else may now be going on behind the scenes here locally as far as renewed venture financing interest in Minnesota’s Internet and IT startups?

That, my friends, is where a large part of my focus will continue to be. In fact, I’m already onto one such story you will find very interesting — another positive sign that the climate is indeed getting better. [Okay, I’m not talking about our weather! 🙂 …]

In the meantime, congratulations to my friend (and former client) Justin Chapweske, founder of locally grown SwarmCast, for making Minnesota proud. Justin, SwarmCast rocks!

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Brightcove Is No YouTube Wannabe – It’s Bigger

My friend Jeremy Allaire busted out of the gates again today with a story that’s all over the web about his firm Brightcove, which is not just any old startup. Jeremyallaire It’s backed by Barry Diller’s IAC/InterActiveCorp and America Online, among others. And it boasts a management team with senior execs from Allaire, Macromedia, ATG, Comcast, Lycos, News Corp., MediaVest, and Discovery Networks. The firm just announced the launch of its Brightcove Network, which is aimed at what it calls “video prosumers” — the ranks of which are dead certain to be growing. I know for sure that will include me, but it won’t be just us tech-savvy folks.

As background, you may recall I published an interview with Jeremy earlier this year, onsite from the PC Forum conference in San Diego. And I also chatted at dinner one night there with his PR people, who had recently secured a front-page feature on Jeremy in the Wall Street Journal. Then, this morning, my buddy Mark Druskoff shot me an email on all this Brightcove attention today (he’s the former editor of Minnesota Business magazine, now working in Texas). He also pointed out that Barry Diller will likely earn the distinction of being this year’s highest paid executive. Yes, and a good guy for Jeremy to have on his board.

Here’s the latest Brightcove news as the WSJ covered it today (subscribers only), and CNet did a piece as well. For other background, here’s a TechCrunch post just out by Marshall Kirkpatrick, and a great wrapup on what it all means from Forbes.com, entitled “AnotherTube.”

Call it the revenge of the media industry. This is about professional video, or at least semi-professional — something more polished than raw crap, anyway. Brightcove1 Let’s face it, consumer-generated video is hardly what everybody wants to spend most of their time watching on the Internet going forward! Hey, this broadband video thing is just getting going. And no firm, startup or otherwise, is better positioned than Brightcove to take advantage of what will be a very, very BIG market — all kinds of video, from professional on down to user-generated. Brightcove3 Think online video marketplace, with every angle covered…and everyone makes money. Unique concept, huh? Making money. Quick, somebody get the YouTube-Google folks on the line — they’ll want to look at this!

I think Abbey Klaassen of Ad Age gets it right today in her commentary, in which she doesn’t hold back the optimism of her employer on this news: Meet the Next Media Mogul: Jeremy Allaire.

I would not bet against her being right.