News
PacketVideo Pockets Big Bucks from Tech Firms
- By John K. Waters
- March 26, 2001
The economy may be in a downturn, but at least one startup is bucking the
trend. Wireless multi-media company PacketVideo got a big nod from some industry
heavyweights this week in the form of $90 million in funding. Investors in the
privately held developer of software to streamline video and audio content over
the Internet included Intel, Motorola, Qualcomm, GE, Sun Microsystems, and Texas
Instruments.
Since the San Diego-based company was formed in July 1998, it has raised $145
million, a company spokesperson said. The latest investment alone ranks among
the largest private technology-financing deals this year.
Does this funding frenzy mark PacketVideo as a company to watch? The CEO sure
thinks so. "Our ability to 'beat the odds' by raising significant funds during
poor market conditions is a testament to the quality of our technology, our
people, our partners, and the tremendous market opportunity we face," said James
Carol, chief executive officer and co-founder of PacketVideo. "This new funding
will help to propel us into 2001 and beyond and allow us to continue to execute
on our strategy."
Whether PacketVideo is the company to watch remains to be seen, but this kind
of support from such heavy hitters certainly should put its technology on everyone's
radar. The company makes multimedia playback software for portable wireless
devices. Its MPEG-4 compliant software enables the delivery, management, and
viewing of video, audio, and multimedia applications over current wireless networks
to mobile devices, such as SmartPhones, PDAs, and laptops.
According to Anjeanette Rettig, PacketVideo's VP of corporate communications,
the attention the company's technology is getting lets it be selective about
investors. "A lot of the investors we have are also partners or customers of
the company," Rettig said. "We look at these investment relationships on a much
more strategic level that just the investments themselves."
PacketVideo is working with such wireless semiconductor providers as ARM,
Intel, Lucent Technologies, QUALCOMM, Texas Instruments, and Zucotto Wireless.
The company recently announced that its PVPlayer decoding software will ship
with Mitsubishi Electric's new Trium Mondo, one of the world's first integrated
GPRS/GSM mobile phone/PDA devices. PacketVideo's software also operates on laptops
and on Microsoft Pocket PC devices, including the Compaq iPAQ, Casio's CASSIOPEIA,
and the Hewlett Packard Jornada.
Rettig says that the company's primary competitors are Real Networks, Microsoft
and Apple, all of which are already making streaming multimedia software for
wired networks.
The company filed for a $64 million initial public offering of stock in March
2000, at the peak of Wall Street's passion for tech-related IPOs. But the company
withdrew the offering in late April, because of "unfavorable market conditions."
The funds from this round of financing will be used to further PacketVideo's
growth, provide working capital, fund research and development, and support
additional resources for engineering, sales, and marketing.
About the Author
John K. Waters is a freelance writer based in Silicon Valley. He can be reached
at [email protected].