Archive for the 'DigitalMedia' Category



Atari gets Nasdaq delisting notice

Wednesday 26 March 2008 @ 2:19 pm

Atari said it received a delisting notice from Nasdaq. The struggling video game maker said it received a “staff determination letter” from Nasdaq that it isn’t compliant with exchange’s rules and is therefore subject to delisting.

In December, the company had received a notice saying that it needed to have a market capitalization of $15 million in the 10 days preceding March 20 in order to be compliant. This is an ill omen for the Electronic Arts veteran David Gardner now heading Atari, as well as Phil Harrison, the former head of Sony’s worldwide game development who joined Atari last month as head of game development. (our coverage).

Atari plans to appeal, noting that its French parent Infogrames Entertainment plans to acquire all of the outstanding shares of the U.S. division.




Chinese site Yaolan.com raises $17.7M for mommy community

Tuesday 25 March 2008 @ 3:01 pm

The US has already seen its explosion of mom-related sites: Mommy bloggers, social networks, shopping sites and more have proved to be one of the most successful Web 2.0 niches. Now a hefty funding for the Chinese site Yaolan.com from Foundation Capital and NSA Investments, reported by peHUB, makes it look as if China is the next frontier.

Yaolan is a community site, where moms can post pictures of themselves and their babies, take part in polls, read articles and blog posts and find products for their children. The site appears to already have a fairly significant amount of traffic.

Also joining the $17.1 million funding were previous backers Sutter Hill Ventures and Chengwei Ventures. The company has raised a total of $26.1 million to date.




Demand Media sucks in $35M, continuing raise-and-acquire trend

Tuesday 25 March 2008 @ 1:23 am

Demand Media, one of the most heavily funded companies on the internet, has boosted its lifetime total to $355 million with a new $35 million investment reported by peHUB.

While the amount would be shockingly large for almost any other company, it’s a relatively small funding for Demand; for perspective, the new investment is about half what the company payed for the social media tool provider Pluck in a deal reported earlier this month.

Demand is better known for buying large numbers of generic web sites based on the value of their names, then plastering them with advertisements. The acquisition of Pluck makes Demand look as if it might finally be moving to build out its portfolio of domains with content, perhaps partially user-generated.

The source of the newest funding was not disclosed. Demand is based in Los Angeles, Calif.




Stealthy CDN Cotendo gets funding from Sequoia

Tuesday 25 March 2008 @ 12:54 am

There’s not much public on Israeli startup Cotendo, a content delivery network that Sequoia Capital recently invested in, according to Tech Confidential. The Sequoia page on the company simply states that the company offers “better performance and low operational costs.”

Despite the mystery, it seems a pretty sure bet that Cotendo is, like most newer CDN startups, aiming for better video delivery. The company’s founding team, most of whom came from an anti-virus firm called Commtouch, are also members of a Meetup group “dedicated to exploring the IP Video revolution.”

No amount was disclosed for the funding in Cotendo, although it was almost certainly the company’s first, as it appears to have been founded just a few months ago.




Roundup: Search-within-search causes angst, secretive Modu raises $100M, Sun tries optical photonics & more

Monday 24 March 2008 @ 7:10 am

Here’s the latest action:

new-york-times-search.jpgGoogle’s search-within-search bugs some publishers — Apparently some folks such as the Washington Post aren’t looking too kindly on latest feature provided Google which lets people search within publications like the Post directly from Google. The feature, started earlier this month, lets you search for a publication on Google, for instance the Post or other sites like Wikipedia, The New York Times, and Wal-Mart, and then gives you a secondary search bar to search within those sites. Here’s the rub: If you search the Washington Post from that bar for say, “jobs,” you’ll see results for the Post’s employment pages, but also ads nearby for competing job sites like CareerBuilder and Monster.com. The NYT has the story.

Modu, a secretive company with a module that can be inserted into various wireless devices, raises $100 million — The Israeli company is expected to close the round within the “next few weeks,” according to the Globes, which also says the company is valued at a significant $150 million before the investment. The company has raised $20 million to date from Genesis Partners, Gemini Israel Funds, SanDisk and founder Dov Moran. The company hasn’t released many detail, but there’s a video here (or just see below).

Sun gets $44M contract from Pentagon’s DARPA to replace chip wires with laser beams –The wiring between processors on a chip is one of the biggest bottlenecks to increased efficiency in semiconductors. Sun has beat out Intel, IBM, MIT and HP on a government contract to figure out how to use silicon photonics, or light beams, to make chips faster and more efficient.

Will Fed make taxpayers pay more for Bear Stearns? — Shareholders of Bear Stearns, a third of which comprise Bear Stearns’ own employees, were so upset by the deal to bailout Bear Stearns at the low price of $2 per share that they’ve revolted and are pushing for a higher price of $10 per share. This is the bank that got caught up in the worst excesses of the subprime bubble, was apparently literally gambling while the ship sank and refused to participate in bailing out other companies (Long-Term Capital Management) in the past. So why would the Fed would and JPMorgan want to make taxpayers pay the higher price to bail these guys out?

Search arbitrage company Geosign disintegrates after receiving record $160M investment last year – The Canadian company’s saga shows the danger of trying to use an arbitrage strategy with Google’s ads. It was buying Google keywords and sending people to landing pages with Yahoo ads on them. When Google found out about the trick, it changed its terms and shut off Geosign’s ability to conduct its arbitrage. The company’s business model disintegrated. American Capital, the lead investor in the company last year, is looking pretty foolish. Why make an investment in a company that isn’t producing anything of sustainable value? We reported on the company here last year when it raised the money.

The X Prize Foundation offers $10 million to team that produces vehicles that can get 100 miles per gallon or more — Details here. The winning cars must carry four or more passengers and have climate control, an audio system and 10 cubic feet of cargo space. Qualifiers also must have four or more wheels, reach 100 mph, and reach 60 mph in 12 seconds, and have a range of 200 miles.

Battery companies LionCells and Seeo raise cash — Seeo, of Berkeley, Calif., has raised nearly $1 million in capital from Khosla Ventures, to make safe, high-density batteries. This comes after the company (which doesn’t have a web site) took in $1 million last year, according to a California regulatory document cited by VentureWire. Last month, another company, Menlo Park’s Lion Cells, whih makes high-power lithium ion batteries, raised approximately $12 million, according to the SEC. Battery Ventures and Nth Power participated in the second round, according to the filing.

GotVoice, the speech-to-text company, now wants to raise money too — Perhaps jolted by the announcement last week that competitor SpinVox raised $100 million in a carrier land-grab for its own speech-to-text technology, GotVoice is now saying it too wants to raise financing. To give it more time, the Kirkland, Wash. company has raised a $1.78 million a “bridge round” of funding to supplement the $3 million in raised in 2006 from Ignition and other individual investors, according to VentureWire.

Silicon Valley venture firm Morgenthaler Ventures raising funds — The venture capital firm is trying to raise another fund, totaling about $400 million, but VentureWire reports that its firm’s 2001 fund is below median in its performance and suggests investors are on the fence on the firm, founded in the 1960s.