Intel
Corporation’s global investment organization, today announced at
the Intel
Capital Global Summit investments
in 16 technology companies. Totaling approximately $62 million, the
investments cover a broad spectrum of innovative technologies.
“Intel
Capital invests in the technology continuum that runs from wearables
and the Internet of Things to big data analytics – and everything
in between, including silicon, smart devices, PCs, the cloud and
datacenters,” said Arvind
Sodhani,
president of Intel Capital and Intel executive vice president. “We
are focused on helping innovative companies develop across this
technology ecosystem, and we expect to invest a total of $355 million
this year.”
Sodhani’s
announcement came at the opening of the 15th annual
Intel Capital Global Summit. The venture capital industry’s premier
networking event convenes more than 1,000 founders and CEOs from
Intel Capital’s global portfolio, Global 2000 business executives,
and industry influencers for two days of company building. This year,
the invite-only event featured distinguished speakers including
former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, Stanford President
John L. Hennessy, record-setting polar explorer Ben Saunders and
former Federal Communications Commission Chairman Reed Hundt.
The
founders of the newest portfolio companies run the gamut from
13-year-old Shubham Banerjee, who has invented low-cost Braille
printers for the blind using Legos and Intel Edison chips; to Sundari
Mitra, a 25-year semiconductor industry veteran who is now running
her second startup; to Earnest Earon, a rocket scientist whose new
company uses unmanned aircraft and cloud-based software to perform
data analytics for agricultural, emergency response and other uses.
More
on the new investments, grouped by technology sector:
New
Devices/Wearable Computing
Avegant
(Redwood City, California), developing the next generation of
wearable devices, is bringing to market the Glyph, a mobile personal
theater that uses a micromirror display with built-in premium audio.
Glyph raised more than $1 million in its Kickstarter campaign earlier
this year.
Braigo
Labs Inc.
(Palo Alto, California, U.S.), founded by 13-year-old
entrepreneur and middle schooler Shubham Banerjee, provides
scientific and technological services by researching and developing
technology-based innovations and services. Its products include
Braigo v1.0, a Lego Braille printer that dramatically reduces the
price of a printer from more than $2,000 to $350 for education,
teaching and home-use purposes.
Eyefluence*
(Reno, Nevada, U.S.) transforms intent into action through your eyes.
The company's robust, low-power, eye-tracking technology, with its
iUi interaction model, integrates into any augmented reality or
virtual reality head-mounted display (HMD) to provide natural,
intuitive eye tracking and control.
Mobility/Wireless
AnDAPT
(Santa Clara, California, U.S.) brings a new genre of analog adaptive
products for multifunction sensor integration and integrated system
power management, enabling enterprise customers to achieve lowest
power consumption, smart power management, high integration, high
system reliability and lower cost.
Audyssey
(Los Angeles, U.S.) is a leader in research-based audio technologies
that correct acoustical problems to improve the sound quality of any
device or listening environment. The company’s technologies are
integrated into home theater products, automobiles, TVs, mobile
phones and movie theaters from industry-leading manufacturers.
Incoming
Media
(Santa Clara, California, U.S. and Sydney, Australia) is a mobile
video platform that uses predictive data analytics and intelligent
content pre-loading to learn how a viewer consumes video on a mobile
device and delivers a personalized mobile video experience with no
interruption.
INRIX
(Kirkland, Washington, U.S.) leverages big data analytics and
predictive technology to help automakers, corporate fleets,
governments and news organizations reduce the economic and
environmental toll of traffic congestion.
Screenovate
Technologies
(Israel) offers mobile solutions that cover entertainment,
productivity and education. Among other applications, its technology
enables smartphone and tablet users to wirelessly beam movies, games,
presentations or other content from their mobile devices to their TVs
or other large displays.
Thundersoft
(China and Taiwan) is a mobile OS core technology and solution
provider that accelerates product development by providing leading
technology and services, specifically for Android smartphone and
tablet services. [Investment subject to satisfaction of closing
conditions.]
Advancing
Microprocessor and SoC Development
NetSpeed
Systems
(Mountain View, California, U.S.) offers a system-on-chip (SoC)
design platform and advanced on-chip network solutions that let SoC
architects create designs that are significantly smaller and more
power-efficient in a fraction of the usual time.
Reno
Sub-systems
(Canada) designs, develops and delivers subsystems used to control
process systems made by OEMs, including vacuum-based chambers to
deposit and etch specialty materials needed in advanced integrated
circuit fabrication.
Big
Data and Cloud Infrastructure
Gigya
(San Francisco, U.S.) makes a cloud-based customer identity
management platform that helps customers turn unknown Web or mobile
visitors into loyal and engaged customers.
PilotTV
(Taiwan) is a digital signage network operator that designs, deploys
and jointly operates digital signage systems for retail venues,
operating over 6,000 screens in various channels including
convenience stores, fast food chains, drugstores and rapid transit
stations.
PrecisionHawk
(Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S.) is an information delivery company
that uses a small, unmanned aerial vehicle and cloud-based software
to collect, process and analyze aerial data. Its solution provides
actionable information to clients in civilian industries.
Prelert
(Framingham, Massachusetts, U.S.) packages data science into
downloadable applications for everyday users. It uses
machine-learning predictive analytics to learn the normal behavior
patterns of populations of individual users, devices and resources.
Stratoscale
(Israel) develops new technology to rethink next-generation data
centers. It is building the runtime software infrastructure for
scalable computing to help customers use all available computing
resources and unify computing and storage across the data center.
In
addition, Intel Capital announced Ossia
(Redmond, Washington, U.S.) has joined the Intel Capital portfolio.
Cota*, Ossia’s smart antenna technology, redefines wireless power
by safely delivering remote, targeted energy simultaneously to
multiple devices as far away as 30 feet without line of site
and regardless
of whether a device is stationary or moving.
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