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/ 06.29.2011 12:00AM
Microsoft White Space Partner Neul Raises $12.8 Million
CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND: Neul, a British start-up focused on TV white spaces,
has secured $12.8 million (£8 million) in
venture capital funding. Neul is one of the 10 companies that are members of the
new Cambridge TV White Spaces Consortium, initiated by Microsoft to promote its
white-space data base technology. The group this week announced its first white-space
“tweet.”
European VC firm DFJ Esprit led the funding round for Neul, with IQ Capital and
Cambridge Angels participating. Neul said its
founders and employees have made a
“significant contribution” as well. The BBC, BSkyB, BT, Nokia, Samsung, Cambridge
Consultants, Spectrum Bridge and TTP are members. (See “Microsoft
Angle for Lighter U.S. White Space Rules With U.K. Trial.”)
Neul’s goal is to “unify the fragmented world of machine-to-machine (M2M) communications
with the world’s first white-space radio system and a new, open M2M communications
standard.” Neul said it would soon launch the standard, dubbed “Weightless.” The
company said its technology would enable “a range of services and applications,
from the predicted 50 billion connected M2M devices, through smart metering to local
broadband delivery, transportation and personal health devices.”
Neul said it announced its first product on June 13. It described
NeulNET as “the first radio system
specifically designed for TV white space that meets all FCC/Ofcom regulations. This
allows networks to operate safely and legally within TV white space.”
The Cambridge Consortium was announced Monday, though Microsoft mentioned the U.K.
white-space trials in filings with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission. The
Redmond, Wash., software corporate is in the running to manage a white space data
base in the United States. It urged the commission to finalize white space rules
and select a data base administrator. (
See
“Microsoft Nudges FCC
to Wrap White Spaces.”)
~ Deborah D. McAdams
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