Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
picoChip, the leading supplier of semiconductors and software for
femtocells, today announced that it has passed the milestone of one
million chips sold and is on track to achieve over 50%
quarter-on-quarter sequential revenue growth this calendar quarter. To
support expansion plans and strengthen the company’s balance sheet
during this period of exceptional growth the company has secured $20m of
additional equity funding.
The growth in demand for the company’s products is driven by the
picoXcell™ product family that is powering the global deployments of 3G
femtocells. With the growth in mobile data traffic, these low-cost
plug-and-play infrastructure devices are increasingly viewed as the key
to the architecture of all future cellular networks, and have created a
multi-million-unit opportunity for picoChip products. picoChip is the
only company today shipping large volumes of femtocell silicon, with 25
femtocell customers and products supporting the HSPA+, LTE and TD-SCDMA
cellular standards.
“As we execute against our plan we have raised additional equity funding
that will set the company on an even steeper growth curve,” said Nigel
Toon, CEO of picoChip. “A major shift is happening in the cellular
market, creating big opportunities for picoChip. With our field-proven
technology, volume shipments and fast revenue growth, this investment
allows us to move aggressively to grasp those opportunities.”
As part of its growth plans, picoChip is adding engineers at its
development centers in Bath and Beijing, and will move to a new
headquarters in Bath, UK. The plans also include accelerated product
development in key areas such as LTE, HSPA+ and self-organizing networks.
In a heavily over-subscribed funding round, picoChip’s existing
investors Atlas Venture, Highland Capital Partners, Intel Capital, Pond
Ventures, Rothschild, Samsung, and Scottish Equity Partners all
participated.
“This is an exciting time in picoChip’s life,” commented Jonathan
Brooks, picoChip’s Chairman. “Our newly strengthened balance sheet gives
us a solid platform on which to base the next phase in the company’s
development.”
“The rapid take-up of smartphones and other always-connected devices,
the huge growth in data traffic on 3G HSPA networks and the transition
to LTE and 4G are disruptive changes for the cellular market,” added
Nigel Toon. “Technology advances like ‘flat architecture’ and ‘small
cell’ will mean a radical shake-up in the established landscape.”
In addition to residential and enterprise applications, femtocells’
plug-and-play self organizing network technology is also being applied
to extend high speed 3G/4G services into buildings and public spaces and
to expand coverage and capacity in metro and rural areas.
Twelve cellular network operators, including Vodafone, Softbank and
AT&T, have launched femtocell offerings. Of these, the majority use
picoChip silicon. picoChip has secured over twenty-five femtocell
customers including Alcatel Lucent, Sagem, Ubiquisys and ip.access.
Research from industry analyst ABI indicates that over 60 carriers
around the world are engaged in femtocell trials and evaluations, that
more than 50% of US households are interested in femtocell products, and
that femtocell shipments will exceed 40M units by 2014.
About picoChip picoChip is enabling the next generation of
wireless infrastructure. Its picoXcell™ family of optimized silicon
devices is the leader in the fast growing market for femtocell access
points. Its picoArray™ family of flexible wireless processors is the
leading solution for OFDMA-based network equipment, and is backed by
comprehensive software support for global standards such as EDGE, HSPA,
HSPA+, TD-SCDMA, WiMAX, LTE, cdma2000 and GSM. Located in Bath, UK and
Beijing, China, picoChip is re-shaping mobile networks.