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Yospace

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Industry
  
IPTV

Headquarters
  
Staines, United Kingdom

Type of business
  
Private

Founded
  
1999

Yospace cdn2quickplaycomfilesuploads201501Yospace4

Key people
  
Graham Pitman Chairman Tim Sewell CEO David Springall CTO

Tim sewell ceo yospace interviewed at nab show nyc 2016yospace tim sewell


Yospace is a digital video distribution company. Its technology allows live and on-demand video content to be taken to connected devices such as smartphones, feature phones, tablets and to web browsers with user-targeted ad insertion.

Contents

Its clients are primarily broadcasters, multi-service operators, and digital publishers.

Yospace is based in Staines outside London along with many other technology businesses in the so-called M4 corridor.

David springall founder cto yospace


SmartPhone Emulator

Yospace was founded in 1999,. Its first product, the SmartPhone Emulator, released in April 2000, was a WAP handset emulator of the Nokia 7110. The product was unique at the time as it was the only solution available to developers that provided an accurate rendering of the handset display. The SmartPhone Emulator was released as a downloadable developer tool and an applet that could be embedded into a web page. The developer tool allowed simultaneous display of a variety of different handsets including those from Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola.

User-Generated Video Communities

In 2005 Yospace launched a user-generated video community called SeeMeTV in partnership with the mobile operator 3 in the UK, which was launched shortly after as LookAtMe! on the O2 network in the UK. BeOnTV followed on T-Mobile in 2007. The services offered a means for subscribers to send in videos and pictures via MMS into a moderated gallery from which other community members could download and rate the entries. The service charged for video downloads and paid a percentage of the revenue back to the contributors via PayPal. By March 2006, the operator 3 claimed that over £100,000 had been paid back to contributors. The company won numerous awards including being voted Number 1 in “Real Business' Top 50 Companies to Watch in Mobile’, and winning ‘Mobile Innovation Award 2006’ from the Mobile Entertainment Forum. The services since combined into a single community under the name EyeVibe. Yospace sold the service to Australian company Moko.mobi in 2010.

Acquisition by EMAP

In February 2007, the company was acquired by EMAP for £8.7 million. EMAP was subsequently acquired by Europe's largest privately held publishing group H.Bauer Publishing. In March 2009, as part of Bauer Media's strategy review, it sold its interest in Yospace to private investors for £1. During the period under Bauer ownership, Yospace launched yospaceCDS, a SaaS version of the video technology it had been developing for its own consumer services as a platform for digital publishers, media production houses and software developers alike to take video content out to mobile devices.

Yospace Today

Today, Yospace operates as an independently owned business specialising in mobile video innovation targeting three main industry sectors: publishers and broadcasters, developers and digital agencies, and ad networks.

The company is managed by Tim Sewell, CEO and David Springall CTO and co-founder.

BBC, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, GSMA, ITN, Thomson Reuters, Vodafone, CBS Interactive, and Hearst Television have used Yospace technology, and with the most recent addition of BT Sport replacing Microsoft Silverlight.

References

Yospace Wikipedia