Virtual-meeting startup VenueGen is announcing today a virtual meeting platform that is both visually appealing and easy to use. To date, most meeting platforms have been neither.
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It’s pretty simple. You don’t need a webcam and can simply log into a meeting via a browser. There is no download required. Signing up takes a matter of minutes. You create a 3D virtual character, or avatar, simply by uploading a picture. The software maps the image to a 3D model so that the virtual character really looks like you.
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When you’re in a meeting, you can change your point of view. You can look left or right by using a panning control.
Whoever gets this right could score big. Research firm Research 2.0 estimates the 3D avatar market for business will grow to $8 billion in annual revenues in 2014. That doesn’t include the training and collaboration markets.
Crown said nobody has really gotten the combination right. Some aren’t visually appealing, and some go overboard on visual effects at the expense of simplicity and usability. VenueGen focuses on being both engaging and immersive. The avatars have faces; the sound comes from different directions; you can share content. During the meetings, you can use a private browser for cruising the web (no one will know that you’re really using Facebook at a time when you should be listening).
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The company was founded in 2007 and has 10 employees. VenueGen has raised $2 million in angel money, mostly from investors who have made money with Crown and chief executive David Gardner in six other startups — ProviderLink, Peopleclick, Report2Web, DBBasics, BuildLinks, and OnSphere. All of those companies have been successful.
VenueGen has been testing its platform with potential customers for a year. So far, hundreds of companies have requested beta codes. Commercial beta testing starts today. Crown said the company licensed a massively multiplayer online gaming platform with a million lines of code; then VenueGen’s team rewrote about 75 percent of the code to come up with the product.
VenueGen will charge subscription fees of $90 per month for all meetings up to 10 users. If you want meetings for up to 25 people, you have to pay up to $490 per month. For 55 people, it costs $990 per month. Check out our interview with Gardner below.
http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f8/980795693
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