-->
Save your seat for Streaming Media NYC this May. Register Now!

Facebook Acquires Video Encoder QuickFire for Undisclosed Amount

Article Featured Image

Social network Facebook acquired QuickFire Networks, a startup that specializes in video encoding, on Thursday for an undisclosed sum. The acquisition is another step in Facebook's transformation to online video powerhouse. QuickFire's proprietary low-bandwidth video encoding technology will help Facebook reduce file sizes, stream smaller files to its growing base of mobile viewers, help mobile viewers avoid data cap issues, and let videos load faster on any device.

According to a note on the QuickFire site, the company will now wind down operations, and "key members" will join Facebook, writes company CEO Craig Y. Lee. The company is based in San Diego, California. The purchase seems to be as much about acqui-hiring encoding pros as gaining the company's proprietary technology. Clearly, Facebook has no interest in running QuickFire as a business.

TechCrunch reports that QuickFire's proprietary technology "relied on custom motherboards built to accommodate 11 high-end Intel Core i7 processors. Custom software let these processors work in unison, and a layer on top of that let the startup massively scale up by distributing work among multiple motherboards."

Facebook now streams over one billion video views each day, the QuickFire note says. Facebook videos auto-start, a change the company put in place last year.

Streaming Covers
Free
for qualified subscribers
Subscribe Now Current Issue Past Issues
Related Articles

Facebook Announces Ad Revenue Sharing for Major Video Partners

The social network continues to take aim at YouTube, this time enticing handpicked video partners with a percentage of ad revenues.

Facebook Announces Embeddable Video Player, APIs at F8 Conference

Ten pre-selected launch partners are already using the APIs, letting publishers distribute video to Facebook with more control than before.

Facebook Challenges YouTube With Similar Video Page Layout

YouTube's One Channel design has inspired Facebook to create a similar video layout for brands, which will roll out to all Facebook Pages soon.

Facebook to Acquire LiveRail for an Undisclosed Amount

The social network is rumored to be paying between $400M and $500M for the online video platform, and wants to deliver targeted ads.