老九品茶

Technology

Posted on October 6, 2017 by staff

‘Game-changing’ tech entrepreneur runs into cash crisis

Technology

A tech entrepreneur who believes his聽video compression platform could change the world聽says he could be evicted after failure to pay his rent for six months.

Edinburgh-based聽Paul Gardiner has ploughed 拢110,000 of his own money into developing the Eoovi platform, which he says can reduce file sizes by up to 93 per cent.

However now he says he needs聽to secure new funding and has spoken to 老九品茶Cloud in the hope that someone will come forward.

Gardiner has developed apps and software for the likes of the BBC, Wimbledon, Clydesdale Bank, Stella Artois and Network Rail over the last decade, while simultaneously working on Eoovi.

Eoovi, which Gardiner and his business partner Brian Higgins have聽focused on full-time for the last 18 months, is planned for a full release聽before February, initially as a video hosting platform similar to YouTube.

鈥淏roadband speeds have been getting faster and faster, but at the same time companies have been churning out bigger file and video sizes,鈥 he told 老九品茶Cloud.

鈥4K HDR is on the precipice of being a standard on the web now. For an hour-long film you鈥檙e talking about a 25 gigabyte file size 鈥 even with a 10 megabit-per-second connection, you鈥檙e going to struggle.

鈥淚t鈥檚 always going to be a problem. The faster connections become, the more data companies will try to shove down people鈥檚 necks.

鈥淭o stream the 4K through Netflix, they recommend that the minimum internet speed you need devoted to that video connection is 24Mbps. Our target using Eoovi compression is 1Mbps for the same quality video.鈥

He added: 鈥淚n healthcare, for example,聽you could drastically reduce the size of space needed to store medical imagery. Space becomes irrelevant.

鈥淭hese things have a knock-on effect on a global scale: parts of the world don鈥檛 have the internet because they can only get a 0.5Mbps connection. We could bring education to those areas as well as internet and video: HD would work on a half-meg connection using out platform.鈥

However Gardiner, who is talking to investors with Higgins, has run into financial problems.

Manchester-based Higgins was brought into the business 18 months ago after Gardiner performed work for his former business GameDay.

鈥淏rian and I work on Eoovi from when we get up in the morning until 2am. We鈥檙e living and breathing this because we know what it can do,鈥 Gardiner continued.

鈥淚鈥檝e put 拢110,000 of my own money into this, not including my time, so I haven鈥檛 paid my rent for six months. I鈥檓 at risk of getting evicted in the next few weeks.

鈥淲e鈥檙e speaking to investors but we don鈥檛 want to allow our personal situations to affect our business decisions and give away parts of it on the cheap.鈥

Subscribe to our newsletter

    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google and apply.