Newswire Top Stories

LanzaTech NZ Ltd., an Auckland, New Zealand company that uses bacterial fermentation to convert carbon monoxide into ethanol, said it has raised $3.5 million (US) in a first round of funding, led by Silicon Valley’s Khosla Ventures.

The technology will contribute to the cellulosic biofuels business by converting syngas produced through gasification into ethanol, the company said. The company wants to produce ethanol from steel mills, turning carbon emissions into fuels — a market as large as 50 billion gallons of ethanol worth over $50 billion per year.

Two existing New Zealand investors participated.

This funding will support further technology development, establishing a pilot plant, engineering work to prepare for commercial-scale ethanol production, the company said.

From the statement:

“We have proven in our laboratories that the carbon monoxide in industrial waste gases such as those generated during steel manufacture can be processed by bacterial fermentation to produce ethanol,” said Dr. Sean Simpson, Chief Scientist and Founder of LanzaTech.

Doug Cameron, Chief Scientific Officer for Khosla Ventures, will join the company’s board.

The company was co-founded in 2005 by Richard Forster, former Chief Scientist of AgriGenesis BioSciences Ltd., and Sean Simpson, former leader of the biofuels initiative at AgriGenesis Biosciences

Khosla backs LanzaTech, carbon monoxide-to-ethanol company, with $3.5M

Alien Technology, the company in Morgan Hill, Calif., that failed in its audacious effort to go public last year, has raised another $33 million in financing.

Alien filed to go public last year, while losing money on every sale of its radio frequency identification (RFID), and was forced to withdraw when markets wouldn’t support it. See our coverage here. Mark Perry, partner with NEA, a backer of Alien said in November he hoped to raise $50 million for the company, so the latest round raises questions. Its IPO filings showed that from January through March 2006 alone, the company burned through $15.7 million in cash.

Alien couldn’t convince new investors to help it. The latest round of financing came from insiders: Advanced Equities and Sunbridge Partners led the round, which also included Rho Ventures and NEA. The company has raised more than $291 million in its 13 year history, and has yet to make money.

RFIDs are radio tags that can transmit data to a receiver, and are often used to place on products for more efficient supply-chain management.

Alien Technology, struggling radio tag company, raises $33M more

Venrock raises $600M fund for early-stage investing, hires Siminoff

Newswire Venture Capital

Solidcore Systems, a Palo Alto, Calif. provider of technology that tracks and controls changes across a company’s IT systems, has raised $10 million in a fourth round of venture capital financing.

The round was led by JAFCO Ventures, and included existing backers Matrix Partners, Menlo Ventures and Sevin Rosen Funds. Total financing to date is $40 million and, according to a statement by the CEO to VentureWire, the latest round saw a valuation increase of 20 percent.

JAFCO Ventures, a Palo Alto-based venture arm of the Japanese publicly traded venture capital company, will help the company expand in Asian, the company said. Two of its competitors are Tripwire and Active Reasoning.

Solidcore, in a statement, reported the following:

• More than four-times year-over-year revenue growth
• New customer successes that include Los Angeles World Airports, NEC and Motorola

Solidcore raises $10M for tracking changes across IT systems

NearbyNow, the Los Altos, Calif. shopping mall search engine company, announced it has raised $5 million from DFJ and Draper Richards. We reported this two months ago (see story).

NearbyNow, shopping mall search engine, confirms $5M investment

Newswire M&A

Responsys, a Redwood City, Calif. email marketing company, said it has acquired Loyalty Matrix, a privately held provider of predictive analytics and contact products. The amount of the deal was undisclosed.

Loyalty Matrix’s customers include 24 Hour Fitness, Apple, Chicago Sun-Times, and DraftFCB.

Here is a copy of the statement.

Last year, Responsys also acquired Inbox Marketing. Responsys has raised about $62 million in venture backing, from Accel, Foundation Capital, Redpoint and Sigma Partners.

Responsys, email marketing company, acquires Loyalty Matrix

Gordon Murray, of McLaren fame, launches green car venture

murray.jpgRespected Formula One car designer Gordon Murray is working on a secretive car company, and the from the few clues we're getting it will use shape and materials design to make cars more efficient.

The company, based in a suburb an outside of London, UK, is called Gordon Murray Design Ltd., and has gotten more than $10 million in a first round of financing. The money comes from Silicon Valley firm Mohr Davidow Ventures and the U.K's Caparo Group, with which Murray is affiliated. Mohr Davidow has been active supporting other types ... » Continue reading

Siminoff back in the game, joins Venrock

siminioff.jpgIt may take them a while, but the fabulously wealthy from Dot-com boom eventually realize they miss the action.

David Siminoff, the Silicon Valley investor who made billions in the late 1990s by making early investments in America Online, Yahoo and eBay, is the latest to return. The Capital Research investor retired after the boom, and practiced his golf game. Siminoff has dabbled only slightly in the latest Internet wave, backing for example 4INFO, a mobile search service. Now, he's returning to join Venrock as a general partner, as part of that firm's new $600 ... » Continue reading

Roundup: Jobs misled, VoIP on Blackberry, Zude, Twitter grows, more

fredanderson.jpgApple's Steve Jobs dealt setback -- Former Apple finance chief Fred Anderson now says Apple chief executive Steve Jobs misled him about stock option accounting. Story here, and statement by Anderson here. Question: Will this bring down Jobs?

Ram Shriram weighs in on FCC vote on wireless rule changes -- See the Google investor's VentureBeat column, where he advocates the FCC should take the first step toward opening wireless standards and access when it meets later today (Wed). He says the innovation gap will grow, if it doesn't. Separate but related: India ... » Continue reading

Note on RSS feeds

rsspolicy.jpgCouple of housekeeping notes:

1. VentureBeat now has a separate feed for David Hamilton's VentureBeat Life Sciences. It is here.

2. Today we inadvertently mixed our Newswire stories into the main feed. Apologies. They are now separate again.

Southern Cal overtakes New England in start-up activity

northeastsocal.jpgIt's official. Southern California has overtaken New England as the nation's second largest center of start-up activity.

Venture capitalists invested $1.122 billion into Southern California companies during the first quarter, compared to only $984 million into the Northeast companies centered around Boston, according to VentureOne/Ernst & Young. See chart below

Several times over the years, venture capitalists have pumped more money into Southern California than New England companies, but these blips never lasted more than a quarter. This latest quarter (Q1, 2007) was the first time Southern California has remained steadfast in front for three quarters, which ... » Continue reading

CastTV raises $3.1M to launch better video search

casttv.bmpSan Francisco's CastTV, a site that says it can search video better than leading players like Yahoo and Google by turning up Javascript-hidden files and other information, has raised $3.1 million from well-known venture capitalists.

Video search is a huge potential market: Lucrative advertising can be displayed by the search results. Predictably, a gaggle of players are targeting this area. CastTV has yet to launch -- it will do so next month with a testing version, and in summer with a fully public one -- but it has taunted with promises it can ... » Continue reading

Kleiner Perkins repents — goes to China with $360M fund

kpcbchina.jpgKleiner Perkins, one of the most respected venture capital firms in Silicon Valley, but also one of its most parochial, has finally decided to invest in china.

It has just announced a $360 million China Fund, to invest in "high-growth industries," including Internet, media, wireless, health and green technologies. To help it make the investments, Kleiner has hired three partners from the Shanghai venture firm, TDF Capital, and another partner from Softbank Asia Infrastructure Fund.

The announcement tonight comes after VentureBeat learned of the fund more than a week ago, and sought comment from the ... » Continue reading

Roundup: Yu’s wild ride, StumbleUpon, dot-bomb travails and more

Here's the latest action:

yu.jpgThe fast rise of Gideon Yu -- Gideon Yu has reportedly become a junior partner at Sequoia Capital, one of Silicon Valley's most respected venture capital firms. What a ride he's had: He was a Yahoo treasurer until September of last year, when he was scooped up by YouTube to be their chief financial officer, a month before the acquisition by Google, where he apparently played a major role. When negotiating the sale to Google, Yu admitted to Time that he told Google different things about YouTube's budget than ... » Continue reading

Green, the new boom

greentech.bmpThe excitement among green technology investors continues in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling earlier this month on climate change, and Rob Day has a good summary of the latest chatter.

"People are comparing it to the Internet boom of 1999," said one green entrepreneur to the Washington Post, about the ruling, which gives finally gives Congress the right to regulate climate change.

In the majority opinion written by Justice John Paul Stevens, the court said that the EPA's steadfast refusal to regulate greenhouse gas emissions presents a risk of harm to Massachusetts that ... » Continue reading

Frucall, mobile shopping comparison search

frucalllogo.jpgFrucall, a Cupertino, Calif. company is offering a convenient way to check prices for all kinds of products from your cell phone while you're shopping.

Today, in addition to letting you search prices with voice -- by calling 1-888-Dofrucall -- it also launches price search via your mobile WAP browser and texting (SMS).

We tried it out at Starbucks the other day, and it worked great. We found an Italian espresso machine on the shelf, typed in the product's barcode at www.Frucall.com/m on our Treo browser, and hit search. While Starbucks priced it at $19, ... » Continue reading

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J. Peter Wagner, Accel Partners, Forbes Profile

J. Peter Wagner at VentureBeat Rate this dealmaker & see more of their investments

Telecom reform over the last four decades has sparked massive innovation and growth – and helped lead to the vibrant wireline Internet we know today.
However, the wireless world could hardly be more different. Where the Internet’s rise was helped by agreements on open standards and access, the wireless world remains splintered by the “walled gardens” […]

Looking at the rain outside my posh Sand Hill office, my co-founder Jay Bhatti and I wondered how we could assemble the right team to build the company we had envisioned. Every entrepreneur confronts this challenge. The vision, in my opinion, is the easy part. Getting it done is a lot harder. My experience in […]

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