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Vidyo
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Vidyo, Inc., founded as Layered Media, provides software-based collaboration technology and product-based visual communication products. It is currently owned by Enghouse Systems.[1] The company's VidyoConferencing products are the first in the videoconferencing industry to take advantage of the H.264 standard for video compression, Scalable Video Coding (SVC).[2]

Key Information

The firm's implementation of this technology enables video communication across general purpose IP networks.[3]

History

[edit]

Vidyo was founded by Ofer Shapiro,[4] who had developed the first IP video conferencing bridge and programmable gatekeeper technology at Radvision.[5] He left Radvision in early 2004 to develop improved video conferencing networks. Packet loss and latency that accompanies general purpose IP networks posed significant challenges to the existing systems. Costly dedicated networks and expensive Multipoint Control Units (MCU), which exacerbated delay due to transcoding or forced all endpoints to conform to the least common denominator endpoint quality, were the only products the industry had to offer at that time. He realized that to take advantage of state of the art H.264 compression technology, the fundamental technology behind video conferencing systems had to change. Shapiro's efforts resulted in a paradigm shift for the video conferencing industry - a new system architecture. It was based upon Scalable Video Coding (SVC) which allowed for error resiliency which was absent in monolithic encoding schemes that were common throughout the industry.[6] Implementation of SVC for only some system components offered little value. The full benefit of SVC required re-designing both the endpoint (client) and MCU (server), a costly and time-consuming proposition for incumbent providers of video conferencing systems. Unencumbered by a legacy product line, Shapiro developed a new architecture in which the MCU was replaced with a low-cost router and all of the encoding and decoding was done at the end points.

At the end of 2004, Shapiro obtained support from Avery More[7] in early 2005; and secured seed funding by October 2005, led by on Bayless[8] of Sevin Rosen Funds. Operating in stealth mode through the beginning of 2007, Shapiro's team created a video conferencing product with HD quality video, that effectively addressed the interactivity inhibiting delay common in legacy systems, and enabled each end point to send and receive at its highest quality levels, irrespective of the other end points and the network. Layered Media licensed its technology to its first OEM customers early in 2007.

In June 2007 Layered Media secured series B funding,[9][10] with Rho Ventures joining in to lead the round. Shortly after Layered Media changed its name to Vidyo, Inc.

By the beginning of 2008, Vidyo emerged from stealth mode with a product offering for the enterprise market and an annual licensing price model.[11]

In the first quarter of 2009, Vidyo raised another round of funding, led by Menlo Ventures joining Rho Ventures, Sevin Rosen Funds, and Star Ventures.[12]

In early April 2010, the company announced another $25 million from their Series C round of financing, bringing the total amount of capital raised by the company to $63 million since its founding in 2005. All existing investors, Menlo Ventures, Rho Ventures, Sevin Rosen Funds and Star Ventures, participated in the round, which was led by Four Rivers Group.

In May 2010, Vidyo launched its Software Development Kit (SDK), enabling developers to build multipoint video conferencing applications into Android and Moblin-based smart phones and tablets running Intel Atom Processor Z6xx series-based platforms (formerly Moorestown) and on ARM processor-based platforms.

In June 2010, at Infocomm in Las Vegas, Vidyo demonstrated the first videoconferencing system to attain 1440p (decode), at 2560 × 1440p resolution, in an HD multiparty video conference via general purpose IP networks.

A few days later, the company announced a partnership[13] with HP to expand the HP Halo portfolio to include conference room and desktop endpoints that run on enterprise networks.

In May 2012, Vidyo announced a fourth round of funding securing $22.5 million bringing the total amount invested to $97 million.[14]

In April 2013, Vidyo announced a fifth round of funding securing $17.1 million bringing the total amount invested to $116 million.[15]

In March 2016, Vidyo integration was added to KioWare Kiosk System Software, creating a video conferencing kiosk solution.[16]

On May 15, 2019 it was announced that Vidyo, Inc. was acquired by Enghouse Systems Limited (TSX:ENGH) for a purchase price of approximately $40 million. Vidyo's current annual revenue is approximately $60 million.[17]

Products

[edit]

Video-chat service for Nintendo's Wii U game console was co-developed with Vidyo, Nintendo European Research & Development and Nintendo Software and Nintendo Software Technology. VidyoRouter is an appliance that performs the packet-switching function. The VidyoPortal is a Web-based environment used to access and manage the VidyoConferencing system and accounts from anywhere with internet access. VidyoDesktop is a software-based endpoint, managed via VidyoPortal, able to support HD quality video. HD-200 is a High Definition room system endpoint. The HD-100 is an entry-level High Definition room system endpoint. Both of these products are managed by the VidyoPortal and interoperate with VidyoDesktop users.[citation needed]

VidyoGateway is an appliance used to connect legacy video conferencing systems with the VidyoConferencing network. The VidyoCampus Program is used by colleges and universities to deploy the system to every desktop throughout their collaboration community. VidyoHealth is a scalable high-definition telemedicine product that uses the public Internet and existing general purpose IP networks at medical facilities for doctor-patient and doctor-doctor interactions.[citation needed]

References

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from Grokipedia
Vidyo is a software-based video conferencing and collaboration platform that enables secure, scalable real-time video communications over standard IP networks, utilizing innovative Scalable Video Coding (SVC) technology to adapt video quality dynamically to varying bandwidth conditions without requiring dedicated hardware. Founded in June 2005 by Israeli entrepreneur Ofer Shapiro in , initially as Layered Media before rebranding to Vidyo, the company pioneered the commercialization of the H.264 SVC standard in videoconferencing products like the VidyoRouter, which earned a 2010 Technology Innovation Award from for disrupting traditional hardware-dependent systems from competitors such as and Polycom. In May 2019, Vidyo was acquired by Enghouse Systems Limited, a Canadian software company, for approximately $40 million, integrating it into Enghouse Video to expand offerings in enterprise video management, , and cloud-based services serving over 1,700 customers across industries including healthcare, government, finance, and education. Vidyo's solutions, such as VidyoConnect for team collaboration and Vidyo.io for embedding multiparty video into applications, emphasize , low latency, and compliance with standards like HIPAA, supporting deployments in over 100 countries and fostering innovations in mobile-first and hybrid work environments. As of 2025, Enghouse Video (incorporating Vidyo) was recognized as a Representative Vendor in Gartner's Market Guide for Video Platform Services.

History

Founding and early years

Vidyo was founded in 2005 in , originally under the name Layered Media, Inc. The company emerged during a period when the videoconferencing industry was dominated by expensive, hardware-dependent systems, prompting the founders to pursue innovative software alternatives. The key founders were Ofer Shapiro, who served as CEO and had previously invented the first IP video conferencing bridge and programmable technology during his eight years at RADVISION; Alex Eleftheriadis, appointed as Chief Scientist and a leading expert in video coding standards; and Isaac Levy, who contributed as a co-founder focused on . These individuals brought complementary expertise in video , compression algorithms, and to address limitations in existing multipoint conferencing solutions. From its inception, Layered Media—later rebranded as Vidyo—concentrated on developing software-based video conferencing systems leveraging H.264 Scalable Video Coding (SVC) to deliver multipoint high-definition video over standard IP networks, eliminating the need for proprietary hardware. This approach aimed to make high-quality video communication more accessible and scalable, particularly for enterprise and service provider applications. In the mid-2000s, the company faced significant challenges in shifting the videoconferencing market from rigid, hardware-centric architectures—often requiring dedicated MCU (multipoint control unit) devices—to flexible, software-defined systems that could adapt to varying network conditions. Early efforts involved overcoming bandwidth constraints and issues inherent in IP-based environments, while the nascent SVC standard required substantial R&D to mature for real-time applications. Despite these hurdles, Vidyo's focus on open standards positioned it to disrupt the industry by enabling cost-effective, device-agnostic video solutions.

Growth and milestones

Vidyo secured funding through five rounds from Series A to E, culminating in a total of $116 million by . Key investors included Menlo Ventures, Rho Capital Partners, and QuestMark Partners, among others. This capital supported product development and market entry, positioning Vidyo as an emerging player in software-defined video conferencing. A pivotal milestone occurred in June 2010 at InfoComm in , where Vidyo demonstrated the first multiparty videoconferencing system achieving resolution at 60 frames per second over IP networks. The showcase featured Vidyo's H.264 Scalable Video Coding on an i7 processor, delivering 2560 x without and with low latency, requiring just 4 Mbps bandwidth. This innovation highlighted Vidyo's focus on high-fidelity, accessible video over standard networks, becoming available in software version 2 shortly after. During the 2010s, Vidyo expanded into enterprise sectors, including healthcare and . In healthcare, Vidyo's platform gained traction for applications, with deployments across U.S. health systems by 2017 to enable secure virtual consultations. In , the technology supported secure video for military branches and public agencies, emphasizing and compliance. These adoptions underscored Vidyo's shift from a startup to a leader in scalable, software-based video solutions. By 2019, Vidyo had grown its annual revenue to approximately $60 million and employed around 275 people. The company had filed over 170 patents worldwide, reinforcing its market position in adaptive video technologies.

Acquisition and integration

On May 15, 2019, Enghouse Systems Limited announced the acquisition of Vidyo, Inc. for approximately $40 million in cash, marking a significant expansion for both companies in the video communications sector. Prior to the deal, Vidyo reported annual revenue of approximately $60 million and held more than 170 video communications patents. The strategic rationale centered on Enghouse's goal to strengthen its video conferencing and collaboration portfolio by integrating Vidyo's scalable, API-driven solutions, which aligned closely with Enghouse's focus on sectors such as healthcare, , and . Vidyo's operations continued seamlessly under the newly formed Enghouse Video division, preserving its core technology while leveraging Enghouse's global resources for enhanced service and support. Following the acquisition, Vidyo underwent as part of Enghouse Video, with its products integrated into a broader that includes Enghouse's existing tools like Qumu for enterprise video and Mediasite for video recording and streaming. This consolidation streamlined offerings, enabling cross-product synergies such as secure video embedding and analytics across platforms, without reported major disruptions to customer deployments. From 2020 through 2025, Enghouse Video emphasized advancements in and enterprise video solutions, capitalizing on heightened demand during the with solutions like VidyoHealth for remote clinical care. Usage surged, including a 1,349% growth in mobile sessions in 2020, supporting deployments in healthcare, , and without any notable divestitures or further acquisitions of the Vidyo assets. In 2025, Enghouse Video was recognized in Gartner's Market Guide for Video Platform Services. By late 2025, the division continued to prioritize secure, cloud-based video for virtual meetings and compliance-driven industries.

Technology

Scalable Video Coding foundation

Scalable Video Coding (SVC), defined as Annex G of the standard, extends the core H.264/AVC framework to enable bitstream scalability across spatial, temporal, and quality () dimensions. This allows a single encoded video stream to support multiple decoding profiles, where subsets of the can be extracted to adapt to varying device capabilities, network conditions, or display requirements without full re-encoding. The standard facilitates by organizing video data into a base layer compatible with H.264/AVC decoders and enhancement layers that progressively add resolution (e.g., from QCIF to HD), frame rate (e.g., from 7.5 to 30 fps), or fidelity, achieving compression efficiency close to non-scalable H.264/AVC while providing up to 50% overhead for scalability features. Vidyo pioneered the commercial adoption of H.264 SVC for IP-based video conferencing, co-developing the extension starting in 2005 with contributions including 18 test sequences and bitstreams to the Joint Video Team (JVT), and launching the first SVC-enabled products in 2007. This development replaced traditional Multipoint Control Units (MCUs), which relied on resource-intensive , with software-based VidyoRouters that route SVC streams over UDP/IP networks, preserving original encoding quality across multi-party calls without losses from re-encoding. Vidyo's involvement continued through standards bodies, including co-editing RFC 6190 for SVC conformance and leading interoperability efforts in the IMTC and UCI Forum. The technical advantages of H.264 SVC in Vidyo's platform center on robust handling of network variability, delivering high-definition (HD) video at low bandwidths—such as 500 kbps per participant—while maintaining frame rates up to 30 fps and resolutions up to . By leveraging layered encoding, the system adapts streams in real-time to fluctuations in or , ensuring continuous video flow over unmanaged IP networks without freezing or artifacts, as enhancement layers can be selectively dropped. This approach also supports interoperability with legacy systems through base layer compatibility with H.264/AVC and endpoints, allowing mixed-device conferences without quality degradation. In implementation, Vidyo employs SVC for layered (simulcast-like) encoding, where endpoints decode only the necessary base and enhancement layers based on their capabilities and available resources, significantly reducing CPU load compared to full-stream processing. This enables seamless operation on consumer-grade devices, including desktops and mobiles, by minimizing computational demands—often to levels compatible with software decoding—while supporting up to HD quality without dedicated . The architecture's packet-switched nature further optimizes multi-party , routing individualized layer subsets to participants for personalized layouts and efficient bandwidth use.

Key innovations and patents

Vidyo's patent portfolio, exceeding 170 awards by 2019, encompassed critical advancements in adaptive video streaming, endpoint , and secure video routing, enabling robust, scalable video communications across diverse networks and devices. These patents built upon the Scalable Video Coding (SVC) foundation to support heterogeneous endpoints without requiring specialized hardware. Key examples include systems for low-delay videoconferencing using scalable codecs, which optimized bandwidth allocation and reduced latency in multi-party sessions. Another focused on server architectures that facilitated seamless among varying video endpoints, enhancing compatibility in enterprise environments. Among notable innovations, VidyoPanorama introduced multi-camera stitching to create panoramic views in setups, rendering up to nine streams across multiple displays for immersive, bezel-free experiences equivalent to . Dynamic layout algorithms further differentiated Vidyo by automatically optimizing multi-party video displays based on participant activity and screen real estate, ensuring efficient use of bandwidth and improved user focus during calls. These contributions enabled Vidyo to deliver the industry's first software-only high-definition (HD) solution, disrupting traditional hardware-dependent systems and making HD video accessible on standard PCs and networks. Additionally, advancements in low-latency UDP transport protocols minimized delays in real-time collaboration, supporting reliable packet delivery over unreliable networks for applications like and telemedicine. In 2014, Vidyo introduced native 4K support and software-upgradable systems for ultra-high-definition video rendering without additional hardware. Following its 2019 acquisition by Enghouse Systems, these capabilities were extended for seamless deployment. These developments extended Vidyo's impact, powering secure, low-latency video in hybrid environments for global enterprises.

Products and services

Core video conferencing offerings

Vidyo's core video conferencing offerings center on a software-defined that leverages Scalable Video Coding (SVC) to enable efficient, high-quality multipoint sessions without the limitations of traditional Multipoint Control Units (MCUs). This approach allows for adaptive bandwidth management and seamless connectivity across diverse networks. The VidyoRouter serves as the foundational media routing component, functioning as a software-based appliance that intelligently switches and mixes video streams using SVC algorithms. Unlike hardware-intensive MCUs, it distributes processing across endpoints, supporting conferences with up to thousands of participants while minimizing latency and bandwidth usage. Deployable on-premises or in virtualized environments, it ensures error resilience and rate matching for each participant, making it suitable for enterprise-scale deployments. Complementing the router, the VidyoPortal acts as a centralized platform available in cloud or on-premises configurations. It facilitates user , scheduling, role-based access controls for , and built-in for monitoring usage and . Administrators can integrate it with enterprise directories and APIs to streamline operations, providing a secure web interface for provisioning devices and managing global infrastructure. Client applications form the user-facing layer of Vidyo's ecosystem. VidyoDesktop and VidyoMobile (now unified under VidyoConnect) deliver cross-platform access for Windows, macOS, , Android, and web browsers. These clients support essential features such as up to 4K, real-time screen sharing, local recording, and chat integration, enabling seamless participation from personal devices or browsers without plugins. While standard support for legacy VidyoDesktop and VidyoMobile versions ended, existing users can continue via VidyoConnect for consistent hybrid experiences. Early hardware endpoints like the VidyoRoom HD-100 and HD-200 provided dedicated room-based conferencing with HD video encoding and multi-monitor support. These entry-level and advanced systems, respectively, were phased out following Enghouse Systems' 2019 acquisition of , with support discontinued in VidyoPortal version 22.1.1 to prioritize software-centric solutions. As of 2025, these offerings are fully integrated into Enghouse Video Conferencing, emphasizing hybrid work environments with enhanced AI-driven features like automated transcription for meeting recordings to improve and . The platform supports scalable deployments for remote and in-office , maintaining while focusing on cloud-hybrid architectures.

Specialized solutions and integrations

Vidyo offers specialized solutions tailored for sectors such as healthcare, , and , leveraging its core video conferencing infrastructure to enable sector-specific customizations like enhanced security and seamless integrations. VidyoPlatform (formerly Vidyo.io) provides a for developers to embed real-time multiparty video communications into custom applications using APIs and SDKs, supporting web, mobile, and desktop platforms for scalable, high-quality video experiences. A key component is VidyoGateway, an appliance that serves as an adapter for connecting legacy SIP and systems to Vidyo's IP-based network, ensuring interoperability with third-party endpoints and MCUs from vendors like Polycom and . It supports standards such as H.239 for , including content sharing and far-end camera control, while delivering video resolutions up to 1080p30. This gateway extends the utility of Vidyo's core router and portal by bridging traditional infrastructure without requiring full system overhauls. In healthcare, VidyoHealth provides a HIPAA- and GDPR-compliant platform designed for secure virtual care, featuring via SRTP, one-click patient entry, and virtual waiting rooms for streamlined workflows. The platform integrates with electronic health records (EHR) systems like and medical devices, supporting high-resolution 4K/5K video visits, audio-only options, post-care summaries, and applications in rural care, chronic disease management, and specialties such as and behavioral health. With over 17 years of trusted service in healthcare and two decades of innovation, VidyoHealth facilitates reliable and interdisciplinary collaboration. Following Enghouse Systems' acquisitions, Vidyo's portfolio expanded with Qumu for enterprise video management, which enables secure content publishing through live event broadcasting and creation with features like quizzes and chapters. Qumu provides for viewer and , integrating with tools like hihaho to enhance training and communication in corporate environments. Similarly, Mediasite adds AI-driven lecture capture and automation for , automatically generating captions, transcripts, smart chaptering, and content summaries while ingesting recordings from platforms including Vidyo, Zoom, and . It supports seamless publishing to learning management systems (LMS) like and , with (SSO) and synchronization. For government and finance, Vidyo delivers secure video solutions with FIPS 140-2 compliant cryptography, TLS/SRTP/AES encryption, and third-party authentication integration to meet stringent compliance needs. In government applications, it supports inter-agency collaboration, emergency response, online court proceedings, and ADA-compliant features like ASL interpreter connectivity across federal, state, and local levels. In finance, the platform powers video banking, contact centers, insurance claims processing, and remote consultations, as exemplified by deployments at institutions like BluCurrent Credit Union for efficient member support. By 2025, Vidyo's solutions support cloud deployments through partnerships, including availability on the Marketplace for scalable, hybrid environments.

References

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