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October 29, 2013 03:30 pm GMT

Communications Platform For Mobile And Web Apps And TC Disrupt Winner Layer Raises $6 Million

0__300300_Just a month after winning TechCrunch Disrupt San Francisco, communications platform for mobile and web apps Layer has raised $6 million in seed funding, bringing the company’s total seed funding to $7.5 million. In addition to existing seed investors CrunchFund, Data Collective, and SV Angel; the round now includes AME Cloud Ventures (Jerry Yang’s investment vehicle) e.Ventures, Ash Patel, Fuel Capital, and Greycroft. The company was founded in March by Toma tolfa, founder of vox.io, and Ron Palmeri, who previously launched a number of companies as managing director of Minor Ventures, including Grand Central (now Google Voice), OpenDNS, Scout Labs and Swivel. Palmeri is also the founder of MkII Ventures, and co-founder of TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2011 runner-up Prism Skylabs. Layer is a communications platform that can be added to any mobile app by adding fewer than 10 lines of code into the mix. Once that Layer code snippet has been placed in an app via an SDK, users will be able to send text, voice, and video messages, and share files across different applications. We’ve compared the service to a Stripe for communications. The startup also offers a set of open source components called the Layer UI kit which work with the SDK, allowing developers to quickly build out specific user interface features, like an address book or a message sorter. Not only does Layer aim to simplify the process of adding these communications capabilities to apps, but it also wants to eliminate developer concerns surrounding infrastructure, or how to manage scaling. The grand Layer vision involves support for web apps, too, but for now the team is releasing an SDK for iOS and Android developers Since Disrupt, Layer has received 3,000 applications from developers to use the SDK for their mobile apps. Unfortunately, Palmeri says the company is limiting the beta to around 50 developers, which include both large and small companies. In fact, yesterday, Layer announced an integration with calendaring app Sunrise to incorporate rich messaging into the app. Gradually, Layer expects to roll out to a larger number of developers (Palmeri expects for fully open access to the SDK in Q2 of 2014). But as Layer is adopted in a more widespread manner, there could be interesting network effecrs. For example, a good number of messaging apps (e.g. Whatsapp, LINE, WeChat, Viber, MessageMe, etc.) could actually talk to each other. Users could then choose their preferred

Original Link: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/IG4hydEpy0U/

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