During its heyday, QuickTime was notably used to create the innovative Myst and Xplora1 video games, and to exclusively distribute movie trailers for several Star Wars movies. The QuickTime File Format became the basis for the MPEG-4 standard. Over the 1990s, QuickTime became a dominant standard for digital multimedia, as it was integrated into many websites, applications, and video games, and adopted by professional filmmakers. QuickTime was created in 1991, when the concept of playing digital video directly on computers was "groundbreaking." QuickTime could embed a number of advanced media types, including panoramic images (called QuickTime VR) and Adobe Flash. The term QuickTime also refers to the QuickTime Player front-end media player application, which is built-into macOS, and was available for download on Windows until 2016. Iconiq was joined by Tiger Global, Goldman Sachs Growth Equity and more than a half-dozen other institutional investors.QuickTime is a discontinued extensible multimedia framework created by Apple, which supports playing, streaming, encoding, and transcoding a variety of digital media formats. The round Wolt announced today was led by Iconiq Growth. The startup reportedly started preparing for an initial public offering after its previous $100 million round last year and is now looking to hire a chief financial officer to oversee the effort. DoorDash, for instance, disclosed in the paperwork for its initial public offering last year that it was experimenting with drone delivery.Ī stock market listing is on Wolt’s roadmap as well. The extra funding should also allow Wolt to expand its engineering operations as rivals invest in new technologies to differentiate their services. The startup is both partnering with established grocery store chains and setting up its own “dark stores,” retail locations focused specifically on online orders. Wolt’s long-term plans include expanding to other areas besides the restaurant segment, most notably grocery delivery. Wolt Chief Executive Miki Kuusi said in a statement today that “we operate in an extremely competitive and well-funded industry, and this round allows us to have a long-term mindset when it comes to doubling down on our different markets.” One of the highest-profile examples is Uber, whose Eats unit in August reported higher revenue than its ride-hailing business for the first time. Several of Wolt’s rivals also saw delivery orders surge in 2020 thanks to demand from consumers opting to do their shopping online during the pandemic. īesides DoorDash, Wolt competes with Uber Inc.’s Uber Eats unit, GrubHub Inc. That’s a comparatively small loss for a startup competing in the highly competitive food delivery market, where much larger players have struggled to achieve profitability. Wolt disclosed today that it closed 2020 just $38 million in the red. Wolt says that its revenues tripled in 2020 on a year-over-year basis, to about $330 million.Īnother detail that likely caught investors’ attention is that the startup has managed to limit losses despite its rapid top-line growth. The startup claims more than 10 million users in 23 countries to whom it delivers restaurant orders with the help of more than 50,000 couriers. but has a substantial presence in the food delivery market. Wolt isn’t as well-known as rivals such as publicly traded Deliveroo Inc. Helsinki, Finland-based food delivery startup Wolt Enterprises Oy today announced that it has raised an additional $530 million from investors, less than a year after closing its previous $100 million funding round.
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