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Summary: The San Francisco-based startup took in a seed round of $1.5 million. Its open-source software can virtualize the part of the network that handles intelligent routing with IP addresses.
Akanda, a San Francisco-based startup that aims to improve routing in a virtualized network, has come out of stealth and taken a seed-funding round of $1.5 million. Web-hosting provider DreamHost helped co-found the company and supplied all of the seed-round funding.
The two-man shop, less than a month old, consists of CEO Henrik Rosendahl, a virtualization veteran who recently helped sell CloudVolumes to VMware and CTO Mark McClain, who was the former project team lead of the OpenStack Neutron networking project and a former DreamHost senior developer.
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The two-man shop, less than a month old, consists of CEO Henrik Rosendahl, a virtualization veteran who recently helped sell CloudVolumes to VMware and CTO Mark McClain, who was the former project team lead of the OpenStack Neutron networking project and a former DreamHost senior developer.
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