RIP: Sling Media Founder Blake Krikorian

Blake Krikorian, noted Silicon Valley entrepreneur and founder of Sling Media, maker of the Slingbox, has died at 48.

Krikorian died Wednesday of an apparent heart attack while surfing in the San Francisco area.

In 2005, Sling Media introduced Slingbox, which enabled users to watch broadcast TV anytime anywhere by encoding local video for transmission over the Internet to a remote device—a practice that became known as "placeshifting."

Krikorian sold Slingbox to Echostar in 2007 for about $400 million. Echostar's Dish Network continues to use Sling as a hallmark of its TV-everywhere platform.

Journalist Kara Swisher, a friend of Krikorian's, wrote on redcode.com:

Considered one of tech’s savviest execs with regard to video and media distribution, Krikorian was also one of its most ebullient characters and was never shy about expressing his opinion about anything.

I cannot tell you how many times he would call me after I posted a story to tell me what I had gotten right and wrong, voice booming. But it was always with a devilish twinkle and giant smile, because Krikorian always got the sometimes silly farce of the tech world, as well as its important impact.

When we were on the set of HBO’s “Silicon Valley” taping a show set at the conference Walt Mossberg and I do called Code, Krikorian—who was playing himself hanging around in our fake green room—was relentlessly teasing us about the ridiculousness of us mocking ourselves. All I remember of him from that day was his deep and sustained laughter, because whatever he did, Krikorian always seemed to enjoy himself immensely.

His favorite topic, of course, was how the whole Hollywood and Silicon Valley relationship was faring. He loved that intersection and spent his life dedicated to grokking how to make it work. But he still managed to keep an almost childlike wonder about the strides that had been made in media delivery.

I’ll never forget him geeking out with my two young sons at his really tricked-out home theater, testing some new 3-D product, as hopped up as they were on the coolness of it. (After that much fun, my elder son jokingly asked Blake to adopt him.)

Krikorian was perhaps best known as the CEO of Sling Media, which he founded with his brother Jason...

The device maker of the Slingbox...was acquired by EchoStar in 2007 for close to $400 million, but Krikorian did not stay long in the corporate environment. In fact, he once regaled me about how he could not even order water for his staff at the annual CES show without forms in triplicate.

He became an active angel investor, served on the board of Amazon and also did a stint as the head of Microsoft’s interactive entertainment business after it bought another company he founded and led called id8 Group R2 Studios that worked on home automation.

Most recently, he had moved to what he loved best—tinkering as a tireless entrepreneur—as well as investing.

Those include some promising startups, such as Lytro, Kno, Clipboard, Chirply, and Tasty Labs. Krikorian also invested in Clicker, which was sold to CBS and, more recently, FreeWheel, which sold to Comcast.

His latest focus remained on home automation, which has been a personal interest for some time, including wiring (or, more precisely, wireless-ing) up his own house in a variety of ever more complex digital experiments.

He once told me he began to outfit his home using Apple devices and then switched to Google’s Android operating system since the software was easier and more extensible to develop on.

Krikorian is survived by his wife Cathy and two daughters. His death leaves them, and all of Silicon Valley really, devastated.

COMMENTS
Michaela's picture

Time shifting had been around since the VCR, but in the Slingbox Krikorian (along with Sony and its LocationFree TV) introduced us to the concept of place shifting.

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