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Same thing.
Hey, that's how I pick stocks! I'm glad my method is now approved by the WU :)
WHo would've imagined that a sound advice could come out of the Navy. But here it is... :)
And that's why they teach you to never volunteer for anything in the Army :)
Frontier Energy Corps Retains Engineering Firm for Geological Evaluation of Texas
Property
NORTH LAS VEGAS, Nev., Mar 17, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Frontier Energy Corp (Pink
Sheets:FRGY), in its ongoing goal to keep shareholders informed, announces they
have signed an agreement with a Texas Engineering firm for the purposes of
determining reserve estimation and economic projection of the oil, gas and
mineral reserves on a Property. The report shall be in the form required by
Frontier, and in accordance with the requirements of the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) and/or Society of Petroleum Engineers (SPE), as applicable. The
property currently has 2 new successful wells and what Frontier believes is a
large oil reserve. The report should be completed in short order and should the
report come back positive, Frontier Energy will close on the lease which includes
the existing new wells.
Frontier Energy Corp CEO, Bob Genesi comments, "This is just one of the many
properties we are exploring. We are particularly excited about this property that
was brought to our attention from our consultant Mr. Bower. One of many we are
currently looking at. We look forward to keeping our shareholders informed about
our ongoing positive developments."
About Frontier Energy Corp.
Frontier is a newly-recapitalized exploratory oil and gas business headquartered
in Las Vegas, Nevada. The goal of Frontier Energy is to build a solid portfolio
of assets through the acquisition of leases and explore and develop the
opportunities on the individual leases.
Except for the historical information presented, the above statements are
"forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995 or regulations there under. These forward-looking
statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, and actual results may differ
materially. These risks include the economic health of the oil and gas industry,
competitive pricing pressures, completion of possible acquisitions, success at
integrating and operating any acquired operations and the availability of
necessary financing. These statements speak only as of above date, and Frontier
Energy Corp. disclaims any intent or obligation to update them.
SOURCE: Frontier Energy Corp
Frontier Energy Corporation, Las Vegas
Robert Genesi, 702-648-5849
I heard that already :)
Pity I sold INIX at .09, but it was a 100% profit still :)
Good trade, sucky news :)
It's a nuclear submarine you paid for.
Yeah, I mixed them up with Telia, thanks.
You learn something every day :) Telus, isn't that a European operator?
It'll work anywhere that a) uses the same standard as what Verizon uses, which is CDMA2000, I believe; and b)the provider has a roaming agreement with Verizon (won't necessarily be free though). It may be slower, as not all providers rolled out 3G service (and not everywhere there's regular reception, either). CDMA isn't really used much outside of North America though, GSM/GPRS/EDGE is the standard there. The two GSM providers I know of in the US are AT&T and T-mobile. T-mobile doesn't have a 3G data network in the US though, to the best of my knowledge, they only offer quite slow GPRS service (slower than a dial-up). AT&T, well, they such, in my opinion, on many other fronts, hence I use Sprint for data and am planning to move to T-mobile for voice.
Yeah, I hear that all the time :)
Yeah, Canada isn't big on CDMA. However, when a friend of mine (who has Verizon) went to Europe, Verizon gave him a GPRS/EDGE aircard. Wasn't cheap though.
Ah, pity. I thought, Canada was spared that lunacy.
It's not difficult to unlock it, but you have to disable (and make sure they ARE disabled, as disabling updates in Apple software doesn't guarantee anything :)) the software updates, or else you can get a iBrick :)
Yes, you Crackberry addict :)
Hey, it's an external hard drive AND an iPod ;)
IPhone is locked to AT&T, so if you have roaming there, it'll cost you the roaming per-minute charges. You can't just buy another SIM card and use a local provider. If you unlock the iPhone, which is possible, the next software update will mess it up, Apple doesn't like people unlocking the iPhones (to say the least), although it claims that this occurrence isn't deliberate. Yeah, right. So, that's also something to consider.
Do providers even lock cellphones in Canada? They don't in Europe, for example, and most of the rest of the world.
Well, for that flash has to become cheaper. Myself, I use a 160GB iPod myself, of which maybe 10GB is music and about 70GB is used for data (the smallest 160GB external hard drive I've seen so far, Apple uses those 1.8" hard drives :)), so I hear you. I really wouldn't want to drop it. It looks like the hard drive there is somewhat (somewhat is the key word) shock protected with foam and 4 springs, but it won't protect from more than a couple of G's drop when the hard drive is on.
I use a Windows Mobile-based phone as well. One of the things that iPhone doesn't have as of yet is support for enterprise applications. It doesn't run ActiveX, so you can't work with something like Outlook Web Access (unless you ask your IT department to change quite a few things on their end, which I hope they'll refuse to do, for their sake :)) and many other sites which use ActiveX. It just wasn't designed for the enterprise, but it looks like they're changing it with v.2 of the software. Still, I'd be quite concerned about a touchscreen-only device, didn't have much good experience with those. My phone has all the proper buttons, all 39 of them, and a touchscreen :)
You don't want 120GB hard drive in it because, well, it's a hard drive. The reason they use flash memory in iPhone instead is because it's resistant to shocks, so you can drop it every now and then. Imagine dropping a hard drive in working state. There goes your iPhone... Or iPod, for that matter. Statistically, phones are much more likely to be dropped than MP3 players, hence they used flash memory for those. The largest (and insanely expensive) flash memory stick I've seen so far was 64GB.
On the bright side, flash memory is generally faster for some operations than today's hard drives (not that it makes much difference for something like an iPod). The down side is that flash memory has a limited number of writes. It seems like a lot (a few million), but if you consider that something like an iPhone has a scaled down desktop operating system in it, which means constant read and write operations to the disk... Don't expect to use it for much longer than the warranty :) Of course, by then there will be i-something else, so you'll just "have to" upgrade, anyway :)
Yeah, gold :)
Unless someone already asked that question? Anyone?
Wish there were more details though (don't I always? :)). For example, if the contract is directly with GM, or with a group of dealerships. I guess, it's time to contact the IR, now that there's finally a real question to ask them (as opposed to the usual "when will my shares double in price? Will it be today? Why can't you tell me this??? You're IR, you know everything, how come you can't tell me when my shares will go up?") :)
Should be this summer. Here it is, it says end of June:
http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2008/03/06iphone.html
Also, it'll have a Cisco VPN client and what looks like Active Directory policy support (or is it wishful thinking and I'm reading too much into it?). I'd wait until August before upgrading though, Apple usually fixed the initial bugs within two months or so (and they usually do have quite a few bugs in the initial releases).
I thought, they just released a PR.
Well, it's down less than the market.
With iPhone, they're releasing version 2 of the software. If the features they advertize will be there and working, even someone like me might consider getting it. They open it up to third-party development (so those annoying software updates that kill any modifications one made to an iPhone and render it inoperable might stop), Exchange connectivity, support for ActiveX, etc.
PC market share, maybe, but there's more involved there, namely, the enterprise. Not too many IT people would even consider a Mac for the enterprise, and that's a mindset Apple has to offer something really good to change. Consumer market, well, that's a maybe.
YUp, my penny portfolio is up several grand today. There doses seem to be a relationship :)
WHich part of "shut up and do it" did they have a problem understanding? :)
I'm kind of curious about this dip. Looked like a big market order followed by panic selling, and then frenzied buying (including yours truly). So it looks like MMs didn't have much on the bid, hence it dropped so quickly. or am I missing something?
Finally the price I like. Got my fill, too, thank you :)
Why do you prefer using 5, 9, and 33 moving averages? Also, don't you normally use EMA rather than SMA?
Or because he doesn't look completely wasted. It's a matter of standards, I guess :P
He doesn't.
Maybe, that's why it was up. Pinks often do go up and the market goes down, as the big (bigger, at least) money flows into them as people pull out of the market. It seems to work that way for my pinkie portfolio, anyway (yesterday was a bad day for my pinks :)).
Monetarily, I believe, the minimum requirements there are similar to becoming an MM.
Minimum requirements, too :)
There is, but I think, it has minimum requirements :)
Well, it seems like that's the only way to accomplish anything these days :)