is presently fighting off an incurable lung cancer, think I maybe winning (mesothelioma)
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zen - I would expect it's a little late in the day, to set a connection of this magnitude! - but a foretaste of what's round the corner for WXpress perhaps.
It's a pity though, especially as 'we have a man in Greece' so to speak.
Lol eom
zen - Wow! - Silly thought perhaps - but what if TVT somehow could rig up a Olympic event replayable cache for w/wide internet viewing, and with amazing this clarity, it would certainly open a few eyes. e/
goinup - Hey bingo! - Yes TVT is now firing on all systems here, in crystal clear lcd quality, sure looks smooth! - t'was the pop up blockers fault! - hrmm (not mine) - but being a 'limey' I'm not too sure I fully understand the inns & outs of the sport content however lol. e/
awk - excellent evenings postings from you & helpful - but you sure laid some heavy bread in front of us with this -
http://www.eapartnership.org/docs/EAP_Temoshok_2-12-04.ppt
Scrolled through this EAP pp three times, and I'm still not sure of the total implications of it all, apart from being an appearance of a blueprint for the future of private & govermental e-commerce, thankfully all being held together with good old Wave Systems magic glue.
helpful - Nice evenings DD work guys! - and great posting, just amazing whats lurking about under the stones when they're uncovered, and with the ever increasing IT awareness in depts now taking place - especially where it matters most, it's certainly most encouraging. e/
eamonn OT - Seem to remember vaguely, a memorial meal with crabs in blackbean sauce, sitting in a tin hut resturant on Ubin island out from a Changi jetty, it was a couple of years ago. e/
eamonn OT - Have fun!! e/
Maybe yet another Wave iron in the fire!!! e/
http://www.gcn.com/vol1_no1/daily-updates/26523-1.html
07/08/04
GSA adds Novell to the SmartBuy program
By Jason Miller
GCN Staff
The General Services Administration last month signed up its third company to the SmartBuy program.
Agencies now can purchase networking infrastructure software from Novell Inc. under the enterprise software license program. GSA had been negotiating with Novell since January (Click for GCN coverage).
Novell created a series of special software offerings and service levels, including bundles for infrastructure, Linux servers and desktops, Web services and, eventually, secure identity management, company officials said in a news release.
Novell said the bundles will provide deployment and pricing flexibility for federal buyers as well as easing the contract negotiation and licensing process.
The infrastructure bundle will include core platform services, collaboration and management tools. Novell also will offer three Linux bundles—for the desktop, a “starter pack” for servers for small IT environments and a larger server application for larger networking environments.
The Web services package will provide software for agencies to connect legacy applications, Novell officials said.
Novell will test its secure identity management software bundle in GSA’s E-Authentication lab in the next few months before selling it to agencies.
...........................................
and checkout the Linux Wave influence here below!
http://www.thetechmag.com/index.php/news/main/895/event=view
Are Investors a Bunch of Yahoos?
The Internet giant reported a spectacular 2Q but shares sunk. Why? Expectations were way too high.
By Paul R. La Monica, July 08, 2004
NEW YORK - Uh-oh.
Yahoo! (YHOO) reported second-quarter earnings Wednesday that were ridiculously good. It's hard to quibble with a nearly 90 percent increase in sales and a doubling of profits.
But in the wacky world of Wall Street, these numbers just weren't good enough. Yahoo! missed the "whisper numbers." It reported earnings of 8 cents a share but there was trader chatter about how profits could hit 10 cents a share.
As a result, shares of Yahoo! got slapped harder than Charlie Murphy (yup, Eddie's brother) was by Rick James on Chappelle's Show. (If you don't watch, you should. "What did the five fingers say to the face?")
The stock was down nearly 6 percent Thursday morning and dragged down shares of fellow Internet search rivals Ask Jeeves and InfoSpace as well as other big Net stocks like eBay (EBAY) and Amazon.com (AMZN).
For that matter, tech stocks in general sunk anew on Thursday. Of course, it didn't help that software developers Siebel Systems (SEBL) and BMC Software (BMC) added their names to the ever-growing list of companies issuing ugly warnings.
Curb your enthusiasm
So what it's all about, Alfie? Do Yahoo!'s results, when viewed in the backdrop of all these tech profit disappointments, really signal that the tech sector is in for some troublesome times during the second half?
Yes and no. As I wrote on Tuesday, Yahoo! is in fantastic shape. The company's second-quarter results do not change that view. Internet advertising is still a booming business.
The problem with Yahoo!'s earnings report was not the company's fundamentals but that since Yahoo!'s valuation was patently absurd, it had a lot to live up to. And it failed to meet the insanely high expectations of greedy momentum investors.
Before the results, the shares were trading at about 100 times 2004 earnings estimates. That's laughably rich. Yahoo! needed to beat, not simply meet, estimates to justify that P/E. It didn't. Hence the bloodletting.
Still, even after Thursday's big drop, the stock trades for about 90 times 2004 estimates. So Yahoo! hasn't suddenly become a bargain. Considering that Yahoo! is going to face tougher competition from Microsoft (MSFT) and the soon-to-be-public Google in search, that P/E might still be too high as well.
Just keep in mind that pointing out that tech stocks like Yahoo! are expensive is not the same thing as being an outright doom-and-gloom tech bear.
Tech isn't in a tailspin
It does not look like the economy is suddenly taking a turn for the worse and that we're about to have a repeat of the ugly 2000-2002 tech bear market when demand for tech products and services fell off a cliff.
Fundamentals still look strong and investors should try to remember that once we're hit with the monsoon of earnings reports in the next few weeks.
And as we head into the thick of earnings season, it would be nice to see expectations for stocks like Yahoo!, and many other techs for that matter, retreat to more rational levels. That's why I think that the latest round of earnings warnings is actually not a bad thing.
It should serve as a welcome reminder to investors that the go-go days of the late '90s are gone for good. Tech investors can't continue to expect companies to continually guide earnings and sales estimates ever higher, ad infinitum. That just defies every law of economics.
What's more, Yahoo!'s latest results should hopefully help put an end to this whole silly notion of whisper numbers.
What point is there in having consensus Wall Street estimates if the market is going to simply add a penny or two to earnings projections and a couple of million dollars to revenue targets and demand that companies meet these highly inflated forecasts?
Finally, it's also worth noting that the opening drops for Yahoo! and other Nets were actually much worse on Thursday morning. At one point, Yahoo! was down as much as 11 percent.
Shares bounced back from their lows as the day wore on. And that's probably a good thing. That's because Yahoo! didn't do anything wrong, except fail to live up to ludicrously high hopes.
Hopefully, the market will learn from Yahoo! Second-quarter tech earnings should be good, but not gangbusters. Ditto for third-quarter guidance. The quicker that investors realize this, the better.
If expectations come down, techs have a good chance of pleasantly surprising investors in the second half of 2004. But if investors start wanting more again, they can expect techs to keep "disappointing."
cmf- Dunno - but it's just in time for the Olympics Lol e/
"Trusted Computing is an emerging area of increasing value to enterprises who value data security," said Stavros Karaguloglou, SmartAxis CEO. "We believe Wave's EMBASSY Trust Suite client and server software can play an important role in such areas as data protection, identity protection and access control."
"SmartAxis is a Value Added Reseller with impressive experience in distribution and marketing to system integrators, consultants and OEMs. They also distribute and market to other resellers serving enterprises such as financial institutions and banks, government, the service industry, and telecommunications companies," said Bruno Leconte, Wave vice president, sales, Europe, Middle East and Africa. "They are a specialist in IT security, and we anticipate they will be a good business partner."
SmartAxis to Distribute Wave Systems EMBASSY Trust Suite, Targeting Enterprises Interested in Trusted Computing in Greece, Turkey, Cyprus and Balkan Countries
7/8/2004 10:06:00 AM
ATHENS, Greece & LEE, Mass., Jul 8, 2004 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Wave Systems Corp. (WAVX) and SmartAxis SA today announced that SmartAxis will distribute Wave's EMBASSY(R) Trust Suite (ETS) software and infrastructure to enterprises interested in trusted computing solutions for personal computer security.
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SmartAxis will distribute Wave's EMBASSY Trust Suite software in Greece, Turkey, Cyprus and in Balkan countries.
Wave's ETS software is designed to deliver solutions compliant with the Trusted Computing Group (TCG) specifications for trusted computing. Millions of PCs have been shipped by the computer industry embedded with a TCG-standard chip, called the Trusted Platform Module (TPM). TPMs serve as a platform for secure services and applications - offered by companies such as Wave. Wave has designed its secure business productivity software to work with all TCG-compliant TPMs commercially available. The hallmark of EMBASSY Trust Suite solutions is usability - designed to be easy to enable, easy to use and easy to manage by IT administrators.
"Trusted Computing is an emerging area of increasing value to enterprises who value data security," said Stavros Karaguloglou, SmartAxis CEO. "We believe Wave's EMBASSY Trust Suite client and server software can play an important role in such areas as data protection, identity protection and access control."
"SmartAxis is a Value Added Reseller with impressive experience in distribution and marketing to system integrators, consultants and OEMs. They also distribute and market to other resellers serving enterprises such as financial institutions and banks, government, the service industry, and telecommunications companies," said Bruno Leconte, Wave vice president, sales, Europe, Middle East and Africa. "They are a specialist in IT security, and we anticipate they will be a good business partner."
The EMBASSY Trust Suite is designed to be compatible with the Microsoft Office(R) environment, and to deliver a variety of PC-related security and productivity tasks, in an intuitive, easy-to-understand format.
Software capabilities include Document Manager Vault for securing files and folders, SmartSignature for digital signature capability for secure electronic contracts, and Private Information Manager for secure storage and management of user names, passwords and personal information. Private Information Manager is designed to intelligently retrieve data for use in web pages, logging into web sites, or for filling forms.
Also available is Wave's Key Transfer Manager, an enterprise software solution that is designed to help backup and protect the hardware encryption keys used for critical personal computer data.
More information about EMBASSY Trust Suite products is available through SmartAxis SA at http://www.smartaxis.gr or Wave Systems at www.wave.com/products/ets.html.
About SmartAxis SA
The growing need for management, comprehension, and implementation of user-centric secure services in the NET are the driving factors which led to the founding of SmartAxis SA. SmartAxis addresses with its specialized know-how and competent world-class partners the advanced and specific demands of the networked economy providing: smart card-enabled applications, complete network & transaction security solutions including digital signatures, data security, strong authentication solutions, etc. and consulting on security related fields. For more information about SmartAxis, visit http://www.smartaxis.gr.
About Wave Systems
Consumers and businesses are demanding a computing environment that is more trusted, private, safe and secure. Wave is the leader in delivering trusted computing applications and services with advanced products, infrastructure and solutions across multiple trusted platforms from a variety of vendors. Wave holds a portfolio of significant fundamental patents in security and e-commerce applications and employs some of the world's leading security systems architects and engineers. For more information about Wave, visit http://www.wave.com.
Safe Harbor for Forward-Looking Statements
Except for the statements of historical fact, the information presented herein constitutes forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the company to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. . Such factors include general economic and business conditions, the ability to fund operations, the ability to forge partnerships required for deployment, changes in consumer and corporate buying habits, chip development and production, the rapid pace of change in the technology industry and other factors over which Wave Systems Corp. has little or no control. Wave Systems assumes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements.
All brands are the property of their respective owners
SOURCE: Wave Systems Corp.
Wave Systems Corp.
John Callahan, 413-243-7029
jcallahan@wavesys.com
or
Jaffoni & Collins
David Collins, Richard Land
212-835-8500
wavx@jcir.com
Ramsey2 - EDS & Wave in the past have threatened to raise hopes, but unfortunately I think it tailed off! - still it never hurts to check under the beds, from time to time, as we've certainly slept around in a few - companywise that is, throughout the years.
There's definate movement going on down beneath the surface, but it's annoying the waters tad murky at present. e/
Ramsey2 - Your post! -
Logically there could lie therein a Wave connection to EDS, unless the Wave/EDS collaboration is forever dead.
Not too sure thats the position!
A blast from the past.
Look back at this biz/eds 10yr contract, 1st URL 2nd paragraph
http://www.wave.com/news/press_archive/00/001113WaveBIZCOMDEX.html
also at these two!
http://www.wave.com/news/press_archive/00/001003EMBASSY_BIZ.html
http://www.wave.com/news/press_archive/01/010913EDSStatement.html
Ramsey2.. Hmmm - you never know, maybe keeping an eye on this contract, might be useful? e/
http://www.eds.com/news/news_release_template.shtml?rowid=3741
awk - Bring it on! - David J. Brailer, M.D., Ph.D - we may have a lot of time for this chap -
http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2004pres/20040506.html
Doors opening wider! e/
Health Care IT Transformation Plan
July 6, 2004
http://www.advanceforhim.com/Common/editorial/editorial.aspx?CTIID=360
HHS to Present Health Care IT Transformation Plan
Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Tommy G. Thompson announced that the first installment of a national health information technology (HIT) plan will be delivered July 21 when HHS convenes a key conference in Washington, DC, to accelerate progress toward electronic health records and other benefits of HIT for Americans, AHA News Now reported.
"The benefits that all of us could reap from health information technology are simply too great to put off any longer," Secretary Thompson said. "The health care sector needs to run, not walk, toward realizing this potential. Health information technology can not only improve care for our patients and offer better support for our health professionals, but it can also make health care more cost-effective and improve our public health."
The strategic plan was mandated by President Bush in an April 27 executive order that also established the new Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology at HHS. The order requires a report within 90 days on progress toward a national strategy.
The report, to be presented by Secretary Thompson and National Coordinator David J. Brailer, MD, PhD, will outline shared responsibilities of the public and private sectors in achieving the benefits of HIT. It will be issued at a special Secretarial Summit that will launch this year's national health information infrastructure (NHII) conference "Cornerstones for Electronic Healthcare," scheduled July 21-23 at the Washington Convention Center. Registration for the conference is at www.hsrnet.net/nhii.
CMS Proposes Coverage of PET for Alzheimer’s Disease
test
test
Mig! - OT thought this might cheer you up LOL
http://www.sedgwick.org.uk/pics/mig.jpg
test
goinup - seems like there's a problem at least with the YES freebie content at this time, (I d/loaded several days ago) and although YES is logged in my tvt cache, I haven't been able to get a squeak out of it yet? eom/
Internet Explorer Is Too Dangerous to Keep Using
By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
June 28, 2004
Opinion: Although Linux & Open Source Editor Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols once used IE on his Windows machines, he now finds Microsoft's browser seriously insecure and endorses open-source ones instead.
OK, I confess it: I've used Internet Explorer a lot. After being a die-hard Netscape user, I finally got fed up with the sheer bulk of that browser and started using Internet Explorer on my Windows machines.
As time went on and open-source Mozilla matured, I started using Mozilla as my main Linux Web browser and as my secondary Windows browser. This past Friday, though, I started installing Firefox, the browser-only side of Mozilla, on every one of my production Windows machines.
Why? Because Internet Explorer, like Outlook, has finally become, to my mind, a permanent security hole that masquerades as a useful application.
Strong words? Have you really thought about this latest exploit? It could hit every Internet Explorer (IE) browser that merely visited any page served by an infected Microsoft IIS (Internet Information Server).
No anti-virus program would stop it, no firewall would slow it down and no shipping IE security patch would even notice it. Visit the page, get the infection. It was that simple.
Oh, but the few thousand people running Release Candidate 2 of Windows XP Service Pack 2 were not vulnerable to the client-side attack. And if you were one of the very few people who had all of the current critical patches installed and were running IE with its security settings at "high," you'd be OK. That leaves, oh, say, 95 percent of all IE users wide open to this attack. I feel so much better now.
And just how bad was this attack? Boys and girls, let me tell you, this was the worst security violation I have ever seen. But don't take my word for it.
Johannes Ullrich, a handler at the Internet Storm Center at The SANS Institute in Bethesda, Md., wrote, "A large number of Web sites, some of them quite popular, were compromised earlier this week to distribute malicious code.
"The attacker uploaded a small file with JavaScript to infected Web sites and altered the Web server configuration to append the script to all files served by the Web server (IIS). The Storm Center and others are still investigating the method used to compromise the servers. Several server administrators reported that they were fully patched."
What sites were spreading the infections? We still don't know. Neither the security companies nor the businesses running the infected sites are talking. Since they're not being any help, I can only suggest that you update your anti-viral software and run it—now.
The only other thing I can say is that sites running IIS 5, which hadn't been patched up to April's MS04-011, were the ones targeted by this exploit. But, I'm sorry to say, it's still not clear that even sites that had been patched with MS04-011 were safe. There are reports that even patched IIS servers were infected.
What happened next was that after simply visiting what looked like a perfectly ordinary page, the JavaScript hidden with the page would direct your browser to quietly download and install one of several different programs from a Russian Web site. "These Trojan horse programs include keystroke loggers, proxy servers and other back doors providing full access to the infected system," Ullrich said.
Many of the people talking about the exploit have discussed how your computers might be used by these back-door programs to launch a DDoS (distributed denial of service) attack. Yeah, that's bad news, but that's not the real problem.
In the few days that the sites provided the Trojan horses, hundreds of thousands or millions of users could have had their credit-card, stock-brokerage and bank-account numbers and passwords stolen.
Let me repeat myself: Millions of you may have every bit of your browser-driven online financial security information stolen.
Maybe this was just another massive Internet security prank. Maybe all that will happen is a DDoS attack. Well, you can hope that's all there is to it and continue to use IE. But as for me, I'm done with it.
For insights on security coverage around the Web, check out eWEEK.com Security Center Editor Larry Seltzer's Weblog.
Yes, by Friday, most of the major anti-viral programs could stop this particular attack. But what about the next one?
According to the U.S. CERT (Computer Emergency Response Team), "Microsoft Internet Explorer does not adequately validate the security context of a frame that has been redirected by a Web server. An attacker could exploit this vulnerability to evaluate script in different security domains. By causing script to be evaluated in the Local Machine Zone, the attacker could execute arbitrary code with the privileges of the user running IE."
There is, at this time, no shipping patch to stop this. Wonderful.
If you must run IE, and unfortunately, I do for at least one remote application I use every day, you can disable all active scripting and ActiveX on all IE zones. Between CERT's frequently asked questions about malicious Web scripts redirected by Web sites and Microsoft's Knowledge Base article on how to strengthen the security settings for the Local Machine zone in Internet Explorer, you should be safe from most variations of this kind of attack.
Frankly, though, I think CERT's other suggestion is an even better one: Use a different Web browser.
Open-source browsers, such as Mozilla Firefox, are simply more secure than IE. Yes, I know all of the tired, old arguments about how if open-source programs were as popular as Microsoft's products; they'd be just as vulnerable. You know what? I don't have time today to deal with the fundamentally inane idea that security by obscurity is somehow the best way to secure software.
Click here to read more about the standalone Firefox browser.
The bottom line is that for all practical purposes for today, open-source browsers are inherently more secure than Internet Explorer, and I still have half a dozen more workstations to switch over to Firefox. Go ahead, stick with Internet Explorer for everyday use. It's your funeral.
Larger bids at the death! e/
U clever! - I think you're dead right, if our w/site is supposed to provide an easy to assimulate content page, which OK technically it does, then it really needs more care taken, with a friendly & attractive layout design.
You could say at least, that we aren't putting 'Techscaler' in the shade. e/
Website is for real!
Boom,
I regret to inform you that this is as "cool" as it gets! The site was recently refreshed and the focus is on clarity as the Wave story & array of services are not that easy to communicate.
I hope you like the content better than the design.
Regards,
David
David C. Collins
Jaffoni & Collins - Investor Relations
collins@jcir.com
David Collins.
Please tell me your current Wave opening web page, http://www.wave.com/ is in the process of being amended, as I can assure you that IMO, at present it does not look as 'coool' as it might be.
Regards B
Wow! - Just got in - another Wave TCG grip tightening movement! e/
awk - Very interesting! - Lots of Himss dots all moving convincingly forward, constructively hopefully into the Hipaa tangle, think there's possible movement now in several directions - checkout a recent posting of mine e/
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=3421203
eamonn - You & me both pal!!
Over the past year or so I've noticed quite a few govermental offices have been changing the IT teams that are in in charge of the various depts?
Now this may not be too much - but down below, take a look at the last paragraph. e/
http://www.gcn.com/23_15/dodcomputing/26266-1.html
“We believe we have the first secure, scalable system that ís patient-centric,” said Dr. Robert Wah, a Navy Medical Corps captain who has been working on the CHCS II system.
06/21/04; Vol. 23 No. 15
Defense medical records system is rolling out ahead of schedule
By Dawn S. Onley
GCN Staff
Defense Department officials say military units are already ahead of schedule in meeting a recent mandate by President Bush for federal agencies to keep electronic health records of personnel and their families.
Under the president’s Health IT Plan, federal officials have until August to review programs and propose ways to incorporate electronic health initiatives into their medical support systems.
But DOD already has an electronic health system running at several sites and is working to improve it.
“We have been working diligently on the electronic transformation of the military health system,” said Dr. William Winkenwerder, assistant secretary of Defense for health affairs. “For more than 10 years, we have had a computerized physician order-entry capability that enables our providers to order lab tests and radiology exams and issue prescriptions electronically.”
CHCS II
That capability is being enhanced with the Composite Health Care System II program.
Over the next 30 months, the Defense Department will log about 9 million military members and beneficiaries into CHCS II, which at full deployment will be available at 100 hospitals and 500 clinics. In January, the DOD began rollout and has deployed CHCS II to seven medical centers in the United States. This year, officials expect to complete rollout at 40 sites.
“We believe we have the first secure, scalable system that’s patient-centric,” said Dr. Robert Wah, a Navy Medical Corps captain who has worked on CHCS II. “CHCS II addresses every one of the president’s points that he made in his executive order.”
Such a large-scale implementation schedule, which DOD has accelerated from its original 36-month time frame, hasn’t been without its challenges, officials say. For example, Defense has faced obstacles in moving patient records from the old Composite Health Care System I to the new database.
The two systems rely on different data models and data integrity requirements, said Larry Albert, senior vice president and health care practice leader at Integic Corp. of Chantilly, Va. Integic is the prime contractor and is serving as developer and systems integrator for CHCS II.
Defense uses more than 100 clinical information systems to keep track of military medical records. When patients moved from base to base, they had to carry their medical records with them, Albert said.
The new system stores data in a central repository and provides users access over the Web.
“We really have a lot of work to make sure the site system administrators are properly trained and that we inform them of the differences of the old system and the new system,” Albert said. “Then we have the training of the users, and I think the most critical part of that training is the over-the-shoulder training.”
Capabilities
CHCS II lets medical personnel update and share files of any military patient. The system also allows physicians to place orders electronically and to conduct research and identify trends from stored records.
It will hold laboratory, radiology and enrollment information on all outpatient visits at hundreds of hospitals and clincs worldwide.
As each medical center converts its data to electronic format, it will upload the information to the clinical data repository, making the information accessible anywhere in the world, officials said.
CHCS II uses commercial software such as the Care Innovation product suite from 3M Corp. of Santa Clara, Calif.
“This new system will allow physicians to use the power of computers to take better care of their patients,” Wah said.
Officials are also working on adding a dental module and an optometry module to the system.
There is also a portable version of the medical database, called CHCS II Theater, for deployment in active theaters of military operations. The sister program to CHCS II Theater is the Theater Medical Information Program, a $47.8 million project for which DOD hired Lockheed Martin Corp.
TMIP, which runs the CHCS II database in combat support hospitals, is a joint program between the Tricare Medical Activity and the Defense Department’s Military Health System. Its mission is to provide an interoperable, integrated suite of software tools that pull together data from several existing Military Health System medical applications
Ticker beginning to smoke! e/
Maybe just a rebalancing act! - we're seriously understated. e/
Mig - No real reason (I don't have level 2 here)- just that it seems the markets a little more edgier today IMO - with sized amounts going thro'. e/
Mig! - Or Not!!! e/
Currently have d/loaded the 'Yesnetwork' TV Tonic new 'Yes' version! - again presentation looks faultless - now breathlessly awaiting free content d/load. e/
Has any one looked at this at all! - with the new instruction 'TVTonic with MCE requires Windows Media Center Edition 2004' on the TVT site.
I duly d/loaded same, and fired it up! - and now have to say this has a much better full on page - swisher presentation, with easier controls ect - well presented free content I'm impressed! e/
Would certainly be heartening at this point! - to see a tad more public recognition of Wave's valient efforts, from our immediate larger bedfellows IMHO. e/
knute! - Thank you for selfless in-depth and descriptive report! e/
Markets appear sniffy over PR! e/
ASISEEIT! - Great reporting! well done fella'. eom
Jaybeaux! - Yes + Yes! e/