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When the time is right...
So far so good today. We're building a nice base over 2.
I'm still in there.
Picked up a little USTT today.
QBID is almost a buy here.
I want my gayvt
50 is the winner
Interesting. Did you notice in the link that the html file is in a folder named 'cmkx?'
This is an interesting timeline from a couple of years ago:
http://www.scottmanning.com/archives/000429.php
I didn't know flash could be server-based, and I had never heard of the FLV. I've been out of the IT game for a bit so my knowledge isn't up-to-date in all areas. I was never much of a media guy either. The technology, as described in that article, is very interesting.
EZTOPITCHATENT
Thanks, Art.
Nice technicals in the sector:
Bummed I missed it.
You are so $ you don't even know it.
Did GWB mention any specific areas in biotech? Did he talk about stem cells? Nano? HIV?
Koo Koo ca-chu?
That was a joke, right?
Good thing I didn't buy it when it hit my scan...looks easy to .075 at least.
Interesting. How was the speech? Did he sound stupid as usual?
I have basketball league on Wednesdays and missed it.
Yo dude,
Unblock PMs from me. I have a question.
RCG getting subway pump tonight
I have seen articles like the following repeatedly over the last 5-7 years, and they never cease to amaze me. The PC may indeed be a relic one day, but that time is just so far off. I remember people jabbering about thin client technology 5 years ago, and the tech just didn't take off. There are still too many problems at the network and internetwork level to make this a reality. I get annoyed whenever I see an article like this that is so painfully short-sighted and uninformed.
The other day I discovered another cool Google (GOOG) feature -- one of hundreds hidden away in the search engine's unassuming interface. As I looked for a series of numbers, Google offered to add them up for me. I soon found that it took less time to type a simple equation into Google than to launch and operate my Mac's built-in calculator app, a version of which I've been using for 15 years.
What does it mean when a website delivers this kind of function better and faster than a desktop application? It means the desktop as we know it today is doomed. Screens may get larger, but the boxes attached to them will shrink. The Mac Mini is just the beginning.
Take two recent seismic shifts in the computer market: IBM's (IBM) sale of its PC business to China's Lenovo and Hewlett-Packard's (HPQ) announcement that it would pursue profits over market share in selling PCs. Sure, Dell's (DELL) unstoppable growth is a factor in both cases, but they also speak to smart business determinations that the days of desktop PCs gushing cash are coming to an end.
To survive, PC makers will keep cutting costs. But how much lower can they go? Sure, they can squeeze suppliers and redesign plastic casings until both are as thin as tissue paper. At some point, however, they'll have to start discarding entire subsystems. First to go will be the optical drive. Flash memory will be a cheaper and more flexible medium for any data you want to store or transfer locally. Next goes the hard drive: Network storage will be abundant, and the bandwidth to move vast amounts of data will be cheaper than ever. Then PCs will lose the CPU, replacing it with a cheap processor that just shuttles data between the network and the screen, with all the computing taking place in distant server farms. (Sun (SUNW) already offers a stripped-down terminal like this, the Sun Ray, but given the company's lack of experience in selling PCs, I doubt that it will be the dominant supplier of such machines when they become the primary computing platform.)
To be sure, there will still be some personal computers around. Engineers and creative professionals may still require high-powered workstations, and road warriors will still likely tote laptops, though they may shrink so much as to be indistinguishable from cell phones. (Tellingly, in the fourth quarter of 2004, laptops outsold desktops for the first time.) And dirt-cheap desktops will sell overseas for some time. But the vast majority of knowledge workers won't need computing power on their desktop. Everything they need will be on the Net
As long as you made the benjamins to go along with those marks.
I have trouble waking up to a regular alarm, but I always get up to get the phone for some reason.
http://www.mycalls.net
I swear by it. 4.95/mo
Shit yeah
HCCF closed strong. Interesting co. Holding 1/2 shares
NWBT, 'HWPR gappahs
Except for all that flashing crap.
Added more HWPR
I just got back in NWBT
Maybe it will gap, and you will be able to afford a pack of bubble gum.
I just check in with them, and they said they would try to give you .003 tomorrow.
.0025 today, I think
Bought some at .0018
Sold NWBT + .04 Getting bored watching
Picked up some UNCNE.
HWPR...new hod, please.
Notice how I said thanks after it broke. I have great respect for the stock gods.
Thanks