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A California mother whose son is right now in Kuwait, wrote her son asking how he would feel if she joined other relatives of service members in an anti-war demonstration in Hollywood last month. After reading her son's response, she elected not to participate.
Dear Mom,
It's really your decision to march if you want to or not. You are the one who has to decide if what we are doing out here is right or not. My opinion is not yours. I do, however, have things I would like for you and Grandma and everyone else at home to know. I am a United States soldier. I was sworn to defend my country against all enemies, foreign and domestic. People may not agree with the things we are ordered to do. I would like to address those people by telling them that terrorism is not only a threat to us as Americans, but to many other innocent people in the world. What type of country would we be if we didn't defend the rights and freedoms of others, not because they're Americans, but how about just because they're human? We live in a country where people feel secure with their daily lives. They do business like usual and don't worry about the thought of terrorism actually happening to them. The people of 9-11 thought the same thing. We now know that it can happen to anyone at any time. Yet as Americans we're afraid of losing our soldiers to defend our security. I can only speak for myself when I say that my life is an easy expense to ensure that my family and friends can live in peace. I strongly believe in what we are doing and wish you were here to see for yourselves the honor and privilege that American soldiers aboard this ship are feeling, knowing that we are going to be a part of something so strong and so meaningful to the safety of our loved ones. Then you would know what this potential war is about. We will stand tall in front of terrorism and defeat it. We as soldiers are not afraid of what may happen. We are only afraid of Americans not being able to understand why we are here. I ask for your courage as Americans to be strong for us; I ask for your understanding in what we believe is right. I ask for your support in what we are sworn to do: defend our country and the life of all. We will succeed in our task and will end the threat of terrorism in our back yard. We will also end the threat of terrorism in our neighbors'. We have to remind ourselves of what this country stands for: life, liberty and justice for all. In order to maintain those rights we have to stop the threat of terrorism. I am proud to be here. I will be coming home, but not until I know that it's going to be safe for all Americans and for everyone I love. My family is first. My country is where they live. I will defend it. Lonnie J. Lewis
Navy corpsman
C Co. 1/4 WPN PLT
UIC 39726 FPO AP 966139726
P.S. Mom, please send this to everyone who has a hard time understanding why we are here. Ask the paper to put what I've said in a column so that others will know why we are here and what we are here for. I love you all and will be home soon. I left my address so that if anyone feels like writing to let me know how they feel, they can.
Danny
ya I meant 1.5 but part of the april fools that bob has given us has removed the edit feature. sea sick is a good way to explain it.
2.5m shares in 1 hr. when did that last happen?
http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson032803.asp
March 28, 2003 7:30 a.m.
History or Hysteria?
Our vulture pundits regurgitate rumor and buzz.
nstantly televised images are broadcast with no in-depth analysis. A national television audience sighs and cheers second-to-second — not unlike the mercurial Athenians lined up on the shore of the Great Harbor at Syracuse, who in dejection and euphoria watched their fleet lose, win, and lose in the sea battle against the Sicilians.
But rather than trying to digest and analyze the tempo of battle, our vulture pundits instead regurgitate rumor and buzz — which are usually refuted by the next minute’s events. The subtext throughout seems to be disappointment that the war so far has lasted seven rather than two days.
Reporters at the beginning of the week were hysterically railing that Basra — cut off and surrounded — was not yet taken. A voice on NPR told us that after three days there would be “no food or water” — as if we had not cut off the power, water, and bridges at Baghdad in 1991 for 44 days, as if Marines getting shot at had electricity in the field. Things happen in war. Surely a temporary interruption in service is not so high a price to pay for lasting freedom.
I flipped the channel. Another pundit was lamenting that we were outnumbered by the Republican Guard; 1,000 planes with the best pilots in the world apparently don’t compute in his strategic calculus. Yet another philosopher worried that we “were angering the Arab street” — as if anger does not naturally rise in war. He should have asked why a German public that hated us in 1941 did not do so in 1945. Not to be outdone, another expert — wrong in the past on everything in Afghanistan — smugly announced that in five days of war “everything has gone wrong!”
Have these people any intelligence or shame?
Casualties, POWs, and skyrocketing costs blanket the airwaves; rarely mentioned is the simple military fact that in a single week, a resolute American pincer column has driven across Iraq and is now systematically surrounding Baghdad — and with far fewer killed than were lost in a single day in Lebanon. When American soldiers move decisively against terrorists and killers in the Middle East, they have a far greater chance of surviving than they do sitting in their barracks as living targets under “rules of engagement.”
In disgust at the hysteria, I took a drive to Washington to the National Cathedral on Sunday. Big mistake. All except one of the entrances were closed due to security concerns. I walked in under the wonderful sculptures of Frederick Hart, an authentic American genius who almost single-handedly restored classical realism to American sculpture. A small statue of a kneeling Lincoln, who sent thousands into battle to eradicate slavery, was in the corner. A plaque of quotations from Churchill, about the need for sacrifice in war, was on the wall. So I was feeling somewhat good again — until I heard the pious sermon on “shock and awe.” In pompous tones the minister was deprecating the war effort, calling down calumnies upon the administration, and alleging the immoral nature of our nation at war.
Such a strange man at such a strange time, I thought. His entire congregation, by its own admission, is in danger from foreign terrorists (why else bar the gates?). His church is itself a monument to the utility of force for moral purposes. His own existence as a free-speaking, freely worshiping man of God is possible only thanks to the United States military — whose present mission he was openly deriding at the country’s national shrine.
All these people need to calm down, take a deep breath, and read their history — computing the logistics of fighting 7,000 miles away and considering the hurdles of vast space, unpredictable weather, and enemies without uniforms. And? In just a week, the United States military has surrounded one of history’s most sadistic and nasty regimes. It has overrun 80 percent of the countryside and has daily pulverized the Republican Guard, achieving more in five days than the Iranians did in eight years.
Twenty-four hours a day, thousands of tankers and supply trucks barrel down long, vulnerable supply lines, quickly and efficiently. There is no bridge too far for these long columns. One-hundred percent air superiority is ours. There is not a single Iraqi airplane in the sky. Enemy tanks either stay put or are bombed. Kurds and Shiites really will soon start to be heard. Seven oil wells are on fire (with firefighters on the scene) — no oil slicks, no attacks on Israel. Kuwait City is not aflame. “Millions” of refugees fleeing into Syria and Jordan have not materialized. Even Peter Arnett is no longer parroting the Iraqi government claims of ten million starving and has moved on to explain why the Iraqis were equipped with chemical suits — to protect Saddam’s killers from our WMDs!
Few, if any, major bridges in Iraq have been blown; there are no mass uprisings in Saddam’s favor. The Tikrit mafia fights as the SS did in the craters of Berlin, facing as it does — and within weeks — either a mob’s noose, a firing squad, or a dungeon. Through 20,000 air sorties, no jets have been shot down; there is nothing to stop them from flying another 100,000. They fly in sand, in lightning, high, low, day, night, anywhere, anytime. Supplies are pouring in. Saddam’s regime is cut off and its weapons will not be replenished. This is not North Vietnam, with Chinese and Russian ships with daily re-supply in the harbor of Haiphong. British and Americans, with courageous Australians as well, are fighting as a team without even the petty rivalry of a Montgomery and Bradley.
Our media talks of Saddam’s thugs and terrorists as if they were some sort of Iraqi SAS. Meanwhile, the real thing — scary American, British, and Australian Special Forces — is causing havoc to Saddam’s rear guard. In short, for all the tragedy of a fragging, Iraqi atrocities, misdirected cruise missiles, and the usual cowardly antics inherent to our enemy’s way of war, the real story is not being reported: A phenomenal march against overwhelming logistical, material, and geographical odds in under seven days has reached and surrounded Saddam Hussein’s capital.
At home there have been none of the promised terrorist attacks. A supportive public — stunned by initial losses, now angered by atrocities — is growing more, not less, fervent, determined not merely to defeat but to destroy utterly the Baathists. The Arab world snickers that we cannot take casualties; the American public is instead growing impatient to inflict more of them — and is probably already well to the right of the Bush administration. We are a calm and forgiving people, but executing prisoners, fighting in civilian clothes, and using human shields will soon draw a response too terrible to contemplate.
Just as unusual has been American ad hoc logistical flexibility. Saudi Arabia caved early on — and we moved to other Gulf states. Turkey caved late — and we went ahead with a single thrust. France connived both early and late — and they are quiet. Russia, as the Soviets of old, proved duplicitous in ways that we are just learning — and it made no difference. Indeed, their night-vision equipment and GPS jammers will help Saddam no more than did the German-built bunker he was bombed in.
We should recall that in the first Gulf War we bombed for over 44 days. Critics in 1991 by day 10 were complaining because after the first few nights’ pyrotechnics, Saddam’s army had not crumbled. In turn, earlier swaggering air-advocates had promised victory in three weeks — only to be unjustly slandered that they had failed to end the war in six. Gulf War I is considered a great victory; it required 48 days of air and ground attacks by an enormous coalition to expel the Iraqi army from Kuwait. Our present attempt, with half the force, seeks to end Saddam Hussein altogether — and on day 7 already had him cut off, trapped, and besieged.
In the campaign against Belgrade, the ebullience was gone by day 10 when Milosevic remained defiant. By the fifth week, criticism was fierce and calls for an end to the bombing widespread. On day 77, Milosevic capitulated — and no critics stepped forward to confess that their gloom and doom had been misplaced. Does anyone recall the term “quagmire,” used of Afghanistan after the third week — and how prophets of doom promised enervating stasis, only days later to see a chain of Afghan cities fall? Yet no armchair doom-and-gloom generals were to be found when the Taliban ran and utterly confounded their pessimism. Our talking heads remind me of the volatility of the Athenian assembly, ready to laud or execute at a moment’s notice.
The commentators need to listen to history. By any fair standard of even the most dazzling charges in military history — the German blast through the Ardennes in spring 1940, or Patton’s romp in July — the present race to Baghdad is unprecedented in its speed and daring, and in the lightness of its causalities. We can nit-pick about the need for another armored division, pockets of irregulars, a need to mop up here and there, plenty of hard fighting ahead, this and that. But the fact remains that, so far, the campaign has been historically unprecedented in getting so many tens of thousands of soldiers so quickly to Baghdad without losses — and its logistics will be studied for decades.
Indeed, the only wrinkle is that our present military faces cultural obstacles never envisioned by an Epaminondas, Caesar, Marlborough, Sherman — or any of the other great marchers. A globally televised and therapeutic culture puts an onus on American soldiers that could never have been envisioned by any of the early captains. We treat prisoners justly; our enemy executes them. We protect Iraqi bridges, oil, and dams — from Iraqi saboteurs. We must treat Iraqi civilians better than do their own men, who are trying to kill them. Our generals and leaders take questions; theirs give taped propaganda speeches. Shock and awe — designed not to kill but to stun, and therefore to save civilians — are slurred as Hamburg and Dresden. The force needed to crush Saddam’s killers is deemed too much for the fragile surrounding human landscape. Marines who raise the Stars and Stripes are reprimanded for being too chauvinistic. And on, and on, and on.
When this is all over — and I expect it will be soon — besides a great moral accounting, I hope that there will deep introspection and sober public discussion about the peculiar ignorance and deductive pessimism on the part of our elites. In the meantime, all we can insist on is absolute and unconditional surrender — no peace process, no exit strategy, no U.N. votes, no Arab League parley, no EU expressions of concern, no French, no anything but our absolute victory and Saddam’s utter ruin. Unlike in 1991, commanders in the field must be given explicit instructions from the White House about negotiations: There are to be absolutely none — other than the acceptance of unconditional surrender.
"Hundreds of thousands of American jobs depend on the success of U.S.-developed wireless technologies like CDMA," he said in the letter sent on Wednesday and posted on his Web site.
what about W-CDMA. I would give the contract to the Japanese companies for being on our side in all of this. 3G is the way to go. FDD/TDD with IDCC inside.
if it's being sent I would appreciate a copy.
mike@phantomwireless.com
Thanks in advance
I think that I found a hole in your theory. We would be a much more attractive takeover target if we HAD all the 3G contracts in place. A buyer would believe that right now it is an uncertainty that IDCC will even get 3G licenses. They could be buying on a hope and a prayer. Once we have licenses then it becomes a better value to a purchaser. Of course, by then, it will be way past 50$ JMHO
Tornado thanks EOM
Can anyone tell me if there are any legal ramifications to posting Tom's report on a web site? are there copy write issues?
Thank you all that emailed me the report. THis board is the best and fastest!!! now I go home and read!
thanks again
Mike
someone please send me a copy of TC's report. I would greatly appreciate it. mike@phantomwireless.com
Just found another use for the ignor button
does anyone know who's OLED they are using? is this PANL's?
From the reference post
In addition, Samsung Electronics put on display the world's first Dick Tracy-style GPRS wrist watch phone, which weighs under 80 grams, measures just 37.8 x 64 x 17.7 millimeters and supports speakerphone technologies. Moreover, to maximize users' experience, the watch phone comes with a bright, easy to read, 256 organic light emitting diode (OLED) color screen that boast high resolution. The phone will be out in the European market in the fourth quarter of 2003.
TEECEE maybe it is your friend that wrote those 3000 option contracts trying to keep us under 20?
Data how long you think IDCC and ERICY have been working together?
JK I like that option
mk
Ed I was also thinking software maintenance. Ericy pays us to be the liaison to their customers who want to use the product. If it is like any other software product that requires customization we could do the software customizing to facilitate that. It would be lucrative work and keep many engineers busy for a while.
I think GENIUS!!
Congrats Jim!
I think this paragraph holds the answer to the strategic partnership and where the "meat" of the deal is. If Ericy's GSM/GPRS/UMTS platform is widely used then IDCC maintaining it could be very lucrative.
The licensed products exclude any product compliant with Third Generation (3G) standards. These agreements resolve a long-standing patent infringement litigation with Ericsson scheduled for trial in May 2003. Ericsson also has granted an option to InterDigital for a Reference Design License and Support Agreement for Ericsson's GSM/GPRS/UMTS platform.
well kiss my Shalaylee(sp?). This baby will not come down!!!
Today it was more like a Shalaylee then a hockey stick. the rest of the year will be a nice game of hockey!!!
I logged in this AM and saw a 34% rise. Must be a mistake right? my frist thought was 250 million setellment has hit. In working threw the mess it looks more like 500 million and counting. Can Motorola be far behind? Congrats to all who held all this time. I can not read all posts now but tonight I will be plenty busy reading..
100 by years end is my guess
has this been posted? when the fool, who has been poking us in the eye for the last 5 yrs, sais someting good we know we are going places. Sorry if this was posted.
By Bill Mann (TMF Otter)
March 17, 2003
InterDigital Communications (Nasdaq: IDCC) saw its market capitalization surge more than $300 million, or 38%, in early trading today after the company announced it settled a patent and royalty dispute with Ericsson (Nasdaq: ERICY).
Ericsson will pay $34 million to cover its sales through the end of 2002 -- a tremendous boost for InterDigital, which had revenues just above $27 million in the last quarter. In addition, Ericsson will pay a $6 million annual license fee to InterDigital, plus a royalty on each product sold through 2006.
InterDigital claims patents on several key components in GSM, a leading, high-speed mobile communications standard, and has been fighting for years to have its patents recognized and royalties paid. Some pundits were fairly dismissive of InterDigital's claims in years past, saying it was seeking to get onto the same gravy train that took Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM) into the stratosphere in 1999. After the endless delays of 3G Communications, InterDigital slid back down into obscurity, out of the public's view.
By January 2001, InterDigital traded as low as $4, which means that even prior to the most recent agreement, the stock had more than tripled -- and in a miserable market, especially for telecommunications equipment companies.
On the other hand, unless an investor has some deep knowledge about the merits of a case, counting on a legal judgment as a key component to an investing thesis isn't recommended. Even if the case seems cut and dry, the law works in strange ways.
After news of the agreement, Ericsson's stock surged, as well -- up in early trading by as much as 17%. How can this be? This suit was scheduled to go to trial in May, and the potential losses for Ericsson due to a bad outcome were as high as billions. This agreement makes it unlikely that other holdouts, including Nokia (NYSE: NOK) and Samsung, would succeed in avoiding making royalty payments to InterDigital. Nokia's royalties from 2002 alone could be worth $120 million to InterDigital.
So, the $34 million paid with this agreement could spiral much higher. These are royalty payments, which have no cost of goods associated with them. As a result, they are almost pure profit to InterDigital. For a small company, getting more than its last quarter's revenues in a lump-sum settlement, if nothing else, makes for a great day.
Ronnie you said
"Do you really think that stock options will make good, productive employees work even harder and produce even more? Most “good” employees work as hard as they can for a reasonable/fair cash compensation, good fringe benefits, bonuses for truly outstanding work, a good work environment, and satisfying/fulfilling work. They really don’t need anything more, ie stock options"
I am a very hard worker. I had a job that paid very good. I took a job for less money. Stock options were involved and, along with a product I liked, they played an important part in my choice. Like I said I all ready am a hard worker and believe that who ever pays me, gets at least 100% out of me. In exchange I expect a very good wage. I go where i get the best deal and not all startups can afford the best, so they augment with options. my current employer gets 110% out of me (just ask my wife) in exchange for coming to work for a start, I get options. the options are out of the money, someday I know they will be worth more. I work for a company I believe in and put my all into it with the expectation that when my hard work pays off it will be made that much more rewarding by the options that I traded for a smaller salary. Does this make me greedy? not any more than someone who invest in a company who's management they do not trust just because there is a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
hope this helps you understand why options are valuable to start ups.
Mike
Art,
If you do that ....... I'm out too. LOL
I like your friend all ready
Wasn't that Kmart in the 60's, Target in the 80's and now Walmart in the 90's? Walmart will eventually get ovrsized and over extended and fall by the wayside. Kmart is at the end of its cycle. Sears? Remember Montgomery Wards? I don't think walmart is a bad thing. I think it is just the youngest and current in a long list of retail outlets that will one day fall to the wayside when their time is up. When wages get to high, in proportion to the work done, then adjustments are made. This is healthy for our economy. It is painful, I agree. I've been there with many others. Walmart comes in with lower wages, then things rise to good wages, then past good to rediculous, then the company fails and someone else takes their place. Look at United Airlines. Highest paid in the industry. Southwest comes along. wages are much lower but getting better. It's been going on for centuries and we are still here.
Just my thoughts about Walmart on a Sunday.
Link to James Black's column
An open letter to America from one European
Americans kept Europeans free to disagree
http://www.dailymail.com/news/Opinion/2003021320/
musta missed jim's request
Amen, Loop. I wish I could say it that well. EOM
I don't agree with what you say but will not attach you for saying it. I spent 8 years defending your right to say what you want. To compare Pres Bush to Saddam is sickening. You ask what the connection between the attacks on the USA and Saddam are? Those pictures show the results of an attempt to take your freedoms away. Saddam would like nothing more than to see you loose those freedoms. Then he could continue his quest to take over the middle east. Saddam has the potential to cause the same kind of damage that we saw inflicted on 9-11. I know, I know, so does north Korea and a host of others. You have to start someplace when cleaning out the cesspool, Iraq is a good choice. Saddam is no saint and stirs the middle east when ever possible. Remove him and a lot of issues can be fixed. I know, it’s all about oil. Only in this case the oil can belongs to France and Russia. I am one of the many who think that we can not sweep this mess under the rug as we have for the last decade. It will only get worse until the terrorism is dealt with head on. I thank your relatives who joined the service with the intention of protecting the way of life we all enjoy. I know that that is the reason they enlisted because, like myself, those that volunteer for service feel a certain duty to repay those that gave their life so that the rest of us may enjoy freedom. Freedom is a very precious thing that most in this country take for granted. We have a whole generation that has grown up with prosperity and until recently, did not know that unemployment even existed. Freedom is often taken for granted in much the same way. On 9-11 we saw that there are people that will take that freedom away just because we have it and they don't. Ya, I know, it’s our fault. I have news for anyone who believes that. The Middle Eastern people have been at it for thousands of years. We are just over 200 years old. We did not create this mess.
I did not attempt to stymie anyone’s right to speak his or her mind. I question their judgment and choice of words. Patriotism. That is a word that gets tossed around pretty freely. Lets look at the word and its meaning.
PATRIOT: one who loves his or her country and supports its authority and interests. One entry found for patriot.
Main Entry: pa·tri·ot
Pronunciation: 'pA-trE-&t, -"ät, chiefly British 'pa-trE-&t
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle French patriote compatriot, from Late Latin patriota, from Greek patriOtEs, from patria lineage, from patr-, patEr father
Date: 1605
: one who loves his or her country and supports its authority and interests
I do not question whether sophist loves his country or its interests. I just question his judgment in these matters. That’s all. I have the right. I fought for it. I will express it. And Oh, by the way, I would rather stand behind someone who looks up to God than down to the forked tailed one. And as far as presidential norm goes, I guess that was re defined in the recent past to include finding new things to do with a cigar and giving new meaning to the word “is”. You think maybe the rest of the world saw the actions of our leader and the trash coming out of Hollywood and thought that the rest of the country was like that? Morally void?
It’s easy for people to find fault with what is about to happen. The same people have no answer as to what we should do. Maybe we should just wait for the next attack? This is not a game and President Bush knows it. Ya, I know, we have to fix that darn Electoral College thing. Then we would never be here, would we?
As far as being able to prove the need to remove Saddam, Bush et al have convinced 80% of the country and at least 90 countries around the world. Just because many of the countries that support the enforcement of UN resolutions are small and recently liberated from communism means we should discount what they say? Maybe they cherish freedom more than the minority in this country? Maybe, just maybe, they know what it's like to be opressed.
There is a small group of people in this country that think we are starting a war. I think they just don’t realize that the war started the 80’s by terrorists lining up for their share of the 90 maidens promised to each warrior of the jihad of a hijacked religion. Achile Laural, Pan Am 103, Lebanon marine barracks, Kobar towers, WTC ’93, Kenyan & Tanzanian embassies were all warning signs. We just did not take this war seriously or acknowledge its existence until 4 aircraft were hijacked and 3000 people died. Some still don’t acknowledge it. What will it take?
Sorry for the long winded, rambling reply
Sophist, Which of these did you miss?
OT: Sorry all for the OT but I must respond to a private message from AMS.
You are correct that tripe is something people eat.(not many though) I got this from a cooking web site. note the 4th stomach description. I thought so and this is what I refer to.
tripe Notes: Tripe is the name given to the stomachs of various animals, but most recipes that call for it intend for you to use beef tripe. Cows have four stomachs, and the first three yield merchantable tripe. Blanket tripe = plain tripe = flat tripe = smooth tripe comes from the first stomach, honeycomb tripe (pictured at left) and pocket tripe from the second, and book tripe = bible tripe = leaf tripe from the third. Honeycomb tripe is meatier and more tender than the other kinds and considered to be the best, but all these kinds of tripe can be used interchangeably in recipes. Tripe is almost always sold bleached and partially cooked. This saves a lot of work, since unprocessed tripe would need to be cooked for many, many hours to make it tender enough to chew. The fourth stomach is the amsbs stomach = irish bs generator = useless short = gonna loose his tailpipe. This 4th stomach therfore is very hard to take in even the smallest portions.
Don't bother responding even privately. I cut off that avenue as well. I should have responded privately but am not capable of figuring out even the most fundamental use of command buttons on web sites. ain't it a bit*h
What is amazing is that the short interest is at almost an all time high only surpassed by the Dec. 99 run and the stock price was at a 3 month low during the week ending Feb. 14, 2003. That goes against any rational trading strategy. The shorts are making a big bet that IDCC is going alot lower than $11.50, back down to the $5 level. As somebody already posted on this board, I would like to get into these people's heads. I would like to know if they know something I don't know.
We saw during '99 longs doing the same thing, for all the reasons longs pay out the kiester when they know they should not. Irrational?
Right now the market is on the longest, sever, sustained down turn in our history, just like the '99 run up was the longest most sever run up in our history.
With the threat of the world coming to an end and the long downturn, the shorts think they can't loose. But they are getting scared. Just look at AMS. I had to finely put him back on ignore last night. I just don't have time when in the field to wade through his tripe.
maybe this is a sign that the bottom is near.
Nice price action today. Can't keep a good stock down!
Mike
it was a non event except for the wealth of information and strenghtening of conviction it has provided for investors of IDCC. RE: terms of NOK contract we have speculated on esp IQ's "why it is taking so long" have been verified true. Ronnie's 14 reasons should also get some bolstering from this. very refreshing in my mind.
what the heck is going on. Striaght up? someone liked the contracts. .26 and rising
what a ping pong ball we have today. I haven't read so many great posts as I did this weekend. What news we have presented to us. We have had many ideas validated for the best. I don't see any negative in this Fridays release. I am very please with the Nok contract and agree with those who stated that IDCC would not release this to the public without NOK consent, unless NOK was not playing nice, but in that case, with a contract like this, NOK would have just committed suicide. I give management a big thumbs up on the terms of the contract and for further being able to negotiate Addendums to the contract that favor IDCC. Hang on and wait for the next shoe to drop.
IDCC pdf looks like it could be what Dr.Briançon presented at the show
Understanding the Business Case for WCDMA TDD
Dr. Alain C. Briançon
Chief Technology Officer
InterDigital Communications Corporation
http://www.interdigital.com/dis.jsp?dis=5&file=WCDMA_TDD_Cost_Savings_Feb2003.pdf
Did this Nokia financial come out about 2pm this afternoon?
your point is?
Fire
In my opinion it has nothing to do with raising the options and dilution issue. it has to do with the end run that a lot feel Ronnie did. That hurt his credibility.