do not believe anyone - there probably wrong
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IBM and INSP - partnership READ ON
===========================================
from IBM WEB Site -
http://www.ibm.com/news/us/2003/02/182.html
===========================================
News
IBM builds momentum for open standards-based wireless infrastructure
IBM has announced new solutions to help customers more efficiently deploy and support wireless services across a range of networks and devices.
The announcement continues IBM's push to establish an open standards-based infrastructure designed to reduce wireless implementation costs, speed the deployment of new services and accelerate revenue generation for enterprises and service providers.
Recognizing that most companies today are faced with a complex environment of multiple data sources, residing in multiple systems, that need to be accessible across multiple networks and devices, IBM is extending its software and services portfolio by supporting the establishment of an open and advanced enterprise reference architecture supported by customer integration labs. The reference architecture and associated solutions will help businesses dynamically extend information to disparate devices, reducing the time and costs associated with deploying new wireless applications, and extending the benefits of e-business on demand to mobile users.
"Historically, standardization has been the key driver for growth in nearly every industry on the brink of mass adoption," said Rod Adkins, general manager of IBM's pervasive computing division. "The wireless industry is following a similar evolution. Our announcements today are designed to address this evolution by providing customers with the ability to choose between a wide range of technology providers and freeing them from reliance on any single company."
Continuing the company's focus on enterprise mobility, the new IBM Wireless Enterprise Delivery Environment creates a framework for the interconnection of wireless networks and enterprise systems and details the horizontal infrastructure required to provide a common development and deployment platform that helps companies to cost-effectively and rapidly support new applications -- such as mobile sales and field force automation, e-mail access, asset monitoring, supply chain management and mobile commerce -- as well as new devices and networks. IBM plans to support the platform with the establishment of two Wireless Enterprise Labs, one in Raleigh, North Carolina, and one in LaGaude, France, that will implement the Wireless Enterprise Delivery Environment using IBM and its business partners' software and hardware components. The labs will be open to IBM business partners as a testbed to integrate components into wireless solutions based on the Wireless Enterprise Delivery Environment. Created specifically for the enterprise market, the Wireless Enterprise Delivery Environment is linked tightly with IBM's successful Service Provider Delivery Environment (SPDE)(TM), an open standards-based framework designed to give mobile and fixed network operators the flexibility to introduce new revenue generating services to their customers faster, easier and at lower cost.
In addition, new wireless solutions announced today that add to IBM's pervasive computing portfolio include:
Utilizing IBM's Wireless Enterprise Delivery Environment and WebSphere infrastructure software and the range of Nokia's business terminal platforms, IBM and Nokia will demonstrate standards-based solutions designed to give companies an effective way to mobilize their business processes and enable a wide array of reliable, scalable and secure wireless enterprise solutions, such as access to e-mail and calendar synchronization. The solutions will be demonstrated at the 3GSM World Congress this week. The companies also announced that they intend to develop and implement joint solutions across a range of Nokia business terminals, including the Nokia 6800, as well as Symbian-based devices like the Nokia 9210i Communicator and the Nokia 7650. IBM also announced that it intends to develop and deploy its WebSphere Everyplace Access client for the Symbian platform.
An agreement with Sony Ericsson to provide secure end-to-end solutions using advanced mobile handsets. The collaboration is designed to accelerate business usage of advanced mobile handsets bringing secure, reliable and scalable solutions to customers wishing to exploit the benefits of corporate mobility and increase productivity in mobile work environments, such as field and sales force applications.
An end-to-end middleware solution with Wavecom that offers enterprise users and network operators a simple, rapid and more efficient connection between different machines across the I/T ecosystem. The new standards-based solution embeds IBM's MQIsdp messaging protocol directly onto the Wavecom Wireless Module helping data coming from handsets and other devices to be transformed to match the data requirements of other enterprise mobile applications. These wireless modules can then be integrated into a wide range of devices, whether vending machines, electricity meters or industrial appliances. Customers can realize a greater return on their IT investment from a solution that is designed to enable machines to rapidly network with applications at the application level without requiring extensive reprogramming or systems administration.
An end-to-end solution based on Alcatel's GPRS, WLAN and ADSL access solutions, running on IBM WebSphere and Lotus software, which will provide mobile workers in enterprises access to back end applications from their laptops or PDAs over multiple networks with seamless services continuity. This capability will be demonstrated at 3GSM at Alcatel's booth. Connecting with IBM's Wireless Enterprise Lab in La Gaude, Alcatel's 3G Reality Centres, a worldwide program launched by Alcatel, integrate key players along the entire mobile value chain to foster timely availability and interoperability of mobile multimedia services, accelerating the development of a mobile centric ecosystem.
Collaboration with SFR to provide enterprises with a wireless e-business solution combining SFR's GPRS data offering and IBM's WebSphere Everyplace Connection Manager to provide seamless cross-network roaming that allows mobile users to switch between a wired network and GPRS without having to restart applications. The solution provides industry-leading security, data flow optimization, and improved session stability over wired and wireless networks.
Collaboration with isMobile, an IBM business partner providing a mobile field force automation application suite based on IBM middleware and servers, and Midray, a Debitel company in the Swisscom Group which provides mobile services to the business market over networks from a number of mobile network providers, including Vodafone and T-Mobile. The isMobile Bla Coordinator suite enables companies with mobile workforces to increase their service efficiency and to reduce their work order cost. Initially aimed at the German market, the Midray service is planned to also become available in other European countries.
The availability of IBM's Lotus Domino Everyplace Access Server and Lotus Sametime Everyplace on Palm's newly announced PalmTungsten(TM) W handheld. With carrier activation, the data-centric Tungsten W handheld provides users with a sophisticated combination of wireless email, SMS messaging, Internet browsing, phone functionality, and business applications on GSM(TM)/GPRS networks. IBM's WebSphere Everyplace Access will also soon be available as a mobile client on Palm handhelds, enabling customers to manage and extend back-end systems, applications and data to deliver enterprise solutions to mobile users.
IBM also made several announcements for the service provider market leveraging components of the IBM Service Provider Delivery Environment, including:
Extensions to the existing IBM Rapid IP Services for e-business Solution (WebSphere Everyplace Subscription Manager, WebSphere Business Integration for Telecommunications, DB2 and WebSphere Portal) to address service provider needs in delivering public wireless LANs. These extensions will provide authentication and management integration with access controllers and pre-paid options like credit cards, vouchers and scratch card support with business partners. WebSphere Everyplace Subscription Manager is highly scalable and capable of supporting access for millions of subscribers. By leveraging this solution with WebSphere Connection Manager, subscribers can roam between wireline (ie, ethernet, DSL) connections, public wireless LAN hot spots and existing public wireless connections (i.e., 3g, GPRS, GSM) without losing the existing session. Self care is an important component of this solution, helping service providers reduce operational expense and increasing efficiency.
The first integrated WAP 2 platform based on Openwave's Mobile Access Gateway 6 and core IBM middleware. By combining WebSphere Application Server, WebSphere Portal, DB2 database software, pSeries e-Servers and storage, operators have the ability to drive lower costs and faster product cycle times. The two companies are also demonstrating joint solutions for downloading mobile content and generating multi-channel, permission-based campaigns. Customers will now be able to rapidly automate their wireless marketing programs, branded through third parties, personalized by segment and optimized for various handsets.
The launch of an on demand wireless e-business solution with Smartner that runs on IBM WebSphere Everyplace middleware and IBM servers, enabling wireless service providers and their customers to reduce the total cost of ownership for mobile office solutions by benefiting from simple, rapid deployment, highly scalable and cost-effective mobile access of their e-mail servers from a variety of devices like mobile phones, PDAs, and laptops. The server portion of Smartner Office Extender, which supports mobile access to Lotus Domino, Microsoft Exchange and POP3 mail servers, can be hosted by service providers, or in an IBM e-business Hosting Center on behalf of the service provider. A range of IBM services are available to support the deployment of Smartner Office Extender. The solution has already been deployed by a number of European wireless service providers, including Vodafone Ireland.
"------------------------------------------------------
LOOK HERE
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A solution to be developed with InfoSpace that targets the mobile professional by unifying general and vertical industry information services, navigation and other location based services, and availability management services, including email, personal information management, alerting and notification, and instant messaging, into a single offering that delivers these capabilities to mobile phones. The solution will include InfoSpace's managed service offering for mobile push-messaging, Websphere Portal running at the wireless carrier and Websphere Everyplace Access running at the enterprise behind its firewall interfacing to Lotus Notes or other enterprise information systems. The integration, flexibility and security built into this offering, combined with its availability on mobile phones and instant alerting capability via push-messaging standards, will create a powerful entry with significant advantages over niche offerings that have been available only on PDAs. This offering allows wireless service providers to sell new value added data services to enterprise customers which is a top business imperative as they look to drive revenue.
In support of WebSphere Telecom Application Server, IBM has established the Developer Center for Telecom and e-business, where IBM Business Partners can leverage IBM technical expertise and development facilities, test applications in a network environment before releasing them, and explore new channels for products. This opportunity is available exclusively to members of PartnerWorld for Developers, the developer resource for IBM Business Partners. And to support the growing number of opportunities for Parlay in Europe, the Developer Center for Telecom and e-business will be also be extended to the IBM Mobile Solutions Lab in Helsinki, Finland. In addition, a Rapid Porting team has been established to accelerate application ports to WebSphere Telecom Application Server.
The new solutions announced today add to a portfolio that includes software that extends IBM's popular WebSphere platform to smart machines, wireless devices and networks, and solutions that enable enterprises to deploy applications and data to mobile workforces. The company has built a services force of 10,000 wireless consultants, and in June 2002 was highlighted by International Data Corporation as "by far the leading provider of mobile and wireless professional services." Through an innovative wireless ROI tool based on thousands of customer engagements, the company is helping customers achieve higher productivity from the deployment of wireless solutions. The announcements also build on IBM's continued momentum of aligning with strategic industry players across the pervasive computing ecosystem. Through its pervasive computing division, IBM provides the flexibility for the on demand era, extending the infrastructure to new devices and new forms of interaction.
New Tool Bar - was built for Windows XP - if you do not have that operating system - do not download it - I am running windows NT and Windows 98 - and it has dll problems with these O/S- I called the company and asked that they put the operating system on the download notice - so you would know it has been tested on your particular operating system.
INSP moved up their CC - NUMBERS will be GOOD!!!
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/041014/145236_1.html
The business company just does not do this - IBM did it once -
now INSP is doing it - WATCH OUT ABOVE!!!!
Do you take a LUNCH? then stop eating and call IR - yes I have a day job and yes I find time to call - 2nd - everybody has an agenda on these boards - that is why they post - since I do not know peoples' agenda - I find talking one on one best to determine agenda. As I do my Due Diligence with this stock, I'll remember your posts - thanks
Market Cap? What is the value today. Anybody?
other search companies - this is my list of publicly traded companies - as another poster said - there are private companies - but as you can see SHGY is the smallest and a 50 cent price tag at 14 million shares is really small -
my list:
INSP SHGY.PK YHOO GOOG CRM MSFT ASKJ AQNT MAMA IFUL LOOK FWHT YPNT.OB
If you do not participate - why should you reap the rewards? - others that work hard as SHAREHOLDERS - that know they can not ask all the questions - and they understand a group asking questions - the individuals in the group can benefit from their questions individually - then stand to benefit from the group participating.
Also look at it this way - you may hold no shares in this stock - and are here only to bash the company - shareholders really have a different agenda.
so next time participate - that is the lesson learned -
today will be just another great day - watch goog - they report next week.
Well it can not get to $1.00 - right now - it would be $1.2 billion company - so I ass/u/me it can not get to 50 cents - that would be a $600 million company - so with all the shares it might get to 25 cents a $300 million company.
I had asked posters to tell me their questions and answers they got -then I would compile them FOR THOSE PEOPLE THAT EMAILED ME - I have sent out the compiled list to that group.already. NEXT Time you should participate!
Authorized Shares mean if this thing ever gets to $1.00 per share - market cap would be $1.x billion - the business currently can not support that - so to ever hope to get out of the sub cents - there will need to be a reverse split in our future (OR SHGY just canceled 1/2 of its outstanding shares-they also could do that) // I have been in this stock for 2-3 years - so I am hopeful we get above a dollar - some time - my retirement plan is 2017.
YAHOO just posted strong numbers for search - wait until the street see's INSP numbers in 14 days!!!
YAHOO posts strong numbers tonight - SEARCH is the ticket to wealth!!!
HOT Property the space - !!!!!!
http://biz.yahoo.com/ibd/041008/newamer_1.html
------------------------------------------------
Search, Mobile Markets Help Internet Firm Bounce Back
Friday October 8, 7:00 pm ET
Pete Barlas
InfoSpace is a rarity in this post-dot-bomb world: an Internet company with a healthy share price and bottom line.
It can thank strong performances from its two main businesses.
One is search and directory, which helps Web users find information, merchants and products online.
The other is its mobile division, which develops tools that let wireless carriers and other clients develop and deliver mobile data services across multiple devices.
Business on both fronts has been good enough to help InfoSpace (NasdaqNM:INSP - News) move back into profitability after three straight years of red ink.
First Call analysts expect the firm to earn $1.08 a share this year, up from a 20-cent loss in 2003.
Wall Street has taken notice, pushing InfoSpace's stock price to a 52-week high of 52.40 on Oct. 4 before a recent slump pushed shares closer to 47.
"The stock has performed very well because people are starting to appreciate that they are in the search business, but they also appreciate that this mobile business has some legs to it," said Wedbush Morgan Securities analyst Scott Sutherland, who owns shares of InfoSpace.
Searching For More Business
InfoSpace operates three search engines: Dogpile, Metacrawler and Webcrawler.
Most of its revenue comes from licensing its Web search service to other sites that want to provide consumers with the ability to search the Internet.
InfoSpace's search customers include ABCNews and Fox News. It also provided search for NBC's Web site during this year's Summer Olympics.
The company has agreements with more than 75 clients. It splits revenue from ads with each site owner. Its search partnerships accounted for 60% of its search revenue in the second quarter vs. 5% the prior year, analysts say.
"They have a compelling offering to other Web sites who want to get their users a search functionality and also get extra revenue," said analyst Stewart Barry of Think Equity Partners.
InfoSpace has cashed in on the fact that most Web sites don't have their own search engine, says Chief Executive Jim Voelker.
"Search has become more of an important activity, second only to e-mail," he said. "There are many high traffic Web sites out there where search is not their core competency, so it's been a strong growth area for us over the course of the last year."
InfoSpace's search operates differently from high-profile peers Google (NasdaqNM:GOOG - News) and Yahoo (NasdaqNM:YHOO - News).
Instead of creating its own search index, it draws its results from several search engines -- including Yahoo and Google. InfoSpace collects the results and puts them in front of the consumer as its own list of results.
Yahoo and other search engines are willing partners. That's because InfoSpace gives them access to more consumers, says Sasa Zorovic, analyst for investment bank Oppenheimer & Co.
"If the user clicks on an ad on Yahoo, then some of the revenue goes to Yahoo, and InfoSpace at least has a chance to get some of the business," he said.
InfoSpace increased its focus on search earlier this year by acquiring Switchboard, a search company, for $160 million in cash.
Switchboard, which provides local search services, helps consumers connect online with small businesses in their hometowns. The deal gave InfoSpace an entry into local search, one of the fastest growing segments of the search market.
Big Potential Payoff
InfoSpace and its peers are chasing business in the paid search market. With paid search, advertisers pay to have their names listed among search results. They pay only when a consumer clicks on their ad.
In the last two years, paid listings helped turn around a moribund ad market. They also reversed the financial fortunes of search companies like InfoSpace that get most of their revenue from ads.
By 2009, the paid listings market in the U.S. will reach $4.9 billion, up from $1.7 billion last year, says market tracker Jupiter Research.
Meanwhile, InfoSpace continues to tweak its overall lineup of products. In the last two years the company has divested several businesses. The last to go was Authorize.net, an online payment processing firm InfoSpace sold for $82 million earlier this year.
InfoSpace kept its wireless business, but has made changes to it in the last year. The company started out selling a software platform to wireless companies that lets consumers get information such as stock quotes and sports scores on mobile phones.
When that business didn't take off right away, InfoSpace expanded its strategy. It began selling ring tones -- the jingles that sound off when somebody dials a cell phone.
InfoSpace entered the business last year after spending $25 million to buy Moviso, a mobile media company. InfoSpace sells packages of ring-tones to wireless carriers.
The company is expected to post wireless sales of $25 million in wireless sales. Over 75% will come from its ring-tone business, analysts say.
That market is growing. By 2009, the number of ring-tone downloads in the U.S. alone will reach 767.4 million vs. 71.1 million last year, says market tracker International Data Corp.
In July, InfoSpace again beefed up its wireless business by acquiring Atlas Mobile, which provides multi-player tournament games on wireless phones.
InfoSpace is trying to carve a niche among wireless consumers who will rely on mobile devices for doing more than making phone calls, analyst Sutherland says.
"It's not just ring tones -- it's going to be graphics, screen savers and games," he said. "As that population ages, you will see a slow migration into user adoption."
Questions I'll be asking?
-------------------------------------
1) plans/time frame to get off the pink sheets?
2) howmuch cash/assets do we have?
3) what are our liabilities?
4) plans to expand usage?
5) more??????
what else will we be asking - post on the message board>
remember to email me the list and when you get your answers - clarenan@msn.com Jerry Clare
Shareholder -orgainze questions?
-----------------------------------
Let the shareholders organize our questions on this message board - then email me the questions and answers you got - Jerry Clare at Clarenan@msn.com - I will combine the qestions and answers into one email and send it out to all individually so we can benefit from the questions/answers that we all asked.
----------------------------------------------------
Postcard? yes I got one too
they want to talk with the shareholders - last this this happened to me with cded - they were telling me about there companies plans for expansion - call them Tuesday - remember to write down any questions you have ahead of time - so you can get answers from the horses mouth!!!
IBD report // from Raging Bull poster:
Dan..., brief mention of ring-tone $$$ in yesterday's IBD paper. I'm still interested in INSP even though the market scared me out a few days ago. Took my profits from the small number of shares I had. Want back in @ a lower price if that happens again. Good luck.
Investor's Business Daily
Search, Mobile Markets Help Internet Firm Bounce Back
Friday October 8, 7:00 pm ET
Pete Barlas
InfoSpace is a rarity in this post-dot-bomb world: an Internet company with a healthy share price and bottom line.
It can thank strong performances from its two main businesses.
One is search and directory, which helps Web users find information, merchants and products online.
The other is its mobile division, which develops tools that let wireless carriers and other clients develop and deliver mobile data services across multiple devices.
Business on both fronts has been good enough to help InfoSpace (NasdaqNM:INSP - News) move back into profitability after three straight years of red ink.
First Call analysts expect the firm to earn $1.08 a share this year, up from a 20-cent loss in 2003.
Wall Street has taken notice, pushing InfoSpace's stock price to a 52-week high of 52.40 on Oct. 4 before a recent slump pushed shares closer to 47.
"The stock has performed very well because people are starting to appreciate that they are in the search business, but they also appreciate that this mobile business has some legs to it," said Wedbush Morgan Securities analyst Scott Sutherland, who owns shares of InfoSpace.
Searching For More Business
InfoSpace operates three search engines: Dogpile, Metacrawler and Webcrawler.
Most of its revenue comes from licensing its Web search service to other sites that want to provide consumers with the ability to search the Internet.
InfoSpace's search customers include ABCNews and Fox News. It also provided search for NBC's Web site during this year's Summer Olympics.
The company has agreements with more than 75 clients. It splits revenue from ads with each site owner. Its search partnerships accounted for 60% of its search revenue in the second quarter vs. 5% the prior year, analysts say.
"They have a compelling offering to other Web sites who want to get their users a search functionality and also get extra revenue," said analyst Stewart Barry of Think Equity Partners.
InfoSpace has cashed in on the fact that most Web sites don't have their own search engine, says Chief Executive Jim Voelker.
"Search has become more of an important activity, second only to e-mail," he said. "There are many high traffic Web sites out there where search is not their core competency, so it's been a strong growth area for us over the course of the last year."
InfoSpace's search operates differently from high-profile peers Google (NasdaqNM:GOOG - News) and Yahoo (NasdaqNM:YHOO - News).
Instead of creating its own search index, it draws its results from several search engines -- including Yahoo and Google. InfoSpace collects the results and puts them in front of the consumer as its own list of results.
Yahoo and other search engines are willing partners. That's because InfoSpace gives them access to more consumers, says Sasa Zorovic, analyst for investment bank Oppenheimer & Co.
"If the user clicks on an ad on Yahoo, then some of the revenue goes to Yahoo, and InfoSpace at least has a chance to get some of the business," he said.
InfoSpace increased its focus on search earlier this year by acquiring Switchboard, a search company, for $160 million in cash.
Switchboard, which provides local search services, helps consumers connect online with small businesses in their hometowns. The deal gave InfoSpace an entry into local search, one of the fastest growing segments of the search market.
Big Potential Payoff
InfoSpace and its peers are chasing business in the paid search market. With paid search, advertisers pay to have their names listed among search results. They pay only when a consumer clicks on their ad.
In the last two years, paid listings helped turn around a moribund ad market. They also reversed the financial fortunes of search companies like InfoSpace that get most of their revenue from ads.
By 2009, the paid listings market in the U.S. will reach $4.9 billion, up from $1.7 billion last year, says market tracker Jupiter Research.
Meanwhile, InfoSpace continues to tweak its overall lineup of products. In the last two years the company has divested several businesses. The last to go was Authorize.net, an online payment processing firm InfoSpace sold for $82 million earlier this year.
InfoSpace kept its wireless business, but has made changes to it in the last year. The company started out selling a software platform to wireless companies that lets consumers get information such as stock quotes and sports scores on mobile phones.
When that business didn't take off right away, InfoSpace expanded its strategy. It began selling ring tones -- the jingles that sound off when somebody dials a cell phone.
InfoSpace entered the business last year after spending $25 million to buy Moviso, a mobile media company. InfoSpace sells packages of ring-tones to wireless carriers.
The company is expected to post wireless sales of $25 million in wireless sales. Over 75% will come from its ring-tone business, analysts say.
That market is growing. By 2009, the number of ring-tone downloads in the U.S. alone will reach 767.4 million vs. 71.1 million last year, says market tracker International Data Corp.
In July, InfoSpace again beefed up its wireless business by acquiring Atlas Mobile, which provides multi-player tournament games on wireless phones.
InfoSpace is trying to carve a niche among wireless consumers who will rely on mobile devices for doing more than making phone calls, analyst Sutherland says.
"It's not just ring tones -- it's going to be graphics, screen savers and games," he said. "As that population ages, you will see a slow migration into user adoption."
SHGY is a metasearch engine - metasearch means it does it in this way - looking for the info on this - when I find it i'll post it.
never said you can crawl the whole web - but metasearch crawls more of the webthan 1 sided search products like goog, look, fwht - for your reading pleasure I took this description from the INFOSPACE web site
" InfoSpace's Web Search properties Dogpile, WebFetch, WebCrawler, MetaCrawler and Excite make it easy to search more of the Web and find relevant results fast.
Our metasearch technology searches the most popular engines including Google, Yahoo!, Ask Jeeves, About, LookSmart, FindWhat, and others, and returns only the best results from each.
By combining the relevancy weightings of multiple engines, InfoSpace metasearch returns the best results the Web has to offer, providing users with a more powerful and comprehensive way to search. "
regards, Jer
google just searchs a part of the web - not the whole thing - yahoo, askj, find what, look all do the same. SHGY and INSP utilize a metasearch concept - metasearch allows the running of each invididual search engines and combines the detail to provide you all search results from multiple engines - so your result is like running 5 or more queries then manually combining the results - instead of taking the 4 minutes for you to do that shgy and insp do it in about the same time as one goog search. pretty cool right!!!!
SHGY vs INSP downgrade ? been on all the conference calls and the investor presentations - the JP Morgan analyst has been no where to be found - so - they do not understand the company and have only a small view at what is possible - If I had another 20K I would buy more insp - but that 20k is better served in shgy - at any price under a 1$ it is a steal. hands down. good luck to all , Jer
stock decline?
People bought - who have no business owning this stock - when they saw it go lower they panic'd and just sold it off - herd following.. good bye to them.. they should stick with CD's -
took a nice hit today down $4 per share - but the fundamentals have not changed - an analyst cited yr 05 can not substain growth - well mark this post - not only will this growth continue but it will be up another 10 % above their estimates -
YAHooooooooooooooooo it will be a ride of a lifetime
Off Topic: a good history lesson Music Content and Mobile - cell phones
http://www.insidedigitalmedia.com/
and INSP -click on Infospace interview
Music Content and Mobile - cell phones
http://www.insidedigitalmedia.com/
and INSP-- holy molely
we are only down 3 cents from the beginning of the week - I now only look at my positions from Friday end of day to where it closed each day - therefor these adjustments to base never really bother me. Good Luck all - the best 7 months for search with the Holidays approaching are upon us. If you aware of the search industry - you know what I am talking about.
just a note - will not be posting other search/cell phone info here - but will continue to post info on the insp board related to insp
Music Content Award - best inclass 2004
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/041005/55436_1.html
triple digit club --yea ha
http://money.cnn.com/2004/10/04/technology/double/index.htm
tech triple digit club
http://money.cnn.com/2004/10/04/technology/double/index.htm
need a nice deal with a major player - and boom up she goes -
local search - will not be mainstream until it is on cell phone.
http://yahoo.reuters.com/financeQuoteCompanyNewsArticle.jhtml?duid=mtfh88098_2004-10-04_04-00-02_na1...
Earnings in October - to watch the market response: YHOO, GOOG, INSP
YHOO 10/12; GOOG 10/21; INSP 10/28
wish we had venture capital comapny invest 50 million in our little micro cap
Personally, I do not post items that are not in the public view from another authoritative source - since I called the company and talked with them - the information I gained is not really anywhere I can find as an authoritive alternate source - so I would rather talk to those that are interested in what I heard - rather than go on public record with a written piece of documentation - as with a public message board - I do not know you - you could be a lawyer - some place down the line - hit me with a legal issue. I rather favor communications between shareholders - and look foward to talking with my fellow shareholders on the company its prospects and the like - they learn about me and I then learn about them - posting on a message board tho allowing us to share public information and our comments is so impersonnal - I do enjoy a good discussion - and have an opportunity to meet people all over the world.
3G services, opening up a whole new world of communication and entertainment via the mobile phone.’
[note: 3G coming allows for explosive growth of what we can do in that small screen]
http://www.mobiletoday.co.uk/artman/publish/article_1043.shtml
Web on Cell Phones - a short story
http://www.thefeature.com/article?articleid=101080&ref=3328069
Future of the Web (Education) and the space will be there!!!
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/webguide/internetlife/2004-10-01-cover-web_x.htm
The Future of the Web (Education)
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/webguide/internetlife/2004-10-01-cover-web_x.htm
I took the time to call them - If you want to discuss call me at 516-662-1283; or you can just call them and ask