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I don't know how anyone can listen to an intellectually challenged individual touting a high risk pink sheet POS stock like CLYW but they do and most make the common moron mistake of misusing the word lose. I guess all the real losers here don't know how to use the correct word!
Looser vs loser dolt for your edification!
Loose
loose (l¡s) adjective
loos•er, loos•est
1. Not fastened, restrained, or contained: loose bricks.
2. Not taut, fixed, or rigid: a loose anchor line; a loose chair leg.
3. Free from confinement or imprisonment; unfettered: criminals who were loose in the neighborhood; dogs that are loose on the streets.
4. Not tight-fitting or tightly fitted: loose shoes.
5. Not bound, bundled, stapled, or gathered together: loose papers.
6. Not compact or dense in arrangement or structure: loose gravel.
7. Lacking a sense of restraint or responsibility; idle: loose talk.
8. Lacking conventional moral restraint in sexual behavior.
9. Not literal or exact: a loose translation.
10. Characterized by a free movement of fluids in the body: a loose cough; loose bowels.
adverb
In a loose manner.
verb
loosed, loos•ing, loos•es verb, transitive
1. To let loose; release: loosed the dogs.
2. To make loose; undo: loosed his belt.
3. To cast loose; detach: hikers loosing their packs at camp.
4. To let fly; discharge: loosed an arrow.
5. To release pressure or obligation from; absolve: loosed her from the responsibility.
6. To make less strict; relax: a leader's strong authority that was loosed by easy times.
verb, intransitive
1. To become loose.
2. To discharge a missile; fire.
— idiom.
on the loose
1. At large; free.
2. Acting in an uninhibited fashion.
[Middle English louse, los, from Old Norse lauss.]
— loose¹ly adverb
— loose¹ness noun
Synonyms: loose, lax, slack. The central meaning shared by these adjectives is “not tautly bound, held, or fastened”: loose reins; a lax rope; slack sails.
Antonyms: tight.
Loser
los•er
los•er (l¡¹zer) noun
1. a. One that fails to win: the losers of the game. b. One who takes loss in a specified way: a graceful loser; a poor loser.
2. a. One that fails consistently, especially a person with bad luck or poor skills: “losers at home seeking wealth and glory in undeveloped countries” (Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.). b. One that is bad in quality: That book is a real lo
And yet another new alias! Desperation can cause desperate moves, but gee get a new line!
Not everyone is as stupid as some of the people posting on this board. The average intellect of the CLYW investors that believe in you is shameful if not laughable!
ROFLOL, Yes Carlos I am sure you will fund it!
For Second Consecutive Year, Extreme Networks' BlackDiamond Switch Plays Key Role Providing 10 Gigabit Data Transfer for Winner of the Bandwidth Challenge
SANTA CLARA, Calif., Dec. 1 /PRNewswire/ -- Providing high-speed 10 Gigabit Ethernet technology that powers the world's most critical scientific research, Extreme Networks, Inc.'s (Nasdaq: EXTR) award-winning BlackDiamond(R) Ethernet switch again provided robust Ethernet network connectivity to assist the winning entry for the S|C06 Bandwidth Challenge.
Extreme Networks enabled the National Center for Data Mining (NCDM) at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), to win at Supercomputing '06. NCDM's Teraflow Network, a high performance and standards-based High Performance Cluster Computing (HPCC) infrastructure, won by sustaining a data transfer rate of 8Gb/s over a 10Gb/s link, with a peak rate of 9.18Gb/s during the competition.
'Extreme Networks' BlackDiamond 8800 switch provided excellent scalability throughout the event and consistently achieved multiple Gigabit data transfers across our network links,' said Yunhong Gu, Ph.D., Research Scientist for UIC. 'We are excited to have built and performed the winning entry for this prestigious event.'
Extreme Networks contributed with its award winning BlackDiamond 8800 switch to support NCDM's use of its own open source software products, UDT and SECTOR, to transfer large datasets efficiently at high speeds on optical networks. Integrated with the bandwidth demonstration, NCDM transferred the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 5 (DR5), which includes imaging data for 215 million objects between diverse geographical sites.
To benefit science, the SDSS is designed to map a quarter of the sky to produce a detailed image of it and determine the positions and absolute brightness of more than 100 million celestial objects. This will ultimately provide a 3-D map depicting as many as a million galaxies and quasars. To benefit society, data is provided to others in the scientific community.
'We congratulate NCDM's winning entry and are proud to once again help to deliver a speedy 10 Gigabit Ethernet backbone at the Supercomputing event, achieving the fastest speeds Ethernet is capable of,' said Scott Lucas, director of marketing for Extreme Networks. 'Year after year, this competition illustrates the remarkable work and technology innovations happening in the scientific and network communities.'
Extreme Networks, Inc.
Extreme Networks designs, builds, and installs Ethernet infrastructure solutions that solve the toughest business communications challenges. Our commitment to open networking sets us apart from the alternatives by delivering meaningful insight and unprecedented control to applications and services. We believe openness is the best foundation for growth, freedom, flexibility, and choice. We focus on enterprises and service providers who demand high performance, converged networks that support voice, video and data, over a wired and wireless infrastructure.
Except for the historical information contained herein, the matters set forth in this press release, including without limitation statements as to features, security, and performance of the products or the combined solution are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the 'safe harbor' provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date. Because such statements deal with future events, they are subject to risks and uncertainties, including network design and actual results of use of the product in different environments. We undertake no obligation to update the forward-looking information in this release. Other important factors which could cause actual results to differ materially are contained in the Company's 10-Qs and 10-Ks which are on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission (http://www.sec.gov).
Extreme Networks, BlackDiamond, and Summit are either trademarks or registered trademarks of Extreme Networks, Inc. in the United States and/or other countries.
Why do you constantly defend liars? CLYW is full of them and some on this board work for Calypso. Shame on you because they've scammed you so may times I think you'd be dizzy!
You never learn!
You keep affirming my contention that you never learn from your mistakes! You can't short a pink sheet POS stock unless you are an MM!
LOL, I wonder who is the loser here? Not me cause I have never owned the CLYW scam while others trying to bash me do!
I can't send you private messages as I have a free account as anyone can see. Now we know you are a prevaricator and most likely are worried about the next paycheck coming from CLYW!
Get a real job with a real company instead of Calypso and that way you will not be forced to cringe when you look in the mirror!
Here is yet another example of how dense these CLYW pumpers are. With a little DD you would have learned that I am a moderator of two boards and have posted on several boards other then CLYW.
If anyone is stupid enough to listen to people for investment advice when they show a tendency to make mistakes then you are beyond help and I pity your family’s financial welfare!
The old ASNAP pump? LMAO
Trouble with you Mr. Mendoza is English is your second language and you have difficulty comprehending others posts!
Let me make it clear in the past five years I have NEVER owned a PINK SHEET POS stock! Calypso has been a scam from day one and it is easy to spot when there is news about past criminal activity by its owner!
For all those waiting desperately for positive information all I got to say is NEXT WEEK! lmao
"Give up and sell..??" Heck no, I want you to buy more cause Carlos needs the money! This may all end if you dupes quit buying and I do enjoy my repartee with desperate CLYW investors!
To sum it up buy more Calypso scam and be happy Magoo's!
I have never been stupid enough to buy this scam and you most likely know it and are just trying to scam others with your obfuscation.
Stupid is as stupid does!
Forrest Gump
You are incapable of learning anything from your CLYW experience and will fall for the next scam if not the reload on this one loose for loser!
You are either an insider or one of the densest people on this planet.
I bet even radiation can't get through to you!
CLYW is a scam façade with no sales ever in its history!
Yawn!
Bottom line is CLYW has no money for a legal fight!
Has no money for PR's to scam investors with!
Has no credibility with the industry because of bogus PR's!
Has a patent that is worthless because others have found away around it!
DING! DING!
I got news for you all, ASNAP is software and there will be many more patents on software that can allow free roaming and any legal fight is just a can of dead worms!
Software patents are notorious for others stealing work.
Just look what Microsoft did to Apple with windows!
US firm wins wide area roaming patent
PCTEL claims it owns 'fundamental patent'
Robert Jaques, vnunet.com 16 Nov 2006
US wireless firm PCTEL claimed today that the US Patent and Trademark Office has granted it a "fundamental patent" covering roaming across different types of wireless network.
PCTEL's Roaming Client permits wireless subscribers to roam from cellular to Wi-Fi networks while maintaining data and voice calls.
According to the firm, the newly granted patent describes techniques for automatic and manual switching of data and voice calls from one network type to another.
PCTEL had previously announced that the Patent Office had communicated its intention to grant the patent. Official notification was provided on 7 November.
US patent 7,133,669 is entitled Systems and Methods for Seamless Roaming Between Wireless Networks, and is described as a technique for the seamless switching of a wireless device between wireless wide area and local area networks.
Marty Singer, chairman and chief executive at PCTEL, said: "While we are committed to protecting our technology and inventions, we also have a history of making our technology available to the industry."
Sad no one cares enough to tell the link does not work!
By: bassoneman 22 Nov 2006, 04:20 PM EST RB
Blockbuster CEO purchased 220,000 shares, Well I hope he isn't into losing money. I guess i will follow his lead...
"The company doesn’t care about shareholders"
The company has no money. Get the share price over a buck so they can sell more shares and this baby will start to spew more lying PR's that will give you hope. Thing is those PR's cost money and so does Carlo's time. He will not work for nothing! LMAO
You got patent on the brain disease. My stock ISO has 100's of patents and was involved in a patent suit against a competitor. Millions of dollars wasted on a legal fight for HTS technology thought to be groundbreaking. Well ISO has now abandoned HTS technology now using RF2 conventional technology with a twist that mimics HTS filtering. It’s cheaper and easy to produce and maintain, dooming HTS.
The CLYW patent is not worth a fart in the wind because others have found ways around it and besides CLYW has no money for lawsuits or to maintain their patent rights.
In other words CLYW will die a slow death as money continues to dry up!
Heck but things are looking up because Charles Finney has a good feeling about CLYW! LOL
from:A$NAP
"DROY cristian turrini thinks its a great idea for shareholder meeting and demonstration of technology ! he said we should DEMAND IT !!! been emailing management on meeting !! will post any response !!"
This guy belongs on MAD T.V.!
I wonder how many shares of CLYW he has left after his last dump?
Carlos I am sure will give himself more so he can claim he has bought more! LOL
Where is ASNAP? Next week! ROFLOL
Charles will not face up to the truth he'd rather believe his truth which makes him Mr. Magoo refusing to put the glasses on and see CLYW as the scam it really is!
Buy more Calypso scam and be happy Magoo’s!
"Investors like me are still optimistic on Calypso." Then buy more Calypso scam and be happy Mr. Magoo!
You mean George Schilling the man that lost his memory to all transactions while he was CEO? Some people are really dense! They are all crooks even Sharma who took the crooks money and said good things about the scam. He knew it was a scam and they were using his good name to bilk others out of money by selling worthless shares. That makes Sharma a scammer also because he took leached money!
Trust me anyone associated with CLYW is a scammer.
But Charles says he has a good feeling about CLYW and will keep putting more money in..?? Yep he is the guy to follow and he will make you rich! hehe
I am not a friend of BBI but do not discriminate against those who have a different view. Good luck with your investment!
Why not discuss CLYW instead of trying to ferment an argument?
'Time to move on?' No, because of your unmitigated pumping of this scam!
To show my disdain for a hyper of bogus scams and to share my knowledge of this one! How many times do I have to answer your broken record of a question? Is it your goal to somehow discredit me by continually asking it or is an attempt to bore me to death instead of discussing CLYW related issues? To keep asking the same question over and over again while I have answered it numerous time shows a real lack of comprehension on your part and is really indicative of what most likely got you so deeply involved in this scam if you are indeed not an insider..?? No one could be that dense but perhaps you are and indeed are not an insider..?? Either way anyone that listens to you will rue the day they ever listened to Charles Finney!
Yes I enjoy the idiots that fall for your B.S. pumping of a soon to be worthless POS stock!
Gee I wonder why CLYW could not get a piece of that order..? No matter they would never have delivered the phones anyway as evidenced by CLYW having no revenue ever since 1998!
Heck but things are looking up according to Charles never find a fault shrewd investor Finney!
Next week for sure on this languishing mountebank of a scam!
Because you have NEVER posted here before your spamming of AXTG and holders of this spurious shame POS CLYW have enough problems without someone coming to their board encouraging them to sell and buy another oct POS!
FYI eom Editor's Corner
November 13, 2006 · In: CDMA | Wireless Carriers | Wireless Internet | Wireless Regulation
http://www.fiercewireless.com/story/editor-s-corner/2006-11-13
All may not go well in the aftermath of Auction 66.
The $13.9 billion auction that concluded in September saw T-Mobile win the bulk of licenses, bidding $4.2 billion for 120 licenses that are vital for its third-generation competitive position against rivals. It's looking to build out a WCDMA/HSDPA network quickly and have services up and running in mid-2007. But the operator and others on a fast-track to deploy services may run into radio interference they weren't banking on.
ISCO International has been conducting tests in the country's major markets and says some of these cities are rife with RF interference. Yes, ISCO is a maker of equipment that eliminates interference in CDMA2000 and W-CDMA networks but it has validated these results with independent parties.
What's the problem? Operators are relying on information from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration and the Federal Communications Commission database, which consists of all of the known 1.7 and 2.1 GHz incumbent transmitters. The 1.7 GHz incumbents are all government users like the military, the FBI and the Department of Forestry and the 2.1 GHz band consists of about 5,700 licensed microwave links, according to Comsearch. The government database is basically a cross-reference and plot of all of the known transmitter sites, and carriers are using this information to relocate incumbents.
ISCO has been tabulating a significant amount of narrowband RF interference, primarily in the 1.7 GHz band, in some major markets. For instance, it's thought that there isn't a need to relocate incumbents in the Chicago market, but ISCO tests have picked up a hefty amount of RF interference. New York is a problem too.
"We don't know what is crowding these bands, but it doesn't show up on these public databases," said Neal Campbell, executive vice president of strategic marketing with ISCO. It could be that the paperwork never caught up with a lot of government operators. Now that's a shocker.
There's also another interesting twist to Auction 66. My friend Tammy Parker, editor and principal analyst at Informa, pointed out in a recent column that the FCC never set a deadline for service deployment in these bands, meaning some operators don't have to deploy services until they want to. Who might that be? The SpectrumCo consortium, consisting of Time Warner Cable, Comcast, Cox Communications and Bright House Networks, bid some $2.4 billion for 137 licenses but its owners have said they are quite content with simply holding on to the spectrum for the time being--probably until their joint venture with Sprint Nextel goes bad. It doesn't appear that Verizon Wireless and Cingular Wireless are in a hurry to deploy services in those bands either. -Lynnette
FYI eom Editor's Corner
November 13, 2006 · In: CDMA | Wireless Carriers | Wireless Internet | Wireless Regulation
http://www.fiercewireless.com/story/editor-s-corner/2006-11-13
All may not go well in the aftermath of Auction 66.
The $13.9 billion auction that concluded in September saw T-Mobile win the bulk of licenses, bidding $4.2 billion for 120 licenses that are vital for its third-generation competitive position against rivals. It's looking to build out a WCDMA/HSDPA network quickly and have services up and running in mid-2007. But the operator and others on a fast-track to deploy services may run into radio interference they weren't banking on.
ISCO International has been conducting tests in the country's major markets and says some of these cities are rife with RF interference. Yes, ISCO is a maker of equipment that eliminates interference in CDMA2000 and W-CDMA networks but it has validated these results with independent parties.
What's the problem? Operators are relying on information from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration and the Federal Communications Commission database, which consists of all of the known 1.7 and 2.1 GHz incumbent transmitters. The 1.7 GHz incumbents are all government users like the military, the FBI and the Department of Forestry and the 2.1 GHz band consists of about 5,700 licensed microwave links, according to Comsearch. The government database is basically a cross-reference and plot of all of the known transmitter sites, and carriers are using this information to relocate incumbents.
ISCO has been tabulating a significant amount of narrowband RF interference, primarily in the 1.7 GHz band, in some major markets. For instance, it's thought that there isn't a need to relocate incumbents in the Chicago market, but ISCO tests have picked up a hefty amount of RF interference. New York is a problem too.
"We don't know what is crowding these bands, but it doesn't show up on these public databases," said Neal Campbell, executive vice president of strategic marketing with ISCO. It could be that the paperwork never caught up with a lot of government operators. Now that's a shocker.
There's also another interesting twist to Auction 66. My friend Tammy Parker, editor and principal analyst at Informa, pointed out in a recent column that the FCC never set a deadline for service deployment in these bands, meaning some operators don't have to deploy services until they want to. Who might that be? The SpectrumCo consortium, consisting of Time Warner Cable, Comcast, Cox Communications and Bright House Networks, bid some $2.4 billion for 137 licenses but its owners have said they are quite content with simply holding on to the spectrum for the time being--probably until their joint venture with Sprint Nextel goes bad. It doesn't appear that Verizon Wireless and Cingular Wireless are in a hurry to deploy services in those bands either. -Lynnette
Why are you spamming on this board for another stock when you have never posted here before? Anyone who has followed this board knows I have never owened this POS!
Asustek and Quanta to ship 3G-enabled PDA phones to O2 Asia Pacific
Two Taiwan-based ODM handset makers – Asustek Computer and Quanta Computer – are expected to start volume shipments of their 3G-enabled PDA phones to O2 Asia Pacific by the end of this year or in the first quarter of 2007, according to market sources.
Asustek is likely to ship two 3G PDA phones (codenamed Jupiter and Mars II) to O2 Asia, which will market the two models under the O2 Xda Graphite and O2 Xda Zinc names, respectively, stated the sources, noting that the O2 Xda Graphite is a candy-bar model, while the O2 Xda Zinc is a slide-form factor handset.
Asustek's Jupiter handset will also be shipped to Vodafone, but without a built-in camera as the O2 Xda Graphite has, the sources noted.
Additionally, Quanta Computer is expected to ship its first 3G-enabled PDA phone (codenamed Apollo) to O2 Asia starting in the first quarter of 2007, said the sources.
The Apollo will be powered by Microsoft's Windows Mobile OS and 3G solutions from Qualcomm, the sources indicated.
What no Calypso Asnap? roflol