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There's a huge debt due in January 2011, next month. All the scraps this company has in assets are pledged. One last pump before the rug is pulled.
Tell it to the earlier 'investors' after the 50:1 reverse and to the ones at 70 cents just a few months ago. A scam is a scam.
If a company like MDGC is so easy to lambaste day after day, I'd say run like hades.
MDGC is the biggest piece of garbage on the boards. That is the reality about a company run by a vacuum cleaner salesman and other assorted zero brainers!!!
More eyes? Maybe Ray will give everyone a Mr. Potato Head for Christmas -- with extra eyes, of course.
So that is the source of the compensated pump? As related by someone with experience regarding Unilava, these folks are eagerly awaiting the dump:
If the company's personnel -- a vacuum cleaner salesman, a conspiracy kook, and a colorful assortment of dubious characters -- have failed to further persuade the masses to continuously supply dollar offerings for Val's projects -- tough spaghetti.
The business you refer to is a 'dot com' website. MDGC, if it remains as it is at present, a website, simply will not cut it. Fortunately for Val, the FCC does not have to sanction his website!!
No, they all speak high-speed English. A mental health professional should pay Val and company a visit. Aren't racing thoughts and rapid speech a symptom of schizophrenia?
get all the entities on board Entities, too? I'll bet they are involved to keep Dr. Peterson interested, especially the incorporeal kind.
Fluff PRs, Clec? I think Fluff is harder to flush. No, the PRs are more like Charmin or Cottonelle, mush easier to flush. Though, I must say, toilet paper is far more valuable than a MDGC PR.
Wakabayashi is another paid Aerius promoter from last August. Read the disclaimer.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=56499871
Next week's date prediction is Valentines Day, followed by the next announcement of 4th of July!!!
It's the oldest trick -- but time after time the bagholders grab for it like they're drowning, which they are!!!!
From an astute June '10 observation, about the time it was half way down from 70 cents in March to a pop and drop nickel.
Very impressive. Val the super duper genius has absolutely nothing published with the IEEE, ay? Brilliant. I'll have to add that to my checklist in the future.
Maybe the company will dump some shares into the market ahead of the tax-loss sellers. That would be the smartest tactic. Of course, being a pinky, the only way you'll see what they have done is by watching the price action.
New shorts, smell of blood in the water, easy money
You must have missed the rule-making process is how the FCC plans to assure the devices, for which the FCC wrote rules so manufacturers would spec them properly, do not interfere with the other current overlapping uses of the spectrum. Why else would the rule making process have been announced as having begun on Nov. 30, 2010? The device parameters were defined (limiting interference) but the method of how to totally prevent interference has yet to be defined. Stuff like this:
"I wanted to ensure that our rules specify that, in the event of significant interference caused by an unlicensed device, the party responsible for this device will also be responsible for rectifying the problem and assume the cost," Tate said. "Some companies have assured us that this will be the case; that their business reputation requires it and it is indeed 'good business' for them to correct the situation."
So there you have it, unlicensed devices with rules yet to be attached. And with a database company that will have to be paid in order to prevent local interference, there will be costs.
And with Val holding a bag full of 10 year old junk, crap which was built for the wrong spectrum, the whole topic of whitespace is moot as far as MDGC is concerned.
And... why all the arguments over this carcass? It's a dilution machine, now at .0038 on its way to the cellar where the market makers have a nice box waiting.
And you are intentionally ignoring the rule-making process that plainly mentions spectrum auctions. What was firmed up and published were the technical requirements manufacturers must meet. How the whitespaces issue fits into the Congressionaly mandated National Broadcasting Plan will be delineated during the FCC rule making process, which began on Nov. 30.
The thoroughly aged Wytec patent is for LMDS, which operates in a different portion of spectrum, is subject to rain fade (interference), and cannot possibly be used in the whitespaces of the former analog TV spectrum. As LMDS was the equipment Wytec manufactured a decade ago, the junk pile Val is pulling his parts out of cannot work out in whitespace nor pass any FCC test (I just broke up laughing at the thought)!!
Here's a cheap source for Val to pick over. His $56 bankroll should pay for the bus ride out to have a look :
MetroFi promised to build the network at its own expense, hoping to fund the project by selling ads on its system. The privately held company said it spent between $2 million and $3 million on Portland's network, which launched late in 2006.
Technical problems plagued the project from the start, though, and residents found they were unable to reliably connect to the antennas -- especially indoors.
MetroFi shut the network down in June 2008 and liquidated its business later that year through a legal process similar to bankruptcy, leaving more than 600 antennas scattered around the city -- primarily downtown and in Southeast Portland.
Portland waited until the antennas were legally forfeit before setting plans to take them down. City crews have already removed about a dozen, according to city staffer Logan Kleier, and work crews will take down about 80 more on traffic signals and other city property over the next couple months.
Most of the antennas are on streetlights owned by Portland General Electric. Portland will hire contractors to remove those, according to Kleier.
MetroFi posted a $30,000 bond to cover the cost of antenna removal, but technical experts estimate it will cost more than twice that to take down all the antennas on utility poles.
Senior, Personal Telco's president, said he explored whether the antennas had any market value by tracking eBay sales. Most recently, he said, a batch of five similar antennas was selling for 99 cents online.
And what might those 'issues' be? They are equipment certification issues, and the testing required by the FCC. There's no free lunch, folks. Plus Val seems allergic regarding ANYTHING involving the FCC!!! He needs to change his clogged HEPA filters!
In addition to these rules, the FCC will require that all white space devices be tested and certified by the FCC Laboratory, just as they require testing and certification of all other wireless devices, including cell phones and wireless routers.
MDGC said they purchased towers -- but have nothing on file with FCC licensing. MDGC said they had cell phones shipped into this country -- but nothing was registered with the FCC, with an FCC ID number, as required. MDGC claims to be testing transmitting devices -- but no experimental licenses can be located for MDGC with the FCC. MDGC claims to be testing transmitting devices in certain cities -- but cannot publish a municipal franchise agreement with any claimed city, village or hamlet. MDGC will claim a zillon whitespace devices but guess what? The FCC will have never show a single solitary test record. Why? With Val past is prologue.
Val should stick with his vacuum cleaners and pimple cream. The audit trail is FAR less revealing!
Of course there will be auctions and costs. Did anyone actually believe the dozen large firms that pushed for opening the whitespaces were doing so without the possibility of their utilizing their wealth advantage to crush the small fry!!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: NEWS MEDIA CONTACT:
November 30, 2010 Bruce Romano, 202-418-2124
Bruce.Romano@fcc.gov
FCC PROPOSES INITIAL STEPS TO OPEN TV SPECTRUM
TO NEW WIRELESS BROADBAND SERVICES
Washington, D.C. -- The Federal Communications Commission today took important steps to meet the
nation’s demand for innovative wireless broadband services and preserve the benefits that free over-theair
TV provides for consumers.
In adopting proposals to make more efficient use of the nation’s airwaves, the FCC set the stage for
broadcast spectrum auctions that could provide consumers with the robust mobile broadband
services they demand while preserving over-the-air TV that many rely upon. The resulting efficient use
of airwaves will help ensure that America leads the global wireless revolution and enjoys the resulting
jobs and economic growth.
Specifically, a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking adopted by the FCC today proposes that wireless
broadband providers have equal access to television broadcast frequencies that could become available in
spectrum auctions. The Notice seeks comment on establishing new allocations for both fixed and mobile
wireless services in the TV broadcast bands.
The Notice also explores enabling TV stations to voluntarily combine their operations and distinct
programming lineups on a single TV channel. The Notice requests comment on the proposed rules that
would enable TV broadcasters to opt to share channels by further tapping the technical capabilities that
became available following the nation’s historic transition to digital television in 2009.
Finally, the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking seeks comment on steps that would improve TV reception on
the VHF channels (2-13), such as by increasing transmitting power and establishing minimum
performance standards for indoor antennas. These improvements could provide better VHF reception for
consumers and encourage broadcasters to use valuable VHF channels in the future.
The proposals in today’s rulemaking will pave the way for future actions that will propose service,
licensing and auction rules for new broadband service operators to utilize vacated TV
spectrum.
Action by the Commission November 30, 2010, by Notice of Proposed Rule Making (FCC 10-196).
Chairman Genachowski, Commissioners Copps, McDowell, Clyburn, and Baker. Separate statements
issued by Chairman Genachowski, Commissioners Copps, McDowell, Clyburn, and Baker.
ET Docket No. 10-235.
For further information, contact Alan Stillwell (202-418-2470; Alan.Stillwell@fcc.gov).
So, what you are saying is Val went from bagless to bagged in one huge misstep? Trump really took the old beater bar to him, ay?
So, what you are saying is Val went from bagless to bagged in one huge misstep? Trump really took the old beater bar to him, ay?
Yes, what everyone will find amusing is that the security camera and burglar alarm manufacturer is in reality located in Wynadot County, Ohio. Wynadot -- hence the derivation of the name change chosen by the former Fire Alarm Ascociates, incorporated in 1959, when in 1988 they decided to modernize the corporate identity. It is absolutely hysterical when the facts bulldoze all hopeless illusions.
Wytec never defended the trademark, not that they would have bothered since it proved utterly worthless. As an undefended trademark, there is no bar against using it. Anyone want to start a company that manufactures Wytec vacuum cleaner bags?
Yet, Val is not able to borrow two cents on any of the patents. If there is now no worth to the patents as collateral was Yuan really ever able to use them for that purpose before he vanished from the scene? Of course Yuan had other income streams as well. All Val has are his Hoovers and Eurekas!!!
Forgetting about cable or fiber for a moment, good old thin phone wire will enjoy having those 'knobs' tweaked. If signal processing techniques can improve DSL to unheard of capacity (according to reputable companies), imagine what advances in broadband tech will do for cable and fiber, which is in place right now, stuff which is less environmentally intrusive than slapping up an LMDS antenna every 2 miles:
VDSL2
The DSL family of technologies still dominates the fixed broadband world. To ensure that operators can continue to use their copper networks, network equipment vendors are adding some new technologies to VDSL2 to increase download speeds to several hundred megabits per second
To boost DSL to those kinds of speeds, the vendors are using a number of technologies. One way is to send traffic over several copper pairs at the same time, compared to traditional DSL, which only uses one copper pair. This method then uses a technology -- called DSL Phantom Mode by Alcatel-Lucent and Phantom DSL by Nokia Siemens -- that can create a third virtual copper pair that sends data over a combination of two physical pairs.
However, the use of these technologies also creates crosstalk, a form of noise that degrades signal quality and decreases bandwidth. To counteract that, vendors are using a noise-canceling technology called vectoring. It works the same way as noise-canceling headphones, continuously analyzing the noise conditions on the copper cables, and then creates a new signal to cancel it out, according to Alcatel-Lucent.
Designed to support the wide deployment of triple play services such as voice, video, data, high definition television (HDTV) and interactive gaming, VDSL2 enables operators and carriers to gradually, flexibly, and cost-efficiently upgrade existing xDSL infrastructure.
Just like 10G GPON, it is also being pitched as an alternative for mobile backhaul.
You have a great idea there. Val should run a talent search to tap paranoid schizophrenics to help MDGC succeed. I want to read all the hilarious PRs put out by all those beautiful minds. I'm sure they would be as equally informative as the PR Val puts out twice weekly, lots of babble having nothing concrete to say.
Let's not forget all these communications from Val were at the exact time massive dilution was occurring, requiring buyers to soak up shares. Those MDGC share buyers were the ones getting soaked! Thank you, Val!!! Tweet harder!!!!
The real story has nothing to do with a business, it has to do with marketable securities called stock. That said, reputable outside sources, not in love with any story or with any regard for any company's business model, have clearly stated LDMS is dead. The rest of the current effort is all conjecture, 'mental photoshopping' of some grand plan and fable Tweeting.
Forget Val for a moment. History as Yuan, Hwang, and a few other cohorts probably would not like the public to know, though it matters little since they 'got theirs':
The five patents, left over equipment, etc., were packaged out of Wytec into companies controlled by Hwang who very smartly realized some might eventually be fooled into buying the shares of a recently formed company called Mediag3. The patents were injected from ADML/Ohana into Mediag3 under Yuan which had revenue (and tons of losses, thus failing and needing to monetize the stock before nothing was left for him) from mainly the children's clothing line. The package was presented to the investing public at $3. Yuan took his Oriental Media and Little Sheep and went 'home' once enough had been milked out of Hwang's plan to monetize what was left of failed Wytec via STOCK SALES (the whole reason for the 99% loss of market value). Anzalone took off with his loot as soon as the company went dark. With the rapid fall in stock price, as anyone can plainly see, the market hardly bought the charade. The stock never sold many shares at $3 -- but in 2008 the principals started selling and promoting and diluting at about $1 to 70 cents. The jump in two years from 19 million to 1 Billion 200 million shares was so blatant I'm surprised anyone is able to keep a straight face when they eschew the massive dilution. The market, not fooled, sent the price of the shares into the sub basement.
By late 2010 all that is left is one vacuum cleaner salesman who picked up the crumbs of a sucked dry stock promotion (there being no business) and started selling the dregs, just as he has done all his life. Which is fine -- that's business -- as long as the facts are 'Clear'.
You do not need to read very far at all. Look to the top right of your screen for the date
February 11, 2008
That was almost three years ago. Since then MDGC has lost 99% of its value.
So what is the purpose of testing over and over, if anyone is doing anything at all besides mouthing words?
LOLOL Such easily verifiable locales! The Philippines and China? Corrupt and Scam all in one sentence.
5G micro media processor
Why not put a picture of the real (if it exists) chip in the ibox, instead of that photoshop job?
equipment is being used today in the tests
The Wytec equipment was never tested when it was built 8 to 10 years ago? Did Dr. Peterson's dog eat the prior results?