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Sounds like Neom.
The market is growing!!
Mobile barcodes get big boost
http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=38038
Adsmart Mobile
http://uk.adsmart.net/mobile_barcodes.php
M-learning (second and third para.)
http://mlearning.edublogs.org/category/mobile-phone/2d-barcodes/
Hewlett-Packard and Publicis
http://www.moconews.net/entry/419-hp-and-publicis-call-meeting-for-mobile-barcodes/
Baycloud LLC
http://www.baycloud.com/index.php
Introducing Mobile ticketing
http://www.plusone.com.au/mobi-ticket.php
RegiSoft Using Gavitec’s Data Matrix technology, the WTS TM creates two dimensional barcodes and sends them by EMS or Smart Message to users who requested mobile tickets or coupons.
http://www.regisoft.com/
Mobile groups study barcode plan
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/07fedd62-c5c6-11db-9fae-000b5df10621.html
Mobile barcodes to power fair-trade ticketing for the people
http://www.bizcommunity.com/Article/196/78/13967.html
For those of you who remember "RetiredandPlaying' and those who don't read the early posts. He must be turning in his grave for what management is doing with this company and it's loyal shareholders!
Still a believer.
I agree, there are so many opportunities for additional business and new ventures. I believe neom's management is constantly looking at new ways to grow the business. Their time is almost here, keep watching.
Vince
I haven't posted for over two years and only check the board once or twice a month. I have over 500,000 shares of neom. I truly believe in neomedia technology and I have one to say "THIS COMPANY WILL BE TAKING OFF BEFORE THE END OF THE YEAR!!!!!!. Please read my prior two posts.
I read this news on Sat. it was posted at http://streetstylz.blogspot.com/
It's still there.
QUALCOMM to Showcase qode® at CTIA 2007
And there is this one:
NeoMedia & Mobalis Power +Mas Nescafe
If this was posted, sorry for the redundant data.
Following list is from, Plexusity blog.
http://plexusity.wordpress.com/2007/03/01/maries-picks-technology-innovators-2007/
The following innovators from the stalwart behemoths to the bootstraped entrepreneurs are worthy of praise–they are changing our future. I am confident I’ve forgotten a few. Sadly, I am not omniscient. It is a live list that I will expand in the same updated post daily, weekly. Your suggestions are welcome. These ideas are actionable, useful and often border on genius. All are worthy of praise whether they make it to the finish line or not. So they are NOT PRIORITIZED. It is a democratic list. Their innovations are recent 2006 and 2007–some are so fundamental yet “new” that I ignored their birth date.
Listed as: Brand Name, Corporation, (description)
iphone by Apple (the most robust phone device yet)
Qode by Neomedia (Mobile Phone Bar Code Scanner)
Zink by same (portable inkless printer for digital devices)
Eyejot by same (video sharing thourgh email)
PayPerPost by same (Paid consumer blog network for advertisers)
Joost formerly Venice Project (richer alternative to YouTube)
Lotus Connections byIBM (Collaboration software)
LinkedIn by same (Answers/Experts Low cost procurement of soft expertise)
Yah00! 100 brands by Yahoo! (Media Channels for advertisers)
ejamming by same (voip for musicians)
Apollo by Adobe (web apps to the desktop)
Mobio Networks by same (mobile mashup platform)
Scram by Ceelox (embeds encrypted messages behind images)
Sentinel by Iwerx (catches blog content pirates)
D’Fusion by Total Immersion (inserts 3D into live video images)
Advanced Photonics (No name yet) by Alps Electric / CAPE (holographic image from mobile devices)
BitTorrent by same (bandwidth enabling video distribution like no other)
Orb Networks by same (allows users to view and create videos on their mobile devices)
Sundance Global Short Film Project /Robert Redford (creating short content for mobile devices)
Sitemaps by Google, Yahoo and Microsoft (new search protocol by stie maps)
Wibree by Nokia (radio technology dual core chip uses so little energy for smallest devices like a watch)
Tagworld by same (social network with all-in-one capabilities)
RDF and OWL - Semantic Web by Tim Berners-Lee (application-free framework and language that allows data interchange)
Videoegg by same (simplifies video capture)
iUpload by same (blogging platform that requires no programmer)
Xensource by same (moves mutliple virtual servers without friction)
Scrybe by same (robust and elegant productivity tool driven by a calendar-perhaps the best)
Geni by same (great hosted genealogy app )
When is this company gonna move?
or Chickie & Petes off Frankford ave and Robbins st!
I remember what it is like on raging bull, I agree that is why we came to I-Hub. Everyone should either ignore them or get rid of them.
Looks pretty interesting . http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10730231/
‘Yahoo Go’ links Web services to phones, TVs
Service to come preinstalled on some Nokia phones
LAS VEGAS - Yahoo Inc., the world’s largest Internet media company, Friday unveiled a new service that will make using its Web, media and personal services as easy to use on mobile phones and TVs as on computers.
Chief Executive Terry Semel said products marketed under the newly established Yahoo Go brand reflected consumer demands to easily access information wherever they like and to customize the way in which they view the Web and the world.
“We think the Internet isn’t just a Web page,” Semel told the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, the largest U.S. electronics convention. “Connecting the Internet to any device you might imagine” is the next stage of the Web, he added.
CES embraced the Web as never before this year and Semel pleaded with hardware makers to work with Yahoo to make its services available everywhere. Announcements during the week showed Web connectivity is becoming standard on many communications devices well beyond the PC.
The Web media company’s new products include Yahoo Go Mobile and Yahoo Go TV. A third product, Yahoo Go Desktop, will tie the phone and TV services to the personal computer, the most common way of using Yahoo services.
But there are nearly 2 billion cell phones worldwide, roughly double last year’s Web use, Semel noted as an indication of where the Web would grow.
Rival Google Inc. is expected to introduce an online video service and an industry effort to improve PC ease of use.
The phone service is a logical extension of Yahoo’s efforts to become a standard channel on mobile phone screens instead of being available only on special phones via Web browsers.
The television plan, which represents a far more ambitious and early-stage effort, will target consumers buying PC-linked TVs with fast Internet connections.
Semel and other Yahoo executives said the Internet media company’s recent push to encourage users to create more information, reviews, Web logs and other shared information could now extend to other devices.
“For many, many years, we grew up where somewhere else was the programmer. That dynamic has completely changed,” Semel said.
The Yahoo Go service will be embedded on millions of Nokia phones sold worldwide. Yahoo is also working with U.S. phone partners AT&T Inc. and Cingular Wireless.
Yahoo Go Mobile will be available in the United States in coming weeks. Consumers buying certain Nokia 6630, 6680, 6681 and N70 devices -- all so-called Series 60 smartphones -- will receive the Yahoo Go Mobile service preinstalled.
Roughly 10 countries, including Britain, Germany, France, Singapore, India, Malaysia, the Philippines and Australia, are to follow in the first quarter, a spokeswoman said.
Yahoo will launch Yahoo Go Mobile with AT&T and Cingular in the traditional 13-state local phone service region of AT&T in the southern and western United States. It will also be available in a handful of other unspecified markets, they said.
Cingular is the largest U.S. wireless carrier. It is jointly owned by AT&T and BellSouth Corp., the No. 3 U.S. provider of local phone service.
Yahoo Go marks the latest step in a four-year program through which Yahoo has formed broadband marketing partnerships with major communications carriers in the United States, Canada and Britain, executives said.
Within the 13-state AT&T core service region, the partners will offer a co-branded Go Mobile service for existing AT&T-Yahoo broadband customers to link their home Internet access with their mobile phones.
Yahoo Go TV will allow consumers to link their existing base of Yahoo contacts and resources directly into their televisions, allowing them to watch digital photos and to check news, sports or other Yahoo services from the same account they use on their computer or mobile phone.
Yahoo demonstrated the new products on machines using Intel Corp.’snew Viiv chips and a demonstration computer stopped working at one point in the presentation.
“I think it’s a Windows problem,” Intel Chief Executive Paul Otellini quipped, laughing at his long term partner Microsoft Corp.’s possible role.
“I would tend to agree,” Semel quickly added.
WilliamFL and Movieguy if it were not for you two, the agony of waiting and not hearing anything would be unbearable. We are very lucking having the both of you and all the others on this board.
Go Neom.
Has anyone seen BSDS. UP .12
I, like you , Picksit, signed on to their web site four months ago. I was hoping to gain any information. I haven't received any follow up what so ever.
Vette
Thanks kokonut
How do we get access to NEOM's display pictures?
Today is a good time for a PR.
EU Patent Law Could Impede Open Source
The European Union's proposed law on software-related patents will affect any IT company doing business in the EU, according to legal experts. In its current form, the proposed directive on "computer-implemented inventions" could harm open-source developers and smaller software companies because it potentially makes it easier for patent holders to defend software-related patents, attorneys said.
FOR THE REST SEE BELOW:
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1772512,00.asp?kc=EWRSS03119TX1K0000594
New Phone Technologies Ready to Meet Customers
http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/tech/200501/kt2005012719292812350.htm
Starting next year, people will be able to check expiry dates of beef or download movie previews from posters through mobile phones equipped with radio-tag readers.
The Ministry of Information and Communication (MIC) said Thursday it would launch trial services of such features halfway through next year with an aim of commercially debuting it a year later.
``We plan to incorporate readers of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags into mobile phones to accelerate take-off of the radio tags,¡¯¡¯ MIC official Seo Seok-jin said.
Toward that end, the ministry will establish the Mobile RFID Forum, which will be in charge of standardizing related technologies and manufacturing terminals fitted with RFID readers.
The Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) are now developing such terminals and the nation¡¯s top cell phone makers like Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics will join.
``Within this year, a prototype phone will be revealed with an RFID reader chip as the state-backed ETRI and major handset vendors combine efforts,¡¯¡¯ Seo projected.
The RFID tag is a small integrated-circuit (IC) chip with a radio circuit and an embedded identification code that can be scanned from a distance.
The radio tag technology is still under development but it is regarded as full of potential; a technology to eventually replace the current bar code.
The MIC projects the RFID-associated market will reach up to $77 billion by 2010 from just $1.6 billion in 2003.
However, the expense of RFID readers, at more than 1 million won, limit the technology but the reader chips inside the handset would be charged at around just 10,000 on mass-production.
``Like the camera module has become a must in current cell phones, RFID readers will also infiltrate most handsets in the near future. It¡¯s not about if, but when,¡¯¡¯ Seo said.
New Phone Technologies Ready to Meet Customers
http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/tech/200501/kt2005012719292812350.htm
Starting next year, people will be able to check expiry dates of beef or download movie previews from posters through mobile phones equipped with radio-tag readers.
The Ministry of Information and Communication (MIC) said Thursday it would launch trial services of such features halfway through next year with an aim of commercially debuting it a year later.
``We plan to incorporate readers of radio frequency identification (RFID) tags into mobile phones to accelerate take-off of the radio tags,¡¯¡¯ MIC official Seo Seok-jin said.
Toward that end, the ministry will establish the Mobile RFID Forum, which will be in charge of standardizing related technologies and manufacturing terminals fitted with RFID readers.
The Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) are now developing such terminals and the nation¡¯s top cell phone makers like Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics will join.
``Within this year, a prototype phone will be revealed with an RFID reader chip as the state-backed ETRI and major handset vendors combine efforts,¡¯¡¯ Seo projected.
The RFID tag is a small integrated-circuit (IC) chip with a radio circuit and an embedded identification code that can be scanned from a distance.
The radio tag technology is still under development but it is regarded as full of potential; a technology to eventually replace the current bar code.
The MIC projects the RFID-associated market will reach up to $77 billion by 2010 from just $1.6 billion in 2003.
However, the expense of RFID readers, at more than 1 million won, limit the technology but the reader chips inside the handset would be charged at around just 10,000 on mass-production.
``Like the camera module has become a must in current cell phones, RFID readers will also infiltrate most handsets in the near future. It¡¯s not about if, but when,¡¯¡¯ Seo said.
A lot of pre market activity.
01/05/05 15:46:19 0.2405 0.262 0.265 300000
01/05/05 16:09:22 0.2405 0.26 0.265 0
01/06/05 09:12:21 0.2405 0.269 0.267 0
01/06/05 09:20:31 0.2405 0.269 0.272 0
01/06/05 09:20:44 0.2405 0.27 0.272 0
01/06/05 09:20:58 0.2405 0.271 0.272 0
01/06/05 09:21:27 0.2405 0.271 0.274 0
01/06/05 09:21:29 0.2405 0.273 0.274 0
01/06/05 09:22:01 0.2405 0.274 0.274 0
01/06/05 09:22:02 0.2405 0.274 0.275 0
01/06/05 09:23:50 0.2405 0.274 0.276 0
01/06/05 09:23:51 0.2405 0.274 0.278 0
01/06/05 09:23:56 0.2405 0.277 0.278 0
Madcat,
also look at http://www.medved.net/quotetracker/. They offer an excellent application.
Volumn is picking up.
Thanks JP. Actually I was at RB since July 03 and here since Feb 04. I've been a share holder since Sep 03 truly a believer in Neom. I don't post much; I enjoy reading all the great information that is posted here.
Go NEOM!
Check out this article from February 27, 2004
NeoMedia's patented PaperClickô technology launched in Europe at 3GSM
http://www.smartmobs.com/archive/2004/02/27/neomedias_pate.html
New systems cut cell phone finger work:
OCTOBER 05, 2004 When it comes to cell phones, Japanese consumers are all over the wireless Internet. By August, more than 71 million Japanese cell phone users -- or 86% of all Japanese subscribers -- had wireless Internet service on their phones, according to the Telecommunications Carriers Association. That's a huge audience just waiting to be tapped by marketers in a variety of ways, but doing so will take some creative thinking.
For one thing, typing Web addresses into the phone isn't easy on those small keyboards; it takes time and patience. Several companies have found a way to jump that hurdle.
A system fast gaining recognition is a 2-D bar code reader that stores data in both horizontal and vertical directions. The small, square reader is called a QR Code and was developed by Japan's Denso Wave Inc.
Reader software supporting the system is becoming a standard feature of many high-end phones with camera functions. Users need only start the QR Code reader software, aim it at a bar code printed on an advertisement in a magazine or poster, and, in a second, the data has been captured. The code typically includes a link to a related site on the mobile Internet.
Another use from the folks at NTT DoCoMo Inc., which strongly promotes the technology, is the ability to encode information from its employees' business cards for easy entry into the cell phones' databases.
Publishers are also catching on. Some magazines include QR codes embedded with a link to a money-saving coupon. One city guide to Tokyo features a code on each page and allows users to jump to a Web page with updated information on the area in question.
And -- for reaching cell phone users on the move -- Taito Corp., a wireless entertainment content provider in Japan, says it has gone one better.
Its Popar system sends data to phones via infrared light and will be embedded into posters or point-of-sale systems. It can handle greater amounts of data -- still images, audio files and video -- in addition to simple Internet links. There are currently more handsets with infrared receivers on the market than QR Code software, so it's also more universal, according to Taito
Picture this: Tickets on your cell phone:
A new "m-commerce" service has moved to exploit existing bar-code scanning and mobile-handset technology, and one of Australia's premier venues is poised to use it to process payment for a forthcoming series of concerts.
The patented technology, "mobi-tickets," was licensed by Aura Digital Communications from U.K. company Mobiqa for distribution in Asia-Pacific. It sends a bar code to a mobile phone as a picture message, which can then be scanned by a typical point-of-sale system.
The bar code can be displayed on any handset that can view picture messaging, which accounts for about 80 percent of the market, according to Aura director Adam Dunne. Because there are two standards for mobile picture messaging--Nokia Smart Messaging and Sony's Enhanced Message Service--the message is sent in both formats, and special "sniffer" technology works out which is the appropriate format. If the handset cannot display picture messages, a unique number is sent, which is manually keyed in by the staff.
Mobi-tickets will be launched next month at The Metro Theatre in Sydney, which will use the method to deliver tickets to performances by Magic Dirt, Echo & the Bunnymen, The Frames and Killing Joke.
"The patrons will receive an SMS containing a bar code, called a mobi-ticket, with confirmation of ticket and event details," said Dunne, referring to the Short Message Service, a technology that lets cell phones send or receive a type of e-mail. "At the point of entry, the bar code on their mobile phone will be scanned by the ticket attendant using Denso scanning hardware."
Leo Crawford, entertainment manager of The Metro, said that mobi-tickets "can be delivered to the customer within minutes of the booking being made, and can be cancelled and reissued effortlessly. This technology is set to become mainstream in the ticketing business."
Aura plans to launch the product in Melbourne and New Zealand later this year, and in countries throughout Southeast Asia next year. The mobile technology services company is also working with local retail chains to deliver promotions based on the technology.
James Pearce of ZDNet Australia reported from Sydney.
The following article appeared in Photography & Printing http://www.compukiss.com/populartopics/photoprintinghtm/article1199.htm
The camera cell phone is also poised to start a shopping revolution. Women are taking pictures of clothing in stores and sending them to friends for instant advice on what they should purchase. Even more importantly, the New York based Scanbuy company has developed a camera phone application that will use the camera to scan bar codes and trigger an automatic download of coupons, product reviews, and other information about the item that carried the bar code. This application might also suggest nearby or online stores that are offering the item at a better price. While Scanbuy is working with Ericsson to produce bar-code-reading camera phones, their competitors M-Ken, Mediastick, and NeoMedia Technologies are testing similar products with Nokia and other phone manufacturers.
I came over from RB. The site is completly hosed. All the good people have left. I'm leaving for work shortly, tonight I will try to contact folks from RB. I look forward to getting and keeping this board up and running.
I'm a true believer in ADVR!!!!
Check out Berlin and Frankford exchanges.
http://de.finance.yahoo.com/q?s=NEOM.BE&d=c&k=c1&a=v&p=s&t=1d&l=on&z=m&a...
http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=NEOM.F&t=1d&l=on&z=m&q=l&c=
Neom is going to move today.
Ok, didn't see the titles at the top.
Thanks
I'm a free member. I want to post to Early Bird Special. When I try, I get a message that states: The board on which you tried to post is only accessible with a Premium Subscription, click here for a list of free access boards. Early Bird Special is on that list, so why can't I post.
By the way this site is great.
Thanks