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Re: paradigm67 post# 120112

Sunday, 04/29/2007 8:32:36 PM

Sunday, April 29, 2007 8:32:36 PM

Post# of 326352
There are so many millions of shares just waiting to be unloaded on any sign of light, make no mistake. Many large holders are stuck by the number of shares they hold, and with buying interest being somewhere between nil and negligible, they simply cannot dump without destrying the PPS. The Cornell cycle of poison has doomed the stock.

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...and you know these people personally or is that just the sentiment that you want to instill here? Besides, if some sign of light, as you put it shines on those people, then it wouldn't be prudent on their part to split with a stock on the way up, now would it. Isn't the rule buy on the way up and sell on the way down? No matter where they bought into the hoopla, you shouldn't be advising them. You should be more preoccupied with putting out the information (DD) that should lead them to the light, not troubling them with where they should not step. They should no more blindly buy into your tripe than they should ours. Which do you think is more credible, one who provides useful diligent information or one who is purely bent on instilling fear doubt and uncertainty? I personally like the ones with the info. Besides stimulating my curiosity, it makes me learn about the technology and the competition. I especially like the ones who compile information and provide links to support it.

I asked you before and I will ask you again. If you want to sway my opinion, provide information that would convince me that there is better technology, IP and potential for revenue from someone else providing a similar service. Yes, it is prudent to know about their financial situation but that is only part of the picture. Your assumption that there is no way out of the financial doldrums that Cornell has put NeoMedia in is very small thinking when one looks at the potential long term revenues possible from the technology. At a nickel a click, we make 5 Million for every million users that click on the first level only. For those that follow through to the buying we gain an additional 15 cents per person and that is a single transaction. The transition out of debt will not be immediate but there is definitely a light at the end of the tunnel.

Do some math with me paradigm. If the market is 200 million domestically, and 1 percent partakes, then the potential is huge in terms of revenue. Now, multiply that with the world population and you get some seriously big numbers (billions). If only 1 percent participated per day, then your revenue stream would be enough to insure that light at the end of the tunnel wasn't a train. After all, the infrastructure is in place. All we need is a little participation. I advise anyone on the fence to wait until the pilot programs are finished and the launch is a reality before one weighs the success/failure of the product. Let some of the marketing payoff and the word spread before you pull the plug or step on the fuse. If they fail, then they fail. Until that time, I would wait and see but that is just my opinion. OK, berate away.


htj