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craigba

02/07/08 7:20 PM

#99057 RE: mide #99051

mide.....you are welcome!

True, Globetel has had their share of problems and continue to cause bad press for themselves. They could have thrown in the towel months ago but they refuse to lay down and play dead. I believe (call me stupid) that they must have something very valuable to someone or they would be gone by now.

I think that new management is trying desperately to get the ship righted and back on an even keel. I also believe (go ahead and call me stupid again), that we may have investors and partners waiting for us to show them that we can pull ourselves up by the bootstraps before they want to be named with us.

Only time will tell if this is the case. I am like many here that have no choice but to believe that this company will rise from the ashes so we can finally see a return on our investment in it. One you stop believing, you have to admit to yourself how stupid you were to fall in love with a company and that is not an easy thing to do.

Despite all of this, I still believe that this company will one day show the naysayers that there was something here all along, we just took the very long way around the barn.


Craig

Scion_of_Greed

02/07/08 11:09 PM

#99076 RE: mide #99051

Shaking in my boots Mide.

In fact, I shaked all the way from $4.00 down to ten cents.


Nothing would bring me greater pleasure than to watch your pals Jonny-L & Shimmi pump this South Florida Nano Company back up to .50 cents so I could ride the wreck back into the grave....one more time.

But alas, it won't happen. You seem obtuse to the forces working against your beloved penny stock. When are you going to tell the good folks here what's getting ready to happen???

And don't tell me you don't know.


BOL

montanar

02/07/08 11:42 PM

#99078 RE: mide #99051

Mide agree, synergies to be made and the US is a great market too....

It appears that the US is actually falling behind in the digital revolution and more has to be done to catch up now. Broadband, WiFi and all that. What goes out comes back home to roost. Not always, some of it stays in Germany. LOL!

Have a great day and GLTUA.

PS: An interesting quote from the local press below:

Editorial
By The Capital Times (Madison, WI)
www.tbrnews.org 2-7-8

President Bush does not use e-mail. The most secretive chief executive since Richard Nixon does not want to risk having his digital communications revealed as part of the official record of the republic he is sworn to serve and protect.

Other Americans do rely on the Internet, however.

Unfortunately, our off-line president has set the tone for a White House that is almost ridiculously disengaged when it comes to the challenge of preparing the United States for a digital future.

A Bush administration report released Thursday claims that high-speed Internet access is now available to virtually every American. This self-congratulatory document suggests that, during Bush's tenure, the United States has taken the right steps to ensure that we have "an environment in which broadband innovation and competition can flourish."

In fact, nothing could be further from the truth.

When George Bush assumed the presidency in 2001, the United States ranked fourth when it came to broadband penetration - the measure of access to digital services.

Now, as Bush enters his last year in office, the United States has dropped to 15th place.

"Declaring mission accomplished won't reverse America 's rapid disappearance from the ranks of world broadband leaders. Just ask the tens of millions of Americans still stranded on the wrong side of the digital divide," says Derek Turner, who has authored several reports criticizing failed U.S. broadband policies.

"Americans pay far more for much slower Internet connections - when they can get service at all - than the rest of the world. Too many people still live in areas that cable and telecom companies refuse to serve, and many more can only purchase slow and expensive connections that can't in all seriousness be called broadband," explained Turner, who serves as research director for Free Press, the nation's media reform network. "Yet while the Bush administration stands by and cheers over Internet connections barely faster than dial-up, countries like England and South Korea are bringing affordable and fast broadband to their citizens. Americans will be left on the sidelines as these countries reap the huge economic and social benefits of innovative technologies."

"What do these countries have that we don't?" asks Turner.

His answer: "A national broadband policy that goes beyond empty platitudes."

That's right, but it is only part of the explanation. Other countries also have leaders who read newspapers, watch television news programs and use e-mail.

America has George Bush