Neomedia - Der neue highflyer ?


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Eröffnet am:22.06.04 13:45von: BörsenfanAnzahl Beiträge:311
Neuester Beitrag:16.11.04 14:48von: bammieLeser gesamt:21.038
Forum:Hot-Stocks Leser heute:22
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2202 Postings, 7541 Tage Kade_Istanding, bin bei NEOM leider nur gering

 
  
    #251
09.11.04 15:32
investiert, trotzdem schön ;-)

RT 0,149  

2202 Postings, 7541 Tage Kade_Istanding bin soeben zu 0,148 in USA raus !

 
  
    #252
09.11.04 15:35
Viel Erfolg noch, aber ich glaube das wars erstmal ...  

2202 Postings, 7541 Tage Kade_IRichtig gemacht, jetzt "kackt" sie ab. RT 0,14 o. T.

 
  
    #253
09.11.04 15:40

2202 Postings, 7541 Tage Kade_IVorsicht 0,136. Die kann ganz schnell wieder unter

 
  
    #254
09.11.04 15:44
0,10 sein !  

2538 Postings, 8619 Tage Poelsi7kurzfristige Gewinnmitnahmen...

 
  
    #255
09.11.04 15:59
...waren doch zu erwarten, die Aktie kennt seit einer Woche nur eine Richtung. Für den Daytrader also optimal erwischt Kade, den langfristigen Anleger interessiert es nicht....  

228 Postings, 7751 Tage DoncamilooRichtig Poelsi7 !

 
  
    #256
09.11.04 16:04
Gewinnmitnahmen hatten wir fast immer mehr oder weniger jeden Tag ca. 15-30min nach Eröffnung.
Denke es kann nur nach oben gehen die sind jetzt überall dran mit Ihren Barcods und Paperclick!
Kurstiel 2004 1$, denn Weihnachten ist Neuheitenverteilung beim Kunden !

Meine Meinung Schluß heute > 0,17 $

Aufgehts....  

2202 Postings, 7541 Tage Kade_IRichtig poelsi, bin ber trotzdem etwas skeptisch.

 
  
    #257
09.11.04 16:24
Mal sehen was kommt. Unter 0,10 steig ich wieder ein...  

4023 Postings, 8000 Tage Dope4youIch sitz jetzt seit über 1 Jahr auf den Dingern

 
  
    #258
09.11.04 16:32
und hab nen KK von 0,105. Hab also schon die 50% Verluststufe erreicht gehabt :)

Wenn die jetzt Heute etwas ins Minus rutschen ist mir das auch Wurst, ich setzte da auf einen Kurs über 0,5 Euro, somit können die Heute machen was die wollen.

Jetzt kalte Füße kriegen ist nicht, entweder Top oder absoluter Flop  

4012 Postings, 7967 Tage standingovationgehe auch und wie (fast) immer volles risiko

 
  
    #259
09.11.04 16:39

4012 Postings, 7967 Tage standingovationhat jemand gerade rt's zur hand?

 
  
    #260
09.11.04 17:05
meine sind temp. ausgestigen... thx  

573 Postings, 7348 Tage Possibility0,122 US$ Gruß Bernd o. T.

 
  
    #261
09.11.04 17:09

4012 Postings, 7967 Tage standingovationcool, die 0.12$ scheinen zu halten

 
  
    #262
09.11.04 17:09
von hier aus geht die reise los  

1268 Postings, 7558 Tage Mischa@standing.gönn ich dir ja, aber vorsicht! schau

 
  
    #263
09.11.04 17:12
dir den letzten hype an! wie gewonnen so zeronnen. viel glück.hatte gestern überlegt einzusteigen, war mir aber fast sicher, das es heute wieder runter geht. mal die nächsten tage schauen.  

2268 Postings, 7360 Tage soyus10,117$ glaube heute nicht an 0,17$

 
  
    #264
09.11.04 18:28
werde es wie Kade halten und schauen ob der Weihnachtsmann mich noch mitnimmt. Wenn nicht freut es mich für Euch. War aber keine leichte Entscheidung für mich jetzt (noch) nicht aufzuspringen...

LG S1  

4012 Postings, 7967 Tage standingovationgewinnmitnahmen, ist klar!

 
  
    #265
09.11.04 18:49
hat jemand rt's? meine sind am A...  

4012 Postings, 7967 Tage standingovationhoffentlich halten die 0.10$

 
  
    #266
09.11.04 19:13
dann können wir uns wieder dem steigen widmen, sonst eher dem sinken ;-)  

4012 Postings, 7967 Tage standingovationcoole sache: 0.105$ schlusskurs bei 30mio. morgen?

 
  
    #267
09.11.04 22:18
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117 Postings, 7757 Tage heinerlenachbörslich US über 12%+++ o. T.

 
  
    #268
09.11.04 22:27

4012 Postings, 7967 Tage standingovationdas baby kommt schon noch ;-) o. T.

 
  
    #269
09.11.04 22:30

8970 Postings, 7729 Tage bammieDial-a-display, habe einen Bericht gefunden

 
  
    #270
10.11.04 13:06
Dial-a-display

By DOUGLAS HEINGARTNER
New York Times News Service
UPDATED AT 4:12 PM EST  Friday, Nov 5, 2004  



CAMBRIDGE, England — When you think of a public information kiosk, your mental picture might include greasy touch screens, broken trackballs and frozen monitors.

But researchers at an Intel-financed laboratory at Cambridge University have developed a way to replace displays like those with something portable, not to mention personal: a cellphone's built-in camera and screen. They and others plan to use commercially available hardware to turn the camera-equipped cellphone into a mouse, remote control, keyboard and more.

"Instead of having all the hassle of putting things out in the environment that you have to maintain and that people can vandalize, you get a cheap PC, shove it in the back room of your shop and just put posters out front," said Richard Sharp, an Intel researcher here.

On these posters are symbols the researchers call SpotCodes: concentric rings of black-and-white blocks representing ones and zeros. Focusing your camera phone on the code and then clicking any button launches a wireless service — for example, the ability to buy a train ticket, check an airplane's departure time or download a ring tone from a store display.

The codes can be produced on any inkjet printer and can be read even by phones with low-resolution cameras.

SpotCode is not alone in this new field. Many other companies are introducing tools and formats that use the camera phone (and camera-equipped palmtop) to bridge the gap between real and virtual.

The potential applications are many. The SpotCode team, for example, has a prototype service that simulates an airport experience. Pointing and clicking on an overhead plasma screen will display flight information; if you wish, details are stored in your phone, activating a text message reminder that is sent just before boarding time.

Part of their motivation, though, was to take better advantage of underused public displays. "A lot of the info is static, so there's no point in putting it on a plasma screen," Mr. Sharp said. His team has been investigating ways of using big screens like these to display images too large for a cellphone's tiny screen — for example, a detailed map to a traveler's departure gate — while reserving the phone's display for personalized information.

"So instead of having a little display and keypad, what you've basically got is a big bank of buttons all laid out in front of you on the plasma screen," Mr. Sharp said. Unlike touch screens, which require users to stand within arm's length, a camera phone can be used to control a display from a distance.

"These are the endpoints of your virtual cables," Mr. Sharp said of the symbolic tags. "They're the things that initiate the connection."

Cellphones have long been able to do more than make calls and take pictures; you can use them to pay parking meters, make purchases from vending machines, project images against a wall, display your bicycling speed or even navigate an unfamiliar city.

But the desire to connect the paper and on-line worlds has only recently become practical, partly because of the rapid rise of camera-equipped cellphones. There are already tens of-millions of camera phones in use, and their sales worldwide (though not yet in the United States) exceed those of regular digital cameras, according to American Technology Research, an investment analysis firm.

Most of the new systems work on the same basic principle: software converts a camera phone's built-in lens into a scanner, similar to a bar-code reader's. When the lens is pointed at a recognizable symbol, the phone's display becomes a real-time viewfinder. In the case of SpotCodes, for example, once the lens detects the symbol, red cross hairs appear. Clicking then initiates a particular service, like loading a Web page or transmitting an e-mail address.

The clickable symbols can assume various forms, and can appear on almost any surface, including a poster, a printed page, a T-shirt or even a product itself. "It could be a box of Tide or a can of Coke," said Chas Fritz, chairman of NeoMedia Technologies of Fort Myers, Fla., which has been developing such tags for nearly a decade. "That Coke can is now interactive."

Though applications like these are only now appearing in the United States, they have become increasingly popular in Asia over the last two years. Examples in Japan include pointing your phone at printed maps to find the nearest automated teller machine, extra information about animals at an aquarium or training your camera phone on a local marketplace's produce to determine its origin and freshness.

Crucial to such projects has been the fact that major mobile operators in Asia like DoCoMo and Vodafone install the necessary scanning software on most new phones they distribute. A Vodafone spokesman, however, said no decisions had yet been made about outfitting European or American phones with similar capabilities.

"When the phone makers start building this software into their phones here, that's when this will really take off," said Anil Malhotra, vice-president of Bango, a Cambridge-based company working on ways to commercialize SpotCodes.

Others in this new industry agreed. "Japan is a school case for us, showing that the technology is already working in a country where the technology is more advanced," said Avi Outmezguine, co-founder of New York-based Scanbuy, another company trying to establish a foothold in what he calls "scan commerce."

Scanbuy and other scan-commerce entrepreneurs have launched a number of applications in North America. NeoMedia markets a business application that lets clean-up workers click with a camera phone on a chemical drum's tag to learn more about what has been spilled. And coding enthusiasts are using a technology from an Ontario-based company, Semacode, for updates on bus arrivals. Volunteers have been placing the Semacode markers at bus stops in several American cities. When pointed at the code, a camera phone can connect to current bus tracking data made available by a company called NextBus.com. Other initiatives are afoot in Europe as well. Beginning next month, a project in Finland will let shoppers with special diets point their Nokias at various food bar codes to see if the ingredients pass muster

Unsurprisingly, many of the proposed applications revolve around shopping, for example letting potential buyers call up information on a DVD player's technical specifications or check how many are in stock.

But how about taking advantage of standardized ISBN codes to lend a physical storefront to a virtual store? "You can walk into Barnes & Noble, click on a book using our software, and it'll link you directly to the Amazon price," said Mr. Fritz of NeoMedia.

Last year NeoMedia produced a version of this application to demonstrate the technology's possibilities to telecom executives, and Mr. Fritz said he hoped a consumer version would be available within six months.

Scanbuy also has a similar application in the works (a test version of which can be downloaded from Scanzoom.com). "What our technology can do for Amazon is to give them a physical presence without paying much lease," Mr. Outmezguine said.

Amazon's director of platform and technology communications, Craig Berman, said he could not comment on services like these without seeing them in action, but added that Amazon makes much of its vast database available to developers to encourage innovation.

While brick-and-mortar stores might feel short-changed, so much pointing and clicking inevitably generates extra traffic for phone operators. A South Korean provider, KTF, recently started a service that gives camera-phone users premium information when they point their phones at the bar code of any of over 400,000 products like books and CDs, for a few cents per lookup.

But these are still early days for scan commerce, and as such it's too early to predict where any big money might be made and by whom. Which explains, in part, why a chip maker like Intel would be involved in this kind of research.

"We're still trying to understand what it's useful for," said Derek McAuley, the director of research for the Intel lab here. "As technologists, we just generate all these options, and then the business folk figure out what to do with it."


http://www.globetechnology.com/servlet/story/...7/BNStory/Technology/  

824 Postings, 7860 Tage jertlvorbörslich 0.1120/0.1130 $ o. T.

 
  
    #271
10.11.04 15:19

4012 Postings, 7967 Tage standingovationdas wird noch ein ding!

 
  
    #272
10.11.04 15:25
ich freue mich schon...  

824 Postings, 7860 Tage jertlleicht nach unten 0.1090/0.1120 o. T.

 
  
    #273
10.11.04 15:32

824 Postings, 7860 Tage jertl0.1100/0.1120 o. T.

 
  
    #274
10.11.04 15:33

824 Postings, 7860 Tage jertl0.1130/0.1140 o. T.

 
  
    #275
10.11.04 15:40

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