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Technology Stocks : VitalStream Holdings Inc. (VSTH)

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To: bogatiy who wrote (269)2/29/2000 11:33:00 PM
From: Jon Khymn   of 447
 
Mr. Bogus, I think you're playing with fire here.
If you're looking for a good short take a look at SCON and CDTS.

Have you heard a guy name Jon Markman?
He is a MSN's financial dude...
He picked PLUG, XLA and SCII In Jan 5 this year and look where those stocks are.
I think SCII can do the same in a short time.

BTW, Jon also wrote about SCON just two weeks ago and take a look now....

Me think much more upside potential than down side for SCII.
Just a freindly advice,,,

Good luck,

web

From Jon's article regarding SCII:

Sensar: distributed broadband over wireless

In January 1997, the shares of a little analytical instruments company in Utah
named Sensar (SCII) hit a high around $57. After that it was all downhill, with
shares dropping to $1 by the spring of 1999. Following two years of business
setbacks, the firm was essentially moribund. It had sold all of its operating units,
and was little more than a shell corporation holding about $6 million in cash.

So why did the shares suddenly begin to levitate in April on virtually no news --
quintupling to $5 in April, and then doubling again to $10 in November and
reaching as high as $68 by the last week of December -- a fabulous one-year gain of
3,362% that beat virtually every other stock on the planet?

A study of press releases and federal regulatory documents filed in the autumn
reveals that Sensar engaged in a reverse merger with two Israeli companies that
have patents on intriguing technologies that could turn every cellular phone easily
and cheaply into a browser capable of receiving streaming, real-time color video
and data on demand from the Internet. Rather than go through the trouble of trying
to find a U.S. brokerage that would take them public, the owners of Israel-based
ITES Corp. and Net2Wireless simply found a Nasdaq shell to crawl into. The board
controlling the former Sensar quietly resigned, and the new managers took over.

The real ramp in the share price came in late December, when it was announced that
the former head of ECI Telecom (ECIL), a highly regarded global
telecommunications equipment company based in Israel, had joined as the odd little
firm's new chief executive. That got the attention of money-management firm SAC
Capital in Connecticut, which has since acquired a 7% stake.

Soon, the whole world will find out whether Net2Wireless' technology works
because the Israeli affiliate of United Kingdom cellular giant Orange (ORNGY) is
launching a pilot starting this month. If all goes well, Sensar very quickly could
start to license its intellectual property to cellular providers worldwide, and quickly
could zoom to a market cap approaching that of wireless browser licensor
Phone.com (PHCM) -- $15 billion. Considering that Sensar today has a market cap
of just $173 million, that gets you close to a 10,000% gain without breaking a sweat.
(Yes, that's a big if.)
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