I think that NMSS provides the circuit boards for the servers that are built by a private company in the Northeast. I think the servers are shipped to Santa Monica where the boards are installed along with some other proprietary software and then the completed server is shipped to potential customers, I assume on a trial basis at first. However, the servers are only shipped to good potential customers-not just ship and hope situations.IMHO. Of course, if a customer signs up then I think that more than one server is usually required for a given location. I don't know the number of calls each server can handle, but I think that is determined by the circuit boards that DGIV gets from NMSS. I think the plan is that DGIV will make some revenue from the sale of servers and, additionally, for a negotiated price DGIV gets x minutes per month as part of the deal. DGIV can then wholesale the minutes in the U.S. to a broker for l.d calling back to the customer/country and DGIV makes money on the spread. Much of this has been in prior news releases although you do have to piece it together from release to release. Also, you have to do some DD on what NMSS is providing, but their product is not a secret. If you know what NMSS is providing then you can figure out what DGIV is doing b/c the boards have a specific purpose. Also, you need to know a little about the long distance telephone business. Anyway, I am of the impression that all of the above is known, but what is not known is how many customers Jimmy can sign to his proposed network, and that is the big "if".The revenue stream depends on customers. I thought everyone here understood the concept. I would not invest in a company if I did not understand the concept. I thought the naysayers were betting that Jimmy would not sign customers. I don't think there has ever been any question that Jimmy can deliver equipment if he can attract customers. I am sure that I have bored many of you with this, but coffee pot was perking in the dark, and he did ask. |