Jorjenzak
Does the following bear any resemblance to ECNC? A Canadian company called E-station
o: Ian A. who wrote (45) From: Ian A. Monday, Aug 16 1999 11:45AM ET Reply # of 46
eStation.com to provide Internet e-commerce
eStation.com Inc ESTN Shares issued 88,012,465 Aug 13 close $0.14 Mon 16 Aug 99 News Release Mr. John Tevlin reports "Things are moving very quickly for the e-commerce industry in general and for eStation in particular. In order to keep shareholders and other interested associates up to date, I'm going to be writing a series of regular corporate updates on this site, beginning with this one. "I caution you in advance that most of our development, negotiations and field testing must be kept confidential in order to protect both our competitive position and those of our clients and strategic partners, a list that includes multinational retailers, financial institutions and telcos. We are, however, particularly grateful for the help we have received from three companies: NCR, Neo Products, and Systech, all of whom continue to support our selling initiatives. "At a strategic level, our mission remains clear: to bring e-commerce to the street. The heart of our business concept lies in participating in the Internet revolution, while developing profitable applications from the amazing computing capacity of the microchip, and that is why we changed the name of the company to eStation.com Inc. Our corporate name is now registered in both the United States and Canada. We have also acquired the URL domain name eStation.com and have a U.S. patent pending for the eStation unmanned sales station process methodology. "eStation's potential, simply stated, is to provide Internet e-commerce to: the millions of North Americans who don't have Internet access; people don't trust the Web's lack of security; and those who want private, secure, high-speed, and even enjoyable e-commerce when they are in public and away from their PC. "From a technical perspective, we believe that the answer is to provide these enormous customer groups with an easy-to-use Internet system that is not only secure (something the Web has not quite yet achieved), but is also private, which we would define as meaning that unwelcome parties cannot even see data transmitted over the network, much less be able to de-crypt it. In our opinion, true privacy can never be attained when using the Web, by its very nature -- it was created to be an open system. On the other hand, privacy has always been available over leased telephone lines. That is why, for example, bank machines connect to their head offices through phone lines for credit card authorization and transaction processing, and why the banks will not permit the transfer of funds (outside one's own bank) through the Web. The eStation solution thus is defined as the process of delivering public access e-commerce safely and privately through a high-speed network using private phone lines for payment and other security-sensitive information. We have yet to encounter any other company pursuing this vision of the future, and therefore we believe we are out to a meaningful early lead in the race. "The newest release of eStation software is now complete. The team at Martinet Development Corp., our software development subsidiary, have done a terrific job with this product. They have written a package of computer code, using a mix of advanced programming languages, that will enable us to present a dynamic, on-line shopping experience that cannot be duplicated using standard HTML Web language. There is no browser, so users are taken instantly to the items they desire by touching the screen instead of having to navigate with mouse, keyboard, and toolbar -- no computer or Web experience is required. There is no interminable waiting for downloads -- every touch of the screen produces a selection instantly. "Video and audio delivery is of a quality and resolution far higher than what can be found on the average PC. Purchases are grouped together in a single electronic shopping cart, even though they are may be from different retailers. At checkout time, only one swipe of the credit card is needed to complete the entire transaction. This credit card swipe is important for another reason: because the card is being physically presented and the information is being transmitted over a private network, the security of the information transmitted in an eStation transaction is virtually equivalent to that of a bank machine. Content will be supplied on a category-exclusive basis; millions of brand name products and services will eventually be available on the eStation network, as will national and local advertisers. "Now to the eStation revenue front. In the last three months, we have made presentations literally from coast to coast, both on our own and in conjunction with giants in the telephone, computer hardware, and systems integration businesses. The business categories we have targeted so far include banks, credit unions, airports, casinos, grocery chains, convenience store chains, a variety of specialty store chains, gas stations, and department stores. Presentations and/or negotiations are currently under way in every one of these categories with major corporations in the United States and Canada. The confidentiality agreements we have signed with various parties prevent me from going into more detail other than to say that announcements will be made at the appropriate time. "We have hired four full-time senior sales executives since the AGM, the most recent addition being the appointment of John Moakler as vice-president of sales. John comes to us from EDS Systemhouse, where he was the client director responsible for the Nortel Networks relationship. "Finally, we have been developing two additional business opportunities that hold great promise for the company as we continue to find new and effective ways to bridge the real and cyber worlds: business-to-business e-commerce -- it is even larger than the consumer/retail business and it too is growing by leaps and bounds. We are developing software to deliver a version of the eStation concept to this immense eCommerce segment, and we also expect to generate synergy among companies that become both providers of eStation terminal locations and users of our eBusiness services. white label (for example non-bank affiliated) automated banking machines are also proliferating. We are assessing the significant tactical benefits of adding eStation functionality to cash-dispensing terminals. (c) Copyright 1999 Canjex Publishing Ltd. canada-stockwatch.com |