To: cAPSLOCK who wrote (10555 ) 2/2/2000 2:17:00 PM From: PartyTime Respond to of 18366
Regarding your statement much is being read between the lines. Well, that's correct. A lot is read between the lines. That's how a savvy investor manages to get there first. But don't forget, being there first has also got to count for the company! Regarding Lucent and IBM highlighting eDigital? Why would these largescale corporations do this, or even want to do this? Well, I think the proper read between the line is there's gotta be something of substance built into these respective relationships. Also, when you consider the nature of cutting edge technology to which eDigital is focused, only recently have corporations publicly begun showing similar interest. Here, eDigital is visionary. And maybe it is concludable that it's the visionary status of eDigital's engineering team which has helped to solidify the kinds of relationships it has with IBM, Lucent and others. Not everything hits the press all at once. It really wasn't until Bill Gates brought attention to wireless micro technology (holding up the portable music player on The Larry King Show) and the action from the recent CES 2000 Convention in Las Vegas, that the media began to cozy to all of this. And that's when other companies began showing wannabe status. Today, it seems they all wanna be a player with this technology. What's cool is eDigital has been a player since the get-go. And first in market niche counts for something! And it explains why EDIG has such nice corporate suitors and why savvy investors are putting their money behind the company. Noteworthy is the fact that eDigital has not--to use the SD Union-Tribume's term--"touted" the IBM-Lucent relationship. In fact, it was the large corporations which released the news about their respective relationships with eDigital. Most OTC level stocks would have been decrying IBM-Lucent type relationships in every whichway. eDigital didn't do this. So it's not a case of reading between the lines to conclude EDIG has been in the vanguard of micro wireless technology and that the company has a highly regarded and well respected professional engineering focus which it considers more important than the need to distinguish itself as the best OTC stock ever to come on the trading block. Once the quality of the Nasdaq association is better understood, that a comfort level exists for this important listing, I suspect the intensity of eDigital's public relations will be moved up a notch or two. Then we'll learn more and won't have to devote so much time reading between the lines. With this eestablished, we'll see a whole new wave of investors coming on board, the re-entry of investors who've previously sold and, importantly, we'll finally begin seeing institutional interest given the comfort level of eDigital's Nasdaq status. Conclusion? Of the fantasy versus the reality in reading between the lines? Reality will have greater focus once EDIG is safely perched onto Nasdaq.