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Technology Stocks : CDDD -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: StockDung who wrote (733)1/17/2001 10:58:38 AM
From: jjs64  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 924
 
Right On Truthseeker! If you do some digging on Shemano Group you will find that they have been involved with all sorts of shady scummy deals. Gary Shemano used to be at Bear Stearns.

As for their involvement in CDDD, if you examine the S1 filed on 10/20/2000 you will see that Shemano group has warrants to purchase 400,000 shares of common stock. Of course, the crim touts never do this kind of DD or tell anyone about the true connections between CDDD and Shemano.

Here are some of the deal they were involved with:

Hollis-Eden Pharmaceuticals (HEPH)
Tera Computer (aka Cray Computer) (CRAY nee TERA)
Bionutrics (BNRX)
Imatron (IMAT)
Harken Energy (HEC)
Magnitude Information (MAGY)
Wave Systems (WAVX)
Saf T Lock (LOCK)
***Coyote Network (CYOE) ***

My best guess is that this CDDD move is just the pump to get Shemano out of their position.

Buyer Beware!



To: StockDung who wrote (733)1/17/2001 5:45:53 PM
From: blebovits  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 924
 
Where Storage Is Always At A Premium

By Shelley Souza

Optionetics.com

I was reminded this morning of a small company I learned of last year called Constellation 3D (CDDD). The company was recently approved Nasdaq listing (at the time I heard about them, they were still a bulletin board stock). Their technology is compelling because they're in the storage sector, which most of us know from personal experience-whether it's bedroom closets or disk space on our computers-is a commodity that always appears to be at a premium. In fact, if storage were an actual commodity being traded in the Futures pits, I suspect it would be one of the perennial bull markets.

Constellation 3D has developed a way to use fluorescent light (which is significantly cheaper than laser) and layer compact discs. Each layer of a DVD data density format disc can store 4.7GB of data; 20 layers means approximately 95GB of storage on a single disc, with a transfer rate of approximately 1 Gigabit per second. Effectively, you can transfer 95GB of data in a minute and a half. Fluorescent multilayer technology is being adapted to different formats beyond circular spinning discs. It's being used in an array of equipment, from digital cameras to smart cards for holding personal data for use in casinos, airports, etc. What makes it attractive as a forward-looking technology is the cost of using fluorescent multilayering. Right now the cost of manufacturing 10GB is less than $10. At this time, Constellation 3D doesn't carry options, but it's worth keeping on the radar screen in case of future listing.

biz.yahoo.com