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To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/5/2003 1:42:45 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
AND BELL CANADA BOUGHT TONS OF THE THINGIES. YOU CAN TELL BY JUST LOOKING AT XYBERNAUTS RAMPING REVENUES OVER THE YEARS.



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/6/2003 5:33:38 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
The silence of the lambs! er ah sheep.....



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/7/2003 2:44:58 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ANYONE REMEMBER XYBERNAUT INCREASING THE SHARES THAT COULD BE ISSUED SO THEY COULD MAKE ACQUISITIONS?

HOW ABOUT YOU ROY? YOU REMEMBER THAT?



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/7/2003 3:37:17 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ROY, BAD NEWS. FIRST XYBERNAUT AND NOW

Flipper exposed as a fraud
By PHILLIP COOREY in New York
08feb03

dailytelegraph.news.com.au

FORTY years after he first graced our screens, Flipper is being exposed as a fraud.

The chattering noise the dolphin made was, in fact, made by a kookaburra.

One US nature expert reckons it could be the biggest soundtrack swindle since a lion's roar was used for King Kong in 1933.

The Flipper deception is being revealed by tour guides at the Baltimore National Aquarium, who explain to the centre's 1.6 million annual visitors that dolphins don't have vocal chords.

"They are pretty shocked," said the aquarium's Jennifer Durkin, when asked how visitors take the news.

"But dolphins don't have any vocal chords. Nothing comes out of the mouth at all.

"[Flipper's makers] heard the kookaburra and it sounded cool so they dubbed that. Now people think dolphins can talk."

Ms Durkin explains the "squawking and squeaking" noises dolphins really make come from the blowhole.

But the "talking" revelation has lifted the lid on decades of widespread misuse of the kookaburra's laugh.

Nature writer and author Robert Winkler said the kookaburra, native only to Australia, was one of the most misrepresented birds in Hollywood.

"Sound editors decided the kookaburra's laugh went with jungle scenery," he said.

"Every American knows the kookaburra from jungle scenes usually in B-films."



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/9/2003 1:02:33 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ROY, IS THE FLOAT 62.8 MILLION AS AS THIS WELL KNOW WALL STREET GRIFTER SAYS? efcg.net



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/9/2003 1:06:35 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
SHORT INTEREST JAN 15TH A MEASILY 2,106,183 SHARES ACCORDING TO MASDAQ.COM

XYBR
 Xybernaut Corporation Nasdaq-SCM
nasdaq.com


SettlementDate ShortInterest Avg DailyShare Volume Daysto Cover
Jan. 15, 2003 2,106,183 1,831,502 1.15
Dec. 13, 2002 2,070,603 2,892,746 1.00
Nov. 15, 2002 2,007,601 6,118,223 1.00
Oct. 15, 2002 2,001,604 988,199 2.03
Sep. 13, 2002 1,990,386 727,041 2.74
Aug. 15, 2002 1,996,329 518,819 3.85
Jul. 15, 2002 2,021,892 1,034,003 1.96
Jun. 14, 2002 2,486,346 1,015,385 2.45
May 15, 2002 2,374,077 513,146 4.63
Apr. 15, 2002 2,724,964 274,673 9.92
Mar. 15, 2002 2,690,865 482,624 5.58
Feb. 15, 2002 2,919,637 410,322 7.12



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/9/2003 5:53:36 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ROY, None! lol->Face scans match few suspects

The software employed at Super Bowl has had limited success, yet Pinellas' Sheriff's Office got millions to use it.
By LISA GREENE

© St. Petersburg Times, published February 16, 2001

LARGO -- Just days after the Super Bowl, Tom Colatosti went on the air. He explained to thousands of radio listeners how his company, Viisage Technologies, provided the software that studied the faces of thousands of fans who attended the big game and compared them to police databases of criminal suspects, even pictures of terrorists.

And he touted his software's effectiveness. "There were a number of arrests," he said.

None of them was made using Viisage.

In truth, the technology that prompted Tampa's recent Super Bowl to be dubbed the "Snooper Bowl" has experienced limited success.

That didn't stop U.S. Rep. C.W. Bill Young from delivering $3.5-million to the Pinellas Sheriff's Office based on the promise that Viisage's software would be able to sift through driver's license photographs in hopes of finding the identity of wanted suspects.

Had Young's aides researched such electronic sleuthing, they would have discovered the U.S. Department of Justice gave $250,000 to the Santa Ana (Calif.) Police Department to use a similar brand of face-recognition software made by a different company. How many arrests in four years has the department made using it?

None.

Thirty miles north of Santa Ana, deputies with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department experienced a bit more success. They made one arrest, but that was four years ago, and those who remember it dismiss the collar as blind luck.

And, spot checks across the United States by the Times show that face-recognition computers have worked in some situations but never to the degree the Pinellas County Sheriff's Office told the U.S. government it will use them.

So why did Young's office steer more than $3-million in taxpayer money to Pinellas County?

"When the local law enforcement folks call for help, he tries to help them out," said Young spokesman Harry Glenn. "That's what his job is, and that's what he did."

* * *
The Pinellas County Sheriff's Office pays Tom Peter to understand technology. As computer services manager, it's his job to ensure the software and hardware that serve the office's 2,600 employees work with precision.

In the summer of 1999, Peter got a telephone call.

It was from the Lafayette Group, a Beltway lobbying and consulting firm that has represented multi-million dollar companies like Unisys.

"I didn't know who the group was," Peter said. "I had no idea who they were working for, other than themselves."

But he liked what the firm had to say. There was money available for a new computer technology that could match pictures of people's faces. The sheriff might be able to get the money if he wrote Rep. Young.

"The way I understood it, the funding would come to us at no cost for the Sheriff's Office," Peter said. "Who would turn that down?

"Not us."

In Tallahassee, Buddy Phillips, the executive director of the Florida Sheriff's Association, had gotten a similar call from Chuck DeWitt, a partner in the Lafayette Group and an expert on Justice grants. In the early 1990s, he directed the National Institute of Justice, the department's research arm.

DeWitt said he called Phillips to drum up business. His firm had handled other face-recognition technology projects, and he wanted it known that LaFayette would hunt down federal money if it could just find someone to take it.

So how did Pinellas County enter the picture? Phillips says he's pretty sure DeWitt suggested using the county.

"I'm assuming that's because congressman Young was very interested in that program," he said. "But that's an assumption."

DeWitt says it was Phillips' idea. The grant calls for its recipient to work with other police agencies. The Sheriff's Office had a history of doing this well, Dewitt said.

The fact Young lives in Pinellas County played no role. "From our perspective, I can't imagine why anybody would question anything about the process," DeWitt said.

Sheriff Everett Rice had a different take. He said his office won the grant because of its success in using high-tech tools.

"If we didn't have a background in law enforcement technology, congressman Young wouldn't have picked us," Rice told the Times. "The fact that he brought it home is coincidence."

After saying this, and with his office filled with three of his top managers, Rice smiled and began to laugh.

* * *
The software is best known nationally now because it was used at the Super Bowl in a demonstration project. No one was arrested, but listeners to WFLA-AM 970's morning show can be forgiven if they thought Viisage had produced a remarkable result.

In a recent telephone interview, Colatosti apologized if he "was unclear on that."

By using Viisage software, police matched 19 people's faces to photos of people arrested in the past for minor pickpocketing, fraud and other charges. They weren't charged with any game-day misdeeds.

Still, matching 19 faces was "far beyond our expectations," Colatosti said.

Tampa's computers contained pictures of 1,700 criminals, including suspected abortion-clinic and Atlanta Olympics bomber Eric Rudolph.

Officers were pleased with the software test and may consider buying the technology someday, said spokesman Joe Durkin. But he admitted that police can't say for sure the matches were correct, because they didn't pursue anyone and confirm an identity.

"We feel confident they were correct matches, but until we take it to the next level, and do the conventional stop, you can never be 100 percent sure," he said.

Still, what happened at the Super Bowl indicates where face-recognition technology actually stands today. It may have promise, but the technology is far from proven.

In Wisconsin, state prison officials have contracted to use Viisage to promote prison security. In Illinois, state officials are testing the technology to compare drivers photos to prevent license fraud. Casinos use it to find known cheaters among their gamblers.

But in Massachusetts, state welfare officials have suspended their use of Viisage face-recognition after four years of free use, 15 matches and no arrests. They say they aren't sure if it's worth it.

So far, police investigative uses have faced more obstacles. Trent DePersia, who oversaw the Santa Ana grant as director of high-tech research for a Justice Department division, is a face-recognition fan. But he couldn't name an agency that has made a street arrest using it.

In Santa Ana, Capt. Dan McCoy thinks his department's program has potential. But it's not exactly a magic wand.

"It's another tool," he said. "You don't want to say this is the answer to everything."

In Los Angeles County and Santa Ana, the program works this way: Employees feed computers a photo or composite drawing of a criminal suspect. It measures the person's face: the distance between the eyes, the angle of the cheekbones, the thickness of the lips. It compares measurements to those in its database of photos and spits out the closest matches.

Los Angeles investigators were learning to use the system in 1997 when they decided to run a composite drawing of a carjacking suspect through their database -- and came out with a suspect who later pleaded guilty.

Since then, police have expanded the database to include 500,000 jail booking photos. But they've arrested no one else.

Neither agency uses the same software that Pinellas plans to use, but they said the software isn't the problem. Ragged, angled, video camera pictures of store holdups and composite pictures drawn, even by computer, from witnesses' memories are rarely recognizable enough to work, they said.

"The technology has its limitations, obviously," DePersia said.

* * *
Nevertheless, those limitations did not deter Rice's office from pursuing or Young's office from delivering the $3.5-million.

No one at the Sheriff's Office checked with police investigators using the technology before asking Young for grant money. Nor could anyone there explain when Viisage became involved in the project. Last month, the Lafayette Group helped write the federal grant "application" the Sheriff's Office submitted to the Justice Department.

In that document, the Sheriff's Office said that Viisage and its partner, Unisys Corp., was the only group capable of handling the job and asked that other companies not be allowed to compete in providing the Sheriff's Office the technology.

The tie between Viisage and Lafayette is less than coincidental. Viisage signed a contract with Lafayette in September 1999 that promised the lobbying firm a percentage of any contract it got for Viisage, Colatosti and DeWitt said.

How LaFayette went about getting those contracts was left to the lobbying firm, Colatosti said. "We're just some simple old techno-geeks up here."

Meanwhile, staff members in Young's office did not check whether other law enforcement agencies were successful in using face-recognition programs the way Pinellas County plans to use it. That measure of research, said Young spokesman Harry Glenn, is best left to locals seeking federal money.

Young "has to rely to some degree on (the local agency's) expertise in that field," Glenn said.

Rice said he's convinced the technology will succeed as an investigative tool and help the department by providing a new video jail-booking system and identifying jail prisoners more quickly. He said the department is now researching the technology and could still switch to another company or drop the plan to search driver's license photos.

"If we get into this and it looks like it doesn't work," he said, "we can give the money back."

How the grant was won is a familiar story for Peter Eisner, managing director of the Center for Public Integrity, a non-partisan Washington watchdog.

"Unfortunately, this is standard operating procedure in Washington," he said. "It runs on power and money and only incidently on what may benefit the public."

Frances Zelazny, spokeswoman for New Jersey based Visionics Corp., was surprised to hear that Pinellas County contended that only Viisage was capable of providing face-recognition technology.

"We are the most widely deployed facial recognition engine in law enforcement and booking systems to date," she said.

Eisner said grant funds earmarked by members of Congress, as this money was, are especially likely to be political pay back or local pork. He questioned whether Pinellas was contacted purely by coincidence.

"Let's see how many people believe that out of 435 districts, congressman Young's would be the district where this takes place," he said.

- Times researchers Kitty Bennett and John Martin contributed to this report.



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/10/2003 11:02:58 AM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ROY, EVEN YOU MUST ADMIT THAT ALAN STONE AND COMPANY ARE NOTHING MORE THAN A BUNCH OF ODD LOT PIKERS. wallstreetresearch.org

NOTICE HE ALSO PUMPED THE MASSIVE FRAUD SURGILIGHT.

BROOKLYN JURY CONVICTS SECURITIES LAW RECIDIVIST
The Commission announced today that on Dec. 13, 2002, a federal jury in
the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
found Dr. Jui-Teng Lin guilty on charges of securities fraud and money
laundering. According to the evidence at trial, Dr. Lin reaped
approximately $1,500,000 in ill-gotten gains from manipulating the
common stock of Surgilight, Inc., a publicly traded company
headquartered in Orlando, Florida. Dr. Lin artificially inflated the
market price of Surgilight stock tenfold (from approximately $2.50 to
over $25 per share) through a series of false and misleading press
releases detailing the company's purported ability to cure age-induced
vision deterioration known as "Presbyopia." Dr. Lin simultaneously
dumped a substantial amount of Surgilight stock on an unsuspecting
public through two nominee accounts and then wired the proceeds
overseas.

At the time of his indictment, the Commission filed a civil action
against Dr. Lin and others in the United States District Court for the
Middle District of Florida. The Commission's complaint alleges that Dr.
Lin violated Sections 5(a), 5(c), and 17(a) of the Securities Act of
1933 (Securities Act), Sections 10(b), 13(d), and 16(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act) and Rules 10b-5, 13d-1,
13d-2, 16a-2, and 16a-3 thereunder. Dr. Lin's wife and Surgilight are
charged with violations of Sections 5(a), 5(c), and 17(a) of the
Securities Act and Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5
thereunder. Aaron Tsai is charged with violations of Sections 5(a) and
5(c) of the Securities Act and aiding and abetting Dr. Lin and Ms. Lin's
violations of Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act and Rules 10b-5
thereunder. The Commission seeks permanent injunctions, disgorgement of
ill-gotten gains with prejudgment interest, and civil penalties from all
defendants and an officer and director bar against Dr. Lin.

The Lins settled a prior civil action brought by the Commission
involving another laser eye surgery company in September 1998 [see SEC
v. Jui-Teng Lin and Yuchin Lin, Litigation Release No. 15870 (Sept. 3,
1998)]. In that civil action, the Lins consented, without admitting or
denying the allegations of the complaint, to the entry of a final
judgment enjoining them from future violations of section 10(b) of the
Exchange Act and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder, as well as various
other provisions of the securities laws. For further information, see
Litigation Release No. 17469 (April 11, 2002).

For tips on how to avoid Internet "pump-and-dump" stock manipulation
schemes, visit sec.gov. For more
information about Internet fraud, visit
sec.gov. To report
suspicious activity involving possible Internet fraud, visit
sec.gov. [U.S. v. Jui-Teng Lin, CR-02-0432
(DGT) EDNY] (LR-17899)

sec.gov



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/10/2003 1:23:15 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
TIP TOE THROUGH THE TULIPS WITH ME mindspring.com



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/10/2003 7:05:54 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
RE:SEDONA Corporation->Donner Corp. International Issues Speculative Buy Recommendation on SEDONA Corporation

SANTA ANA, Calif., April 25 /PRNewswire/ -- Donner Corp. International, a broker/dealer specializing in investment banking, headquartered in Santa Ana, Ca., today issued a Speculative Buy Recommendation and initiated coverage on SEDONA Corporation (Nasdaq: SDNA), King of Prussia, Pennsylvania. SEDONA Corporation has developed an award-winning, Internet-based Customer Relationship Management (CRM) solution, which enables clients to more effectively manage their customer accounts.

SEDONA'S CRM solutions are marketed primarily to small and mid-sized financial service companies, as well as Internet retailing companies. CRM solutions enhance all aspects of customer management, enabling organizations to more quickly and precisely acquire and manage new and changing customer information, greatly enhancing personalized customer interactions and profitability management to optimize sales and marketing opportunities.

``SEDONA has a large and growing multi-billion dollar market with an urgent need for CRM products and services,'' Donner said. ``There are nearly 10,000 community banks, credit unions serve more than 75 million people, and Internet retailers also benefit from these products.''

IBM has selected SEDONA's Intarsia(TM) to sell and market to community financial services clients through its Mid-market Banking, Finance, and Securities Group (BFS). SEDONA has been designated an IBM Advanced Business Partner in IBM's PartnerWorld Program for Developers. Of significance, with more than 90,000 IBM Business Partners, there are only a few hundred designated Advance Business Partners.

``SEDONA is achieving record growth, reporting revenues of $1.8 million for year 2000, up 600 percent compared to 1999,'' Donner said. The Company is projecting that revenues will grow an additional 400 percent in 2001 and that SEDONA will achieve breakeven status by the end of this year.

``SEDONA'S flagship software product, SEDONA Intarsia(TM), was recently selected Product of the Year by the major magazine in this field,'' Donner said. ``We are also impressed that it partners with market leaders such as IBM, Acxiom, Jack Henry & Associates and E.piphany to develop and deliver best-in-breed CRM solutions. These factors indicate to us that SEDONA is well-positioned for continued growth.''

Copies of the Donner report on SEDONA Corporation are available at www.donnercorp.com.

Donner Corp. International is a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers, CRD 37702. Any information or opinion provided in this report/release does not solicit or make an offer to buy or sell any securities or any options, futures or other derivatives related to such securities herein. DCI and its affiliates may trade for their own accounts in any securities of the issuer or in related securities. DCI or its affiliates, directors, officers and employees, may have a long or short position in securities of the issuer or related investments. DCI or its affiliates may from time to time perform investment banking or other services for, or solicit investment banking or other business from, any entity mentioned in this report/release. This research report/release has been prepared for general circulation and is circulated for general information only. It does not have regard to the specific investment objective, financial situation, suitability and the particular need of any specific person who may receive this report/release. Investors should seek financial advice regarding the appropriateness of investing in any securities or investment strategies discussed or recommended in this report/release and should understand that statements regarding future prospects may not be realized. Investors should note that income from such securities, if any, may fluctuate and that each security's price or value may rise or fall substantially. Accordingly, investors may receive back less than originally invested. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Copyright 2001 DCI. In the purview of Section 17(b) of the Securities Act of 1933 and in the interest of full disclosure, we call the reader's attention to the fact that DCI was recently compensated by Rhino Advisors, Inc. in the form of a $5,000 due diligence fee. DCI may also receive SDNA stock, which has not been determined as of the date of this report/release.

MAKE YOUR OPINION COUNT - Click Here
tbutton.prnewswire.com

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/10/2003 7:07:04 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
Trading Suspension:Sedona Software Solutions, Inc.
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Release No. 47283 / January 29, 2003
The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the temporary suspension, pursuant to Section 12(k) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 ("Exchange Act"), of trading of the securities of Sedona Software Solutions, Inc. (stock symbol SSSI) of Vancouver, Canada, at 3:00 p.m. EST on January 29, 2003 and terminating at 11:59 p.m. EST on February 11, 2003.

The Commission temporarily suspended trading in the securities of Sedona Software Solutions, Inc. because of questions concerning the accuracy and completeness of information about Sedona on Internet websites, in press releases, and in other sources publicly available to investors concerning, among other things, Sedona's planned merger with Renaissance Mining Corp. ("Renaissance"), a privately-held company; the assets and business operations of Renaissance; and trading in Sedona common stock in connection with the announced merger.

The Commission cautions broker-dealers, shareholders, and prospective purchasers that they should carefully consider the foregoing information along with all other currently available information and any information subsequently issued by the company.

Further, brokers and dealers should be alert to the fact that, pursuant to Rule 15c2-11 under the Exchange Act, at the termination of the trading suspension, no quotation may be entered unless and until they have strictly complied with all of the provisions of the rule. If any broker or dealer has any questions as to whether or not it has complied with the rule, it should not enter any quotation but immediately contact the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington, D.C. If any broker or dealer is uncertain as to what is required by Rule 15c2-11, it should refrain from entering quotations relating to Sedona Software Solutions, Inc. securities until such time as it has familiarized itself with the rule and is certain that all of its provisions have been met. If any broker or dealer enters any quotation that is in violation of the rule, the Commission will consider the need for prompt enforcement action.

Any broker-dealer or other person with information relating to this matter is invited to call Ivonia Slade, Senior Counsel, in the Washington, D.C. office of the Securities and Exchange Commission, at (202) 942-4757.



sec.gov

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Home | Previous Page Modified: 01/29/2003



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/10/2003 7:31:56 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
Interesting group of big investors in Pen Interconnect.
NOTE: All but Liviakis Financial are part of Rhino Advisors Inc.
Alpha Capital Aktiengesellschaft
Balmore SA
Austost Anstalt Schaan
Amro International SA
Liviakis Financial

Anyway if you know anything about toxic financing and OTCBB stocks then you will recognize these names.



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/10/2003 7:58:38 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ROY, JUST A REMINDER THAT XYBERNAUTSUCKS.COM IS STILL AVAILABLE

"The Court stated, "Taubman concedes that Mishkoff is 'free to shout
"Taubman Sucks!" from the rooftops'… Essentially, this is what he has
done in his domain name. The rooftops of our past have evolved into the
internet domain names of our present.""

Appeals Court Upholds Right of Online Critic to Use Shopping Mall's
Name in Domain Name

Dallas Web Designer Did Not Confuse Internet Users, Infringe on
Trademark in Fan Site, Gripe Sites

WASHINGTON, D.C. – In a ringing affirmation of free speech
rights on the Internet, a federal appeals court has upheld the right of
a Dallas man to use the name of a local shopping mall as the domain name
for a Web site singing the praises of that mall, as well as a second Web
site denouncing the mall's owner for suing him under the federal
trademark laws.

Computer consultant Henry Mishkoff has been involved in a
dispute with the nationwide shopping mall developer Taubman Company,
which was building a mall called The Shops at Willow Bend, in Plano,
Texas, near his Dallas home. Mishkoff originally built a "fan site"
praising the mall, but after Taubman claimed his site violated its
trademark and demanded it be taken down, he developed a site criticizing
the company.

In the fall of 2001, the Michigan district court ordered Mishkoff to
remove both of his sites from the Web, taking a dangerous step toward
restricting non-commercial speech on the Internet. The appeals court
suspended the order against the gripe site in March while it considered
the First Amendment implications of the case.

Today's opinion overturns the district court's injunctions that
prevented Mishkoff from using the domain name "shopsatwillowbend.com" in
his fan site and variations on "taubmansucks.com" and
"shopsatwillowbendsucks.com" in his subsequent gripe sites. In a
unanimous opinion authored by Circuit Judge Richard Surhheinrich, the
court wrote that Mishkoff clearly had no commercial intent in either of
his sites, that there was no likelihood that any visitors to his sites
would be confused as to their purpose and that allowing the injunctions
to remain would harm the public by curtailing free speech rights.

The Court stated, "Taubman concedes that Mishkoff is 'free to shout
"Taubman Sucks!" from the rooftops'… Essentially, this is what he has
done in his domain name. The rooftops of our past have evolved into the
internet domain names of our present."

"This is the first time an appellate court has addressed the trademark
and free speech rights for an Internet fan site not meant to mislead and
gripe site, and it was particularly important that the court get things
right. This decision will set an important precedent protecting the
rights of citizens to criticize and to praise. It is quite a victory,"
said Paul Alan Levy, an attorney with the Public Citizen Litigation
Group who represented Mishkoff.

"I'm very gratified to learn that the Court of Appeals has agreed with
most of the points I've been making all along," Mishkoff said.
"Hopefully, the ruling will help to ensure that other people will be
able to exercise their right of free speech without having to worry
about being harassed by big companies with deep pockets."

Barbara Harvey has served as Mishkoff's local counsel in Detroit.
Professor Milton Mueller, director of the Syracuse University's Graduate
Program in Telecommunications and Network Management Research and
co-director of The Convergence Center, has served as Mishkoff's pro bono
expert witness who wrote a report on the case, available online at
taubmansucks.com.

A copy of the court's opinion is on the Web at
pacer.ca6.uscourts.gov.
Public Citizen became involved in the case because it has a history of
defending free speech on the Internet. For more information on this and
other online free speech cases, go to
citizen.org.



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/11/2003 2:23:56 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
Roy,the tips don't get any better do they? :-)

____ __ ___
//_// (( // // //
(( (( _)) ((__ (( ((
of the day

_____________________________
______________
||\ ||
|| \ ||
|| \ ||
|| | || "Boy, is it ever cold!"
|| |_________| /
|| | /
|| | (((( [:]
|| | %%%%)))))
|| | %%%%%%__/
|| (|)%%%%%% \ || | // \\__//
|| |(/____\) |
_|| | //\\ |||_____________
\ | (_)(_))(_)
\ |
\| "You said it, Roy.
It's fr-fr-freezin'."

44444444444444444444444444444444444444444
44444444444444444444444444444444444444444

_____________________________
______________
||\ ||
|| \ ||
|| \ ||
|| | ||
|| |_________||
|| | ||
|| | (((( [:]
|| | %%%%)))))
|| | %%%%%%__/
|| (|)%%%%%% \ || | // \\__//
|| |(/____\) |
_|| | //\\ |||_____________
\ | (_)(_))(_)
\ |
\| "How much longer, Roy?"

JROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJRO
JROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJROJRO

_____________________________
______________
||\ || "Just a week or so more.
|| \ || By then, we ought to have
|| \ || let in enough cold in so
|| | || will HAVE enough xybr certs to
|| |_________| / build the fire."
|| | /
|| | (((( [:]
|| | %%%%)))))
|| | %%%%%%__/
|| (|)%%%%%% \ || | // \\__//
|| |(/____\) |
_|| | //\\ |||_____________
\ | (_)(_))(_)
\ |
\|
endendendendendendendendendendendendendend
endendendendendendendendendendendendendend



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/11/2003 9:46:17 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 6847
 
ICAC Kickoff 2003
Advisory Committee
ROY, DEMO PUMP TUEDAY->Congressional Internet Caucus
Reception and Technology Fair February 12, 2003
<<February 12, 2003, 5:00pm - 7:00pm

Overview | Demonstrators
WHAT: The sixth annual Kickoff Reception and Technology Fair. This event, through key speakers and demonstrations, will introduce some of the pointed issues that may face the 108th Congress. Hands-on demonstrations of the latest technologies in wireless, tele-medicine, e-learning, cyber security, online gaming, Internet movies and music and more, will help illustrate these debates and possible solutions. This year's Kickoff comes on two anniversaries. The Internet is now celebrating its historic 20-year anniversary as well as the 10-year anniversary of the commercial Internet. The Internet Caucus Co-Chairs, Senators Conrad Burns and Patrick Leahy, and Congressmen Bob Goodlatte and Rick Boucher, will preview the technology issues they feel will be drivers for the next 10 years of the Internet. This event is hosted by the Congressional Internet Caucus Advisory Committee in conjunction with the Internet Caucus and its Co-Chairs.

WHO: The Internet Caucus Co-Chairs will be joined by Timothy Muris, Chairman of the FTC, Howard Schmidt, Acting Chairman of the President's Critical Infrastructure Security Board, other Members of Congress, Congressional staff and Internet industry and non-profit representatives.

Demonstrators include:
Internet Movie Downloads, MovieLink
Wi-Fi Technology, Proxim
Wearable Computing Technologies, Xybernaut
Biometric Security Application, Advanced Biometric Securities
Internet Music Downloads, Full Audio
3G, NTT DoCoMo
Tele-health Application, University of VA
Accessible E-gov Demonstration, E-Gov OS
and many more
WHEN: Wednesday, February 12, 2003, 5:00 ?7:00 PM. Cocktails and hors d'oeuvres will be served.
WHERE: Hart Senate Office Building, Room 902, Washington, DC >>
http:// www.netcaucus.org/events/2003/kickoff/



To: Roy F who wrote (5375)2/12/2003 9:32:20 AM
From: Roy F  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6847
 
FastVDO and Xybernaut Combine Bandwidth Management Technologies with Wearable Computing Devices

COLUMBIA, Md. and FAIRFAX, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 12, 2003--

Compression/Decompression Capabilities Optimized for Wearable Computers; Enhances Quality and Efficiency of Video Delivery

FastVDO LLC, a leading provider of rich media and bandwidth management technologies, today announced a teaming agreement with Xybernaut(R) Corporation (NASDAQ:XYBR), a leader in the wearable computer industry.

Solutions created and marketed under this agreement will bring high quality video to mobile users. The goal for the combined solutions is increased quality and greater efficiency of information technology investments for organizations or individuals that need high quality video.

Applications include military, law enforcement/security (surveillance/monitoring), field force automation, video conferencing, video-on-demand, entertainment/leisure, remote training, distance learning, photo/video journalism, interactive marketing, inspection/maintenance/repair.

FastVDO and Xybernaut indicated that initial research programs have already begun. These first programs concentrate on techniques for high quality video delivery to mobile platforms.

"The ability to send and receive high quality video when and where mobile users need it is a critical component of success for organizations and individuals in many segments of today's market. Wearable computers facilitate this type of immediate communication," stated Dr. Pankaj Topiwala, president and CEO for FastVDO. "Xybernaut's unique wearable computing products work with FastVDO video compression/decompression (codec) solutions to improve the efficiency and productivity of mobile computer users."

FastVDO helps organizations improve the quality and efficiency of video transmissions over public or private networks such as the Internet, satellite and other wireless broadband services, or secure intra/extranets.

Xybernaut mobile/wearable computing technologies have proven beneficial to organizations -- both large and small -- in increasing productivity in various field force automation applications. FastVDO and Xybernaut both share experience and expertise in developing solutions for a large number of vertical industry sectors.

Various organizations within the U.S. Government use FastVDO solutions to improve their delivery of high quality video. Organizations currently employing Xybernaut wearable computers include Bell Canada, Boeing, various U.S. and foreign militaries, DynCorp, FedEx Express, GE Power Systems, International Truck, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and NTT DoCoMo.

"The benefits of wearable computers are already being realized in field force automation functions across many industry segments," stated Edward G. Newman, chairman, president and CEO of Xybernaut. "Combined with FastVDO expertise in delivering high quality video, our mobile/wearable computing solutions will boost the user experience and productivity within organizations and throughout consumer communities."

About Xybernaut

Xybernaut Corporation is an established provider of wearable/mobile computing hardware, software and services, bringing communications and full-function computing power in a hands-free design to people when and where they need it. Headquartered in Fairfax, Virginia, Xybernaut has offices and subsidiaries in Europe (Germany) and Asia (Japan).

Xybernaut's Web site is at www.xybernaut.com.

About FastVDO

FastVDO was founded in 1998 to commercialize advanced research in image processing and video compression technologies. Currently the company is privately held with equity stakes by various investors. The company's research into advanced imaging systems also has been funded by multi-million U.S. Government contracts.

The cornerstone to FastVDO's products is compression technology supporting standards such as MPEG-4 and H264, as well as proprietary extensions that add value, functionality, scalability and security. While FastVDO's compression (codec) technology leverages existing standards, these technologies are more efficient and scalable than existing standards, with better image quality at a given bit rate.

Additional information can be found at www.fastvdo.com.

Xybernaut, the Xybernaut logo, Atigo(TM) and Mobile Assistant(R) V (MA(R) V) are trademarks or registered trademarks of Xybernaut Corporation in the USA and other countries. All other brand and product names are or may be trademarks of, and are used to identify products or services of, their respective owners.

This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (the "Act").

In particular, when used in the preceding discussion, the words "plan," "confident that," "believe," "scheduled," "expect," or "intend to," and similar conditional expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Act and are subject to the safe harbor created by the Act.

Such statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties and actual results could differ materially from those expressed in any of the forward-looking statements.

Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, market conditions, the availability of components and successful production of the Company's products, general acceptance of the Company's products and technologies, competitive factors, timing, and other risks described in the Company's SEC reports and filings.

Third party statements contained herein and information contained on any third party website are not endorsed by or adopted by Xybernaut, nor has their accuracy been verified by Xybernaut.

--30--SF/ph*

CONTACT: FastVDO
Pankaj Topiwala, 301/442-6063
contact@fastvdo.com
or
Xybernaut Corporation
Michael Binko, 703/631-6925
mbinko@xybernaut.com