OmniChart

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GBO dave297 29 Oct 2015

Who did Costis sell to ? Do we know yet -I don't recollect declared volumes of 40 mill +.Only an II,or very wealthy PI could afford those amounts & they will clearly be very unhappy & , we should imagine,extremely embarrassed .

MGAM Oxtrader 29 Oct 2015

Re: Still on the way down Good evening! I do believe it's mostly the wider picture with UK manufacturing currently. This graph paints a good picture:[link] think the market isn't buying into a share that's going to have surpressed demand as a result. Having said that, I do think the share is now at a very, very good opportunity this week. I believe it goes on ex-dividend on the 6th of November? This company in a better opportunity than others to build upon any uptick on demand. Personally I'm not worried for now, holding.

FOGL Originofquake1 29 Oct 2015

A wildcat well,has a 10% chance of success. Does humpbacks crude oil and gas discovery sound like 10% success to you? Nobel knows the basement level for 100 miles of ancient lake oil reservoirs, all connected, true the channels may be narrow, but there connected, by alignment, same evolution of aging as you move east from humpback. Every ancient lake ,oil reservoir is older as you move toward the Herslia fan, starfish, etc. the starfish in the Herslia fan will be 4 or 5 million years older then humpback. Oilmen know old or younger oil, I don't. My geology gives me nothing, it's my 44 years of research that tell me the ancient lakes moved east with the movement of the Scotia Sea structure. I knew there would be crude oil, but I can't predict quality. I'm like the poker player with a could hand, they loose the most money with that confidence. I got burned.

KUL ICB888 29 Oct 2015

Fast Forward - a good week Today's RNS announces that the funds have been invested in 4 investments and the board have high hopes. The proposed rename to Fast Forward after The title of a book by Jim Mellon is good news. Mellon is very interested in this area and he now has his reputation on the line.We have seen a good rise in the sp this week and it seems realistic that this rise should continue.

GBO Trystano 29 Oct 2015

Re: Class Action - EDWIN COE Not sure why that is marked as a hold, sorry

GBO Trystano 29 Oct 2015

Re: Class Action - EDWIN COE Please include me too. I have lost a decent sum here

FTC Caddie 29 Oct 2015

New Order Filtronic is working on new mobile phone mast antennae that are far lighter and smaller than predecessors. Mr Smith said it is working on a number of interesting projects with Nokia.Read more: [link] the new order a result of Mr Smith's work with Nokia?

SBLM BHP12 29 Oct 2015

o/t India showers $10 bn credit on Africa India showers $10 bn credit on Africa30 Oct 15[link]

GBO Mpg1 29 Oct 2015

Re: Class Action - EDWIN COE count me in

MMX arborman 29 Oct 2015

Re: Volume 21.6 million at the end of play!Also just noticed that the 50 day sma crossed above the 200 day sma on about 7th octoberThis can often signal a rising sp trendSo i am giving it a strong buy againGLA

GDP Larry_the_Lock 29 Oct 2015

Profits! [link]

SBLM jonmor 29 Oct 2015

Re: Great news... Seems to have been great news for SMA but not SBLM - any idea why?

OXS Brookie Boy 29 Oct 2015

Bet we find out in November It's November next week, and I feel certain that we will see the legal outcome for OXS then. And the odds look in shareholders' favour. So strong upside and very soon. Expect some increased volume, say 10m+, and some jumps in the SP imminently. Don't forget that the Board confirmed 1 month ago that this will indeed happen "in the very near future". Good luck if you are invested and/or buying.

MIRL Kenj2 29 Oct 2015

Daryl's dodgy contract Posted on LSE by Dicknum1[link] Hodges' consultancy agreement with Minera IRL (MIRL.L) (IRL.to)There have been questions asked about this, so let IKN explain the main points of the deal between Daryl Hodges and Minera IRL. Daryl Hodges gets paid $15,000 per month for his "consultancy agreement", the money paid to his own company "Ladykirk Capital". The contract has no end date. That means if it's not cancelled, Hodges gets $15,000 a month indefinitely. If the contract is cancelled, Hodges gets a windfall payment of $500,000 plus one year's worth of monthly fees, i.e. $680,000. If he's fired, if he resigns, if there's a change of control at the company, he gets this payment whichever way. The terms of the agreement are such that he can claim his cash no matter the way he is separated from IRL. He got $100,000 when the COFIDE bridge loan deal was closed. He'll get another $150,000 when the COFIDE project financing is eventually closed, all that despite not doing a thing for the deal, before or now. It's not tied to performance at all. It's just paid, open-ended, forever.And here's the best bit: Although the contract between Ladykirk and Minera IRL began in March 2014, a great many terms of the agreement you see that include the "can't lose" windfall payment were altered in March 2015 after Daryl Hodges became executive chair of Minera IRL. In other words, he wrote his own contract and the lackeys he put on the board of directors rubber-stamped it. Then he has the brass neck of falsely accusing other people of being corrupt.

TGL Hedgehog100 29 Oct 2015

Quantum Cryptography in "New Scientist" In the wake of the Talk Talk hacking furore, this from the "New Scientist" 31 October 2015: "TRUST NO ONE Need to share secret? You'll want a cipher that's as strong as the laws of physics, says Neil Brooks ... as far as cybersecurity is concerned, we are finally poised to create a world in which trust is optional. The development taking us there is called device-independent quantum cryptography. ... This perfectly secure future can't arrive quickly enough, as present-day cryptographic systems are in a precarious state. The security of all our online purchases, bank transactions and personas rely on a single shaky assumption: that certain mathematical operations are hard to do. The best known of our modern encryption systems is called RSA. ... Even if we could prove that the factorisation problem is beyond the abilities of traditional computers, there are still quantum computers to consider. ... One way to invigorate our privacy is to fight fire with fire and employ quantum cryptography. This promises the ability to create keys that are entirely random, entirely unpredictable ..." And from Wikipedia: "Quantum cryptography is the art and science of exploiting quantum mechanical properties to perform cryptographic tasks. The best known example of quantum cryptography is quantum key distribution which offers an information-theoretically secure solution to the key exchange problem. Currently used popular public-key encryption and signature schemes (e.g., RSA and ElGamal) can be broken by quantum adversaries. The advantage of quantum cryptography lies in the fact that it allows the completion of various cryptographic tasks that are proven or conjectured to be impossible using only classical (i.e. non-quantum) communication (see below for examples). For example, It is impossible to copy data encoded in a quantum state and the very act of reading data encoded in a quantum state changes the state. This is used to detect eavesdropping in quantum key distribution. ... "[link]