Become a Member

Basenese’s “Secret” San Diego NFC Security Stock

Sniffing out the mobile security pitch from MicroCap Tech Trader's Louis Basenese

OK, OK, the questions on this one are getting a bit overwhelming — and I’m afraid that if I don’t cover this one soon the villagers will soon be gathering their fiery torches and marching on Castle Gumshoe … so here goes.

Louis Basenese and the folks at Wall Street Daily are pitching his MicroCap Tech Trader by promising huge returns for a small company that he thinks holds the key to secure NFC transactions — and which will generate big licensing revenues as their key patents are put into use by Google and Apple, among others.

So what’s he talking about? Well, much of the ad is about the risks and promise of near field communications (NFC) — this is a wireless protocol, kind of like bluetooth but shorter range, that allows two devices that are typically within a few inches of each other to communicate. In practice, the consumer-facing applications are mostly smart cards (like you might use for your local transit system), contactless payment cards or keyfobs (like that little ExxonMobil keychain you can wave in front of the pump to pay for your gas), or, in the next wave of this development, NFC chips in cell phones that let you use your phone as a “digital wallet.”

In all cases, NFC security is an issue — that’s because you don’t have to hold the card or phone to connect with the NFC chip, it’s wireless and someone with a transmitter might be able to snoop on your wireless transactions or even ping your card, chip or phone to try to “hack” it to get the pertinent numbers and ID info. That’s why you see them marketing NFC-blocking wallets with layers of aluminum (or whatever) to prevent snoopers from sniffing out any cards you’re carrying, and that’s why, to at least some extent, NFC and the “mobile wallet” cell phone that you use to pay for everything haven’t really taken off yet — though both are more prevalent in some Asian and European countries than they are here.

That’s not the only thing slowing the adoption of the chip-based “cell phone as wallet,” of course — there are plenty of security concerns, but there’s also the lack of clear standards, competition among providers and payment processors and lack of easy interoperability, the rising capabilities of app-based or other non-chip payment solutions (you can pay via PayPal or your smart phone at Home Depot or Starbucks, for example, and those don’t use NFC chips).

And there’s also the simple fact that consumer acceptance of new trends is often very slow — particularly for financial products. People are comfortable with credit cards, for the most part, and NFC isn’t that much faster or easier — but debit card use only exceeded check use a few years ago, and though check use is still falling sharply there are still billions of checks processed every year by the Federal Reserve. The impatient foot tapping you do when the person in front of you in the express line at the grocery store when tries to buy two cans of tuna and pay with a check may not be necessary soon, but it doesn’t mean that person will be paying with their cell phone next year.

There are also, as you might expect, roughly a gazillion companies trying to get their foot in the door in NFC payments, whether they’re card or reader makers, software or security companies, chipmakers or payment processors or phone builders … everyone wants to have a piece if this turns into something big. And big is expected, though soothsaying the speed of acceptance is not easy — early adopters and futurists have been predicting the mass consumer rollout of the “mobile wallet” and cell phone payments for more than a decade now, the technology to use a chip in your phone to make a payment has been around for longer than “smart phones” (contactless chip-enabled payments by mobile phone were launched commercially in Japan and South Korea a decade ago — not without challenges, but they’re pretty established at point of sale terminals and in vending machines thanks to that head start at working through the challenges and the tech early adopter culture in those countries).

So that’s the backdrop, as best as I can share with you in a few moments — what, then, is the specific little company that Louis Basenese is teasing as a key player, a company that he thinks will have licensing deals, key announcements by August 14, and good exposure on Apple and Android devices very soon?

Well, for that we’ll need some clues. Unless, that is, you’d like to pop over and subscribe for $3,500?

Oh, wait, this is also one of those “we’re going to write you a check” teasers — so it’s not $3,500, it’s $3,500 minus the check for $2,650 they send you … so the newsletter is actually going for $850 these days.

But regardless of whether or not you want to pony up that kind of cash for a breakthrough-tech newsletter, I’m guessing you’d like to know the name of the stock first, right? Take away that crazy “tell me the secret now!” impulse, and make a sober decision about subscribing after a good night’s sleep? Sure, we can do that — I’m certain I won’t cover the stock as thoroughly as Basenese, and I won’t tell you whether or not to buy it, but I’m pretty sure we can identify it for you. And the price? Much more free-ish (though of course, we always delight in welcoming new members to the Irregulars, our $49 a year premium membership group — just to entice you further, those folks would have already seen the answer to this teaser and a nice quick summary in the beige box on the left).

So what are our clues from Mr. Basenese and the MicroCap Tech Trader?

Well, they’re frankly a bit thin — so we might not reach 100% certainty in our match today — but this is what we get:

“… for the better part of a decade now, the world’s corporate giants have been building the infrastructure for ‘mobile wallets’ and wireless payments to become the industry standard.

“Their logic is pretty straightforward…

“Easier ways to pay for products and services will mean more sales. A lot more sales!

“The technology powering everything is called near-field communications. Or ‘NFC,’ for short, which allows for easy, convenient payments at stores around the world.

“The heavyweights are pushing all their chips in on NFC.

“In fact, credit card giant, Visa, has predicted that people born over the past five years will never own a physical wallet.”

So the argument, basically, is that there is such a massive, global, corporate push for NFC payments that they will overcome the security concerns — and at least in part, they’ll do so using the technology of this company that he’s teasing. Or, as he puts it more floridly:

“Armed with only a smartphone, crooks can steal a mountain of credit card numbers with little more than the touch of a finger.

“More credit cards just got stolen this very second.

Are you getting our free Daily Update
"reveal" emails? If not,
just click here...


“Beep. Beep. Beep.

“And the giant corporations are powerless to stop it from happening.

“They haven’t been able to develop the software smart enough to stump the crooks.

“They’ve tried everything, too!

“Enter one tiny company trading for less than two bucks.

“A company that holds every conceivable patent needed to stop these thieves dead in their tracks.

“By extension, this tiny company is also the gatekeepers to the entire trillion-dollar M-Commerce market.

“I expect The Bigs to secure this brilliant anti-theft technology for themselves any minute.”

So … any more specific clues hiding in all this puffery? Here’s what I found to feed into the Thinkolator for you:

“This time, the announcement concerns a company trading for less than $2/share….

“I’ve been tracking this company’s innovation from the very point of inception.

“I’ll see it through to its completion, too, which could happen as early as August 14, 2013….

“… this less than $2-a-share, San Diego outfit already has all the necessary patents in place…

“The biggest companies in the world MUST deal with it.

“These patents can secure their transactions, and get their $1 trillion juggernaut rolling….

” I’ll rush you that certified check for $2,650….

“You can do as you please with the money….

“… you’ll want to use the cash to purchase shares of this tiny company.

“At current prices, that’s about 1,800 shares. [note: that would be a price around $1.50]”

So that gets us partway there. A little more?

“one single investor (the man I told you about earlier) has already snatched up an amazing 38% of the company’s shares.

“Here’s the deal…

The two largest players in the smartphone market - the giants responsible for more than 94% of every smartphone in the world - are poised to start deploying this tiny, less than $2-a-share outfit’s technology.

“This company is in substantive discussions with multiple partners.

“And its ground-breaking patented technology stands to become THE standard of protection for nearly every smartphone on the planet.

And he says his “Validation Report” on this stock includes:

“Confirmation of a market-ready, antitheft prototype for the Android.

“Confirmation of the first antitheft prototype for the iPhone.

“And all the details concerning the August 14 announcement where I believe news of a partnership will hit.

“A partnership that could ultimately lead to this company’s technology protecting all Apple and Google wireless devices.”

And, of course, it’s small and uncovered:

“most everyone knows that mobile payments will ultimately become the industry standard, no one realizes that a tiny company stands as the gatekeeper…. not a single Wall Street analyst is even formally covering the stock.”

And there’s a big insider buying, we’re told:

“A short while ago, one single investor - just one - increased his stake to nearly 40% of this company’s outstanding stock.

“Nobody - and I mean nobody - takes a stake like that in a tiny company trading for less than $2. That is, unless they KNOW something big is unfolding.”

Phew! So, a few clues hiding in that mishmosh of temptation. What’s our stock?

This is, so sez the Mighty, Mighty Thinkolator, ImageWare Systems (IWSY, trades over the counter)

And yes, it’s quite small — market cap around $140 million now that it’s run up with the attention from Basenese. And it does have a 38%-owning insider, Director Neal Goldman of Goldman Capital Management (not Goldman Sachs, just to be clear), though the shares he’s added over the last year have all been options exercises.

Though they do position themselves as having a security solution for the “mobile wallet” and mobile transactions, they do so with biometrics — this is a biometric security software company that was focused initially on photo and face recognition when they were a stock market darling in 2001 and hit $14 briefly (I expect their biometrics technology is face recognition, but I’m not sure about that). The stock declined pretty gradually over the early 2000s, coming to a head when they were delisted from AMEX when the price stayed under a dollar in 2008.

They describe their main offerings related to secure identities here.

And the basic catalysts that Basenese appears to be foreseeing are described (though with perhaps less certainty) in the conference call they hosted to give a “business update” about a month ago — you can see the transcript of that call here, but the basic “upside” possibility comes from this bit from CEO Jim Miller:

“We have reached a very exciting crossroads where the cloud and mobile computing have intersected with biometrics. The rapid expansion in availability and use of mobile devices presents an incredible opportunity. As these devices have become culturally ubiquitous and nothing short of phenomenal in their reliability and robustness, the door has swung open to provide security for the myriad of transactions that occur on these devices every single day. While you can easily ascertain that it’s my phone or my device, you can never really be sure who exactly is using it. The more transactions and sensitive information that can be accessed via mobile devices, the important it is that this critical security piece of the puzzle be solved. Happily, it’s this solution that the new generation of ImageWare products addresses and solves.

“We have also continued to develop and advance our biometric secured mobile transaction technology that is built upon the patented wireless interactive messaging technology we acquired from VOCEL last year. We’ve now married this technology with our Biometric Engine and other existing foundational patents to build interactive mobile applications that can be secured biometrically.

“On the last call, we announced that we introduced the first demonstration models of this mobile technology on the Android platform to key potential corporate users. We have now a production release of our Android product and will soon release our iPhone demonstration product. We are currently in substantive discussions with several new clients regarding licensing opportunities. We strongly believe that the combination of these technologies provides yet another substantial competitive advantage for ImageWare.”

The company believes it’s on track to generate enough cash flow to cover costs as they start to sign more licensing deals (they’ve signed one so far, it appears, with global payments processor Emida), so they think they’ll have enough cash and liquidity for the year — thanks partly to a line of credit from their largest shareholder (Neal Goldman again). So I guess quite a lot is probably riding on their next six months or so of potential deals and rollout of their technology to a possibly broader audience.

I have absolutely no idea whether or not they will build a meaningful user base or achieve any kind of leadership in mobile security or authentication for mobile payments or anything else, they but I’m quite sure this is the pick Basenese is touting. It’s the very definition of a “story stock”, you certainly can’t justify the valuation based on their current business or financial position or even on the orders and deals they’ve made, it’s too early in the process to have any idea what their revenue potential might be or whether the product will become important to consumers or payment processors or retailers … but if it can grow into that story that Louis Basenese spins and generate a little tiny penny of revenue from each of billions of mobile transactions someday, well, then it’s a cheap buy with massive potential growth.

There are lots of biometric security companies out there, and lots of mobile security companies and technologies, most of which probably won’t become critically important — so you have to have confidence in the technology and the story to want to buy this. I do not know how valuable their patents might be — they bought the key patents from Vocel that they think will help them expand into the consumer market more aggressively just last year, and most of their work seems to have been with governments before that — credentialing and IDs and border authentication stuff, as far as I can tell.

IWSY has generated no meaningful amount of revenues over the past decade, and have churned through well over $100 million in losses during that time, so perhaps all that investment in their technology will come to something? That’s your call to make, let us know if you’ve an opinion to share with a comment below.

P.S. No, I don’t know if there’s anything other than guesstimates behind the August 12 date that Basenese teases — whether he thinks they’re just a couple months from more deals or product announcements (like an iPhone product), or will have an other corporate update by then (they did issue a “progress report” in mid-August last year). That’s right around when their next 10-Q quarterly report is due to be filed with the SEC, so maybe it’s just that and a hope that they’ll begin to report higher cash flow by then.

Irregulars Quick Take

Paid members get a quick summary of the stocks teased and our thoughts here. Join as a Stock Gumshoe Irregular today (already a member? Log in)
guest

12345

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

164 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
rl
Member
rl
June 13, 2013 2:39 pm

WSD has been pushing IWSY since the end of 2012, so many investors (I am not one of them) have probably pocketed some nifty gains so far. I don’t know how good the technology is or whether they are on the verge of a brakthrough (by August 12), but it is an interesting, highly speculative play.

Add a Topic
5080
sf_gs
sf_gs
June 13, 2013 3:07 pm

How does APDN fit into the biometric security package?

Ron A
Guest
Ron A
June 13, 2013 3:12 pm

I did my own sleuthing back about 5/18 and came up with this too. But a long vacation ant went from 1.44 to 1.78 today. Picked up a bit as I’ve made money on his ideas before.
,

William Meredith
William Meredith
June 13, 2013 3:22 pm

Travis, for those that don’t, I spent a lot of time trying to figure out this play last night, and sometimes I am successful, but late, last night for a few hours, I could not get it, and so I tip my hat to you, you are one very smart dude with some excellent research skills. The best that I could come up with in this brand of NFC security for mobile e commerce was Celltrust a privately held company, and NXPI who was at $29 a share late last night. Anyway I say this not so much to mention these other companies, or myself, but to take a moment to thank you for being on our side. You are the better man for it. I know you would appreciate the $49 more, but I still want to say thank you none the less. : ) William

baygreen
June 13, 2013 3:35 pm

I just don’t know Travis but that was really cool, or was the thinkolater really the coolness , either way I really like the hypeolater , no kidding it was more fun reading the article so that must make me a real boring person. But this boring person is an irregular and has some regular cash in my pocket and had a good time keeping it there (great job). Now I will hang out and wait till you and the thinkolater get a hold of S world Dominater with the little dividends that are going to be the big dividends,and I like Porter and his team and Doc. But it is worth the wait and you still keep integrity possible. I like the thrill of the hunt or the teaser and I am sure like many irregulars do there diligence and a lot of that is all the newsletter teasers hype it is like a home run at the ball game and the crowd cheers when the fan throws the ball back but as said earlier you keep integrity in play because there is not as many home runs as they all say. Maybe it is just that they all have a different way of saying what they have is the best and no matter what they can not advise you, and yes there are some that are worth there weight and bring a lot to the table but like anything else there is always the fine print. I DON’T KNOW BUT THAT OLD SAYING IF IT LOOKS TO GOOD we all know that answer. Thanks for the fun and much more than that with out all the $ or 0’s. Being an irregular you really do get more than what you pay for what is the Wall Street word liquidity. But to get a smile or laughter with that is priceless.

Add a Topic
152
Add a Topic
372
👍 30
bogart8665
Member
bogart8665
June 19, 2013 12:40 pm
Reply to  baygreen

WTF?

👍 2
arif rasheedi
June 13, 2013 4:47 pm

Travis, you write so well, I love reading your analyses. Imageware was on my watch list until recently. I started following it when it traded around $1.20 and then started falling, went down to 80 cents and dipped down few times even lower in day trading. I decided, even if it got taken over, it wasn’t going to be much and dropped it off my watch list. Keep up the good work. Many thanks.

CWP
Member
CWP
June 18, 2013 12:42 am
Reply to  arif rasheedi

A great job of profiling. One key is there are a lot of companies out there trying, and the timing of when such tech takes off is very uncertain – especially with the recently exposed government snooping and reactive fear of things like facial recognition going on record. My reluctance comes from Goldman. His exercisizing options [at what prices] to a 38% owner level, plus the money that may be available in his managed fund, suggest he may be placing his group in a buyout position soon. Even if it is at a higher price the risk reward ratio seems high [no 5-10 bagger] in this arena; and if there is significant delay in things happening and Goldman loans monney to the company [makes sense, get liquidation priority over stock], Goldman could take the company private at a cheaper price while protecting his interest to get it all if the company fails – ending up with the patents. With such skewed ownership [by a director, not the CEO, because the company has struggled for several years], it seems too risky for the potential reward.

Add a Topic
570
Add a Topic
5971
MarcoP
Guest
MarcoP
June 13, 2013 5:12 pm

Well done Travis! I spent an hour or two last night trying to sleuth this one out and came up dry, so a tip o’ the hat to you once again.
The closest match I found was NQ, another mobile security software company that has been touted around a bit lately, but the numbers were off. Basenese seems to do best at promoting these companies over a short period of time. His famous UNXL pick did great until people found out they made a crappy product… lots of money was made by a quick in-and-out over several weeks, but you would have been wiped out if you didn’t have your stops in place. The stock has tanked over the last few weeks. I would be interested to know if he put out a sell rec to his subscribers before the haircut in the stock price. The same will probably be true of IWSY. No money to speak of in the coffers and a substantial burn rate… they will need some good news before the summer is over or will need to raise more funds to stay solvent. As you noted, they were almost de-listed a while back, and history does tend to repeat itself. Careful with this one.

Add a Topic
899
Add a Topic
5971
Add a Topic
5971
traderj44
Irregular
June 13, 2013 7:28 pm
Reply to  MarcoP

he did write when the stock was in the mid 30″s that u should take profits and maybe call some calls if you wanted to be along for a longer JOE

Add a Topic
5971
👍 21
John
Member
John
June 13, 2013 6:43 pm

Wow, you are good Mr. Gumshoe! I think I may take a position in this because of your sleuthing (I have been digging around about it too) and this technology makes sense. Remember the Mobile wave to pay thing a few years ago? I always wondered how they prevented people paying not only for their own gas, but the guy at the next pump.

Sorry, just thinking out loud.

Add a Topic
372
👍 21718
techscan
Irregular
techscan
June 13, 2013 7:32 pm

Here’s an old [6/12] report written by an invedtment firm that helped their 2012 financing. Good backgrounder but light on actual facts about competitive environment. http://www.mdb.com/assets/files/IWSY%20Initiation.pdf‎

👍 37
Roller Blader
Guest
Roller Blader
June 13, 2013 11:46 pm

Travis,

You have done an outstanding service. Thank you. I look for deals like the one Basenese is touting. I’ve invested in deals that Insider Dr Philip has been buying, most recently SIMH which will be going on the AMEX and is predicted to go to $ 5.00 soon. I’ve put $ 80 k into it at average cost of 80 cents after checking out ad verifying everything I heard, read and found. Dr Frost also has OPK, ROX and LTS. The last two are tiny investments for him. He has 127,000,000 shares in OPK and my source at SIMH says Frost is expecting it to go to 15 – that’s why he keeps buying more and more as the price goes up. In any event, I expect to start buying IWSY soon. Thank you again. Outstanding job!

cajungun13
June 14, 2013 1:54 am

Where do you find out about insider buying? I checked out SIMH and MSN does not even have a profile on the company. I am newbie and generally leave the snooping to Travis. Love the site and insight Travis, keep up the great work! Would appreciate it if someone could answer my question.

👍 6
alainbm
alainbm
June 14, 2013 9:16 am
Reply to  cajungun13

Best is to go directly to the source at http://www.sec.gov in the search function at the top left type in the company you are checking out . Once its found it look for form 4.

👍 28
Truman Roper
Member
June 16, 2013 6:23 pm
Reply to  cajungun13

Yahoo has Insider trading data listed with much data about a stock. Also have charts on stocks and comparisons. Free.

Add a Topic
5971
Val
Guest
June 14, 2013 4:21 pm

Travis: Excellent work Travis, appreciate it as always.

All: I will pass on IWSY, Travis summarizes:

“IWSY has generated no meaningful amount of revenues over the past decade, and have churned through well over $100 million in losses during that time”

The comment, above, by another appreciator of Travis also says it well: Company will need to raise more money before the summer is out. Another Great: Great things need to happen soon if this Company is to even remain listed.

I see IWSY as a long shot, one chance in about 72 that it will make the big time.

Alan Nathan
Alan Nathan
June 15, 2013 8:10 pm

Byron King (Agora) has seemingly just discovered graphene and is pumping a north American graphite mine as well as a vanadium mine and a Beryllium mine. Does his motley pitch make any sense? I greatly appreciate your bloodhound talents and smarts. Alan Nathan.

Add a Topic
687
Add a Topic
6137
Add a Topic
2576
Myron Martin
Irregular
June 16, 2013 4:55 pm
Reply to  Alan Nathan

Alan, on the contrary Byron King has been on the graphene story for a long time. Personally I believe it may take somewhat l-o-n-g-e-r to play out than he envisions. Some other sceptical analysts projecting 10 years, while rumour has it that at least some innovations will hit the market before the year is out. Byron King has made me quite a bit of money over the years, I certainly do not consider anything he writes as a “motley pitch” though like most analysts touting relatively new technology, he may be EARLY in some cases, but better to be early catching a gravy train than even a day or week late. Will be reporting on the beryllium and vanadium picks in my next column for the Irregulars.

Add a Topic
687
Add a Topic
2576
Add a Topic
687
matt
Guest
matt
June 16, 2013 9:15 am

Travis,
Good find, one small comment.
“(I expect their biometrics technology is face recognition, but I’m not sure about that).”
I wish you did more DD on IWSY’s technology as if you did you would understand the reason why this company may become the foundational leader of multi-modal biometrics. Their products are “multi-modal, device- and algorithm- independent biometric software platform, open architecture biometric software platform optimizes biometric enrollment, management and authentication while supporting more than a dozen biometric modalities.” To simplify that their product works to support identify verification through a variety of different biometrics, including
facial recognition, fingerprinting or iris scanning. Not just face.. It also works across multiple hardware devices and algorithms so it doesnt require a huge revamp for an IT / corporation and can be accomplished within days vice weeks or months. They hold foundational patents (not clear if they will be able to defend them) on this technology so technically anytime a device/software uses more than one biometric then a royalty should be provided to IWSY.

Deborah G Flynn
June 16, 2013 10:14 am

I think my paid subscription to Travis is the BEST investment I have ever made in a my life for stock info. I am not immune to these teasers. They are ALWAYS interesting but usually just looking to grab some bucks. I do however like Louis Bennese’s picks in general but these tiny stocks scare me and I would only bet my mad money on any of them . One I have bought is ZIXI and have seen a modest 6% gain

Add a Topic
5971
Truman Roper
Member
June 16, 2013 12:18 pm

If it’s so secret that we canot figure it out, how is the “public” going to find out enough to buy it and drive it up? Just sayin’

Myron Martin
Irregular
June 16, 2013 5:25 pm
Reply to  Truman Roper

Truman: I have quite a bit of experience in speculating in juniors that are not yet well known in the market. Identifying well managed and financed juniors with a promising “breakthrough technology” and in the case of miners, promising initial metallurgical results requires a degree of faith in management, balancing risk in terms of potential rewards and above all PATIENCE! Not all are “Buy and Hold” some you trade the ups and downs.
It is not a space in which all stock buyers are comfortable and requires a certain personal temperament to be successful, and not every trade will be a winner. However that holds true in any sector, even Blue Chips. You have probably heard the expression; “the early bird gets the worm” and in most cases you will find that early investors who have the confidence to “speculate” when all the pieces seem to be in place, end up making the most money, particularly if they have the patience to hold on until the institutions discover the stock and drive up its price. I want to be in a position to SELL to the Big Boys when the stock gets discovered. Read the biographies of millionaires and billionaires and you will find that most made their money on investments that were not well known at the time, many of then under a $1. if you choose to wait to invest until something is “a sure thing” then not only will you need way more capital than the early investor, your profits will also be much smaller on a percentage basis. Generally it is not the average retail investor that drives a stock into the limelight anyway, that is why I have extensive “watch lists” to time my purchases.

Add a Topic
5971
Add a Topic
150
Add a Topic
5971
Alan Harris
Guest
Alan Harris
July 19, 2013 6:48 pm
Reply to  Myron Martin

Sorry, but that sounds like bull. You may as well read the autobiography of lottery winners or the multi bagger reco’s of tipsters who conveniently bury the x 10 wrong calls. There’s always a winner in a raffle, but a lot more losers.

Leta
Member
June 16, 2013 1:04 pm

Truman, I believe He is probably using reverse psychology. By telling people to keep it a secret, he is probably expecting it will spread even faster and furthur. Obviously no one here is trying to kept it a secret!

Truman Roper
Member
June 16, 2013 2:43 pm
Reply to  Leta

Thanks for my reality check. I think my brain was asleep when i wrote it.

techscan
Irregular
techscan
June 16, 2013 3:49 pm

Apple is rumored to be putting a biometric fingerprint reader in an upcoming iPhone. This will put biometrics into the mainstream. Corporations will want this. They will need to have a system like IWSY’s to do the processing.

http://midsizeinsider.com/en-us/article/next-generation-ipad-and-iphone-may-feat

👍 37
Alan Harris
Guest
Alan Harris
July 19, 2013 6:51 pm
Reply to  techscan

Ive got a fingerprint reader on my HP laptop….its 5 yrs old and HP dont support it anymore.

who noze
Member
June 16, 2013 7:45 pm

dr. frost is in a 7cent stock ALQA alqippa when he put in his million all theexecutives dis appered new grp came on bd and their mission statement was changed

Add a Topic
5971
who noze
Member
June 16, 2013 9:29 pm

there are 3 or four co. that dr frost is connected with ended up in the same office bldg. as their headquators such as Ladenburg &thalman [lts] optko]

1 2 3 5

We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies.

More Info  
34
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x