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Monthly Archives: January 2012

BVSN BOOKS QUARTERLY LOSS; HAS NO IDEA WHAT THE FUCK ANYONE IS TALKING ABOUT

BroadVision reports Q4 loss of $0.30; revs declined 18% YoY – no ests (22.03 -2.18)
BVSN reports Q4 loss of $0.30 per share, compared with loss of $0.33 in Q3 and EPS of $0.14 in 4Q10. Revs declined 18% YoY to $4.2 mln compared with revenues of $4.2 million for the third quarter ended September 30, 2011 and $5.1 million for the comparable quarter of 2010. There are no analyst estimates… License revenue for the fourth quarter of 2011 was $1.6 million, compared with $1.3 million for the prior quarter and $1.5 million for the comparable quarter of 2010.

In addition, the Company noted that, during the past few weeks, there has been an unusually large amount of trading activity and price movement in its stock. The Company is not aware of any corporate developments that it believes would explain this unusual activity. “With the close of Q4, we concluded 2011 with impressive growth in Clearvale over 2010, including the number of networks and users, paid customers and revenue bookings, despite a tough global business environment and the expected decline from our legacy business due to market maturity… Looking ahead at 2012, we will continue to execute our two-prong go-to-market strategy of focusing on channel partners via our Clearvale PaasPort program and on driving adoption via our Clearvale Social Enterprise Transformation (SET) program. As social business and cloud computing reach the mainstream, we believe Clearvale is very well positioned to dramatically change how people and businesses collaborate and in doing so transform the entire industry.”

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The Bulls Are Buying the Dips

This market has no chance of going down when any little dip presents asshat dip buyers.

DOW down 21

NASDAW down 12

S&P down 7.5

 

[youtube://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEea624OBzM 450 300]

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Super Bowl Luxury Suite Menu is Not All That and a Bag of Chips

(via TMZ)

0126_superbowl_food_composite_superbowl_exCelebs piling into Super Bowl XLVI (46 to non-Romans) luxury suites better bring their own grub if they want fancy finger foods … because TMZ has learned this year’s stadium menu is loaded with home-style comforts.

While the Giants and Patriots do battle at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis —Centerplate catering will dish up some Midwest favorites:

— Braised Buffalo Short Ribs featuring natural buffalo in a classic French braise
— Heartland Farm Table platter with local veggie selections
— Chef designed Chicken Pot Pie

Basically, sushi lovers … stay home.

However, average joes in run-of-the-mill super expensive SB seats can get Indianapolis Shrimp Cocktails … which we’re told is legendary — despite Indy being landlocked.

Oh, and there’s a sweet consolation for the NFL teams that didn’t make it to the big game. All team owners get a giant jar of mixed M&Ms in their team’s colors.

Feel better now, Baltimore and San Fran?

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ATTENTION SCUMBAGS ON CELL PHONES: BROADWAY ACTORS WILL KICK YOUR ASS!

(via NY POST)

For anybody who’s ever been annoyed by some idiot texting near them in a dark theater, seeing justice done is sweet. But never more colorfully or symbolically so than at a recent performance of the off-Broadway play “Freud’s Last Session,” in which one transgressor was reprimanded by the father of modern psychology himself.

“There was a lady texting in the front row,” says actor Martin Rayner, who plays Sigmund Freud in the show, which is at New World Stages.

“It’s very distracting, especially in such a small theater. I decided at some point I had had enough of it, and I turned to her and said, ‘Stop texting!’ and carried on. She was stunned. I think my partner onstage was stunned, too, because I stuck it in the middle of a line!

WIREIMAGE
Hugh Jackman, “A Steady Rain,” September 2009: “You wanna get that? Come on, just turn it off. Don’t be embarrassed, just grab it. You got it? All right, great.”

It got a cheer,” Rayner recalls.

“I think a lot of audiences hate those people sitting next to them texting.”

That moment of triumph seems indicative of a growing resentment of the boorish, entitled smartphone addicts who seem to pop up at every movie or live performance these days. The common wisdom in years past has been to simply ignore such bad behavior, or accept it as an unfortunate side effect of our perma-online culture.

Lately, though, fed-up patrons and performers are pushing back — such as conductor Alan Gilbert of the New York Philharmonic, who recently stopped the orchestra in the midst of a climactic moment in a Mahler symphony when an iPhone marimba ringtone sounded in the front row.

“Are you finished?” he asked. The tone went on. “Fine, we’ll wait.” When it finally stopped, Gilbert apologized to the rest of the audience, saying he usually ignores such things, but that “this was so egregious that I could not allow it.”

And a recent viral video from a violin concert in Prague shows another way of fighting back: When a cellphone rings, the annoyed violinist deftly picks up the tune and plays a few bars of it before switching back to the concerto.

Most of the time, though, we must content ourselves with an impotent whispered request — often ignored — or else face the daunting challenge of causing an even bigger public disruption than the phone hog.

“One of the great ironies of manners is that the people who enforce them often have worse manners than the initial violators,” says Henry Alford, author of the new etiquette book “Would It Kill You To Stop Doing That?”

Nevertheless, Alford is all in favor of combating the scourge of smartphone rudeness sweeping the nation. For inspiration, look to high-profile stage performers such as Hugh Jackman, Patti LuPone and Kevin Spacey, all of whom have stopped mid-show to chastise techno-rudeness. In May, Frances McDormand was at a pivotal moment in her Tony-winning performance in “Good People” when a cellphone rang — and its owner answered it. McDormand reportedly stopped, put her arm around her co-star and said, “Let’s wait.” Which she did, until the oblivious patron realized what she’d done and stashed the phone.

Occasionally, someone will take it to the next level. When hairdresser Wyatt Raymond took his visiting niece to a movie in Times Square, he says, “about five minutes into the movie, you hear someone talking on her cellphone. The guy in front of me stands up, looks for the person, sees her, and reaches over and closes her phone. She gets up and starts shouting, ‘You don’t do that! You don’t touch someone’s phone!’

“He waves her away and she picks up her very large soda and throws it at him. It didn’t actually hit him — it hit the guy next to him. Who grabs his soda and throws it at her!”

When all involved parties had been escorted into the lobby, the rest of the audience simply laughed it off, Raymond reports. But not all moviegoers are so forgiving.

“I think it’s really the theater’s responsibility. They should warn people on the first offense, and then on the second offense they should pull the person out by the ear and kick them in the ass, hard!” says one Manhattan movie publicist, who asked to remain anonymous.

The likelihood of having to deal with these disruptions in a movie for which you’ve paid upwards of $14, he suggests, is largely to blame for this year’s plummeting ticket sales ($500 million less than the previous year, and a 16-year low for the industry, reports Hollywood.com). “Why pay all that money to go to the movies when you can wait a couple of months to watch in the comfort of your own home?” says the publicist, whose livelihood depends on people not doing that.

So why aren’t more movie theaters following the example of the Alamo Drafthouse theaters in Texas, which famously boot patrons for texting or talking? This summer, they made one indignant woman’s angry voice mail into a public service announcement for the chain: “I’ve texted in all the other theaters in Austin, and no one ever gave a f - - k!” she rants in the spot, which concludes with a message: “Thanks for not coming back to the Alamo, texter!”

The viral video has obviously struck a chord with the public: it’s got nearly 2.5 million hits on YouTube. “We probably kick out about 100 people a year from our 10 locations,” says Alamo owner Tim League.

A spokesman for the AMC chain assures The Post that New York cinema managers “do periodically check auditoriums to make sure there’s no distracting texting going on,” though anyone who’s been to a show in Times Square lately may take issue with that assertion.

A spokeswoman for the Clearview Cinemas chain in New York, meanwhile, didn’t respond to our request for comment.

Broadway theaters and fine arts performance spaces always make announcements asking patrons to turn off their phones, but even this explicit instruction doesn’t seem to get through to everyone. At Lincoln Center Theater, “before the show begins and during intermission the ushers walk up and down the aisles asking everyone to be sure to turn off their electronic devices,” says spokesman Philip Rinaldi.

But many theater owners seem oblivious to just how deeply most patrons despise those little lap-lights. Exhibit A: the plan to have a block of “tweet seats” in select Broadway shows. The director of promotions for the current revival of “Godspell” has said the production intends to try out this idea.

The very thought makes Stephen Bienskie’s blood run cold.

The actor, who plays Buffalo Bill in the off-Broadway show “Silence! The Musical,” says he’s always stunned when patrons whip out their phones mid-performance, whether to text, talk or take pics.

Although Bienskie says he’s been known to stop mid-line and wait for a phone to stop ringing, there are some moments when it’s simply not possible to break character and yell at violators.

“I get to the end of the number and I reveal myself,” says Bienskie, who is seminude for a few seconds during the show, “and I see about 10 cellphones come up in the audience. How do you combat that?”

Still, Bienskie thinks the tide may be turning.

“People are starting to speak up,” he says.

“Audience members get as outraged as we do, and think nothing of turning to someone and saying, in so many words, to turn their phone off and have some respect. People will actually jump on them pretty quickly.”

Read more: http://trade.cc/adjj

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Hooked On Chicken Nuggets: Girl, 17, Who Has Eaten Nothing Else Since TWO Rushed to Hospital After Collapsing

  • Stacey Irvine has breathing problems and anaemia
  • Only other food she eats regularly are fries
  • But despite warnings cannot resist McDonald’s treats

A teenage girl who has eaten almost nothing else apart from chicken nuggets for 15 years has been warned by doctors that the junk food is killing her.

Stacey Irvine, 17, has been hooked on the treats since her mother bought her some at a McDonald’s restaurant when she was two.

Shocked doctors learned of her habit when the factory worker, from Castle Vale, Birmingham, collapsed and was taken to hospital after struggling to breathe.

Read the rest here.

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Most Active Options Trades

-CALLS- 
OPTION    EXP.DATE       STRIKE PRC.     VOLUME        LAST S/PRC.    NET CHANGE 
BAC        2/18/12           8.0000        3187            0.0900      dn 0.0100 
MET        3/17/12          31.0000        2046            3.9000      dn 2.3500 
BAC        3/17/12           8.0000        1415            0.2200      dn 0.0100 
NBR        2/18/12          18.0000         764            0.8000      up 0.1700 
AAPL       1/27/12         450.0000         711            0.6200      dn 0.9500 
BAC        2/18/12           7.0000         686            0.5100      dn 0.0100 
WFC        2/18/12          30.0000         490            0.5000      dn 0.2900 
BAC        2/3/12           8.0000         410            0.0200      dn 0.0200 
GOOG       1/27/12         580.0000         349            0.3000      dn 0.3400 
JCP        2/18/12          36.0000         341            2.7700      up 2.0700 

 -PUTS- 
OPTION    EXP.DATE       STRIKE PRC.     VOLUME        LAST S/PRC.    NET CHANGE 
BAC        2/18/12           7.0000        1134            0.1600      dn 0.0100 
AAPL       1/27/12         445.0000         584            2.2200      up 0.3200 
WFC        3/17/12          30.0000         421            1.4400      up 0.4300 
AAPL       1/27/12         440.0000         401            0.4500      dn 0.3300 
GME        7/21/12          22.0000         343            1.6300      up 0.5000 
GLD        1/27/12         166.0000         238            0.2500      dn 3.0100 
GLD        2/18/12         151.0000         233            0.1600      dn 0.0800 
LVS        1/27/12          50.0000         230            1.0500      up 0.4000 
GLD        1/27/12         165.0000         193            0.1200      dn 0.6000 
HBAN       4/21/12           5.0000         166            0.1000      dn 0.0100 

 -VOLUME- 
 CALLS      PUTS           TOTAL 
76872    69399        146271
 -CALLS- 
OPTION    EXP.DATE       STRIKE PRC.     VOLUME        LAST S/PRC.    NET CHANGE 
BAC        2/18/12           8.0000       11300            0.0900      dn 0.0100 
MT         3/17/12          23.0000       10000            0.9200      up 0.2900 
GLD        2/18/12         175.0000        9916            0.9700      up 0.0400 
KOG        1/19/13          10.0000        7154            2.0000      dn 0.0800 
AAPL       1/27/12         450.0000        7128            0.5300      dn 0.9700 
KOG        1/19/13          15.0000        6982            0.6600      dn 0.0700 
BAC        3/17/12           8.0000        6445            0.2200      dn 0.0200 
CS         6/16/12          33.0000        6121            0.6500      up 0.2000 
CSCO       2/18/12          20.0000        5398            0.6200      up 0.0200 
NFLX       1/27/12         120.0000        4760            0.5500      dn 0.1500 

 -PUTS- 
OPTION    EXP.DATE       STRIKE PRC.     VOLUME        LAST S/PRC.    NET CHANGE 
WFC        7/21/12          28.0000       11187            1.9800      up 0.2400 
GLD        3/17/12         144.0000        7500            0.2600      dn 0.1000 
XEC        6/16/12          45.0000        5500            1.3000      dn 0.1000 
GLD        3/17/12         155.0000        5497            1.0100      dn 0.2100 
ESI        1/19/13          62.5000        4600           13.5000      up 0.7500 
ESI        1/19/13          52.5000        4600            9.0000      up 0.4500 
MMR        2/18/12           8.0000        4207            0.1600      up 0.0500 
PSS        2/18/12          15.0000        4045            0.7000      up 0.0000 
BAC        2/18/12           7.0000        3810            0.1700      up 0.0000 
C          6/16/12          28.0000        3197            2.0500      dn 0.2700 

 -VOLUME- 
 CALLS      PUTS           TOTAL 
1499072    1348681        2847753

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