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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sandvine Corp. | LSE:SAND | London | Ordinary Share | CA8002131008 | CMN SHS NPV |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 123.00 | - | 0.00 | 01:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
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08/7/2010 12:47 | As expected, good Q2 results indeed! Interesting to see market reaction when opens across the pond..... DL | davidlloyd | |
07/7/2010 14:24 | Results out tomorrow - expect these will be good....so have topped up..... :-) | davidlloyd | |
12/5/2010 08:29 | 400bn euro solar power supergrid? By REBECCA TORR , Posted on ยป Wednesday, May 12, 2010 BAHRAIN and other Gulf countries could soon benefit from a 400 billion euro (BD191.7bn) plan to link their solar plants with Europe through a supergrid. The pan-continental electricity supergrid will be powered by a chain of solar farms in the Arabian Gulf and North Africa. They will be linked to hydro-electric plants in Scandinavia and the European Alps, onshore and offshore wind farms in the Baltic and North Sea, along with marine energy and biomass power facilities. Bahrain announced this month that two hybrid plants were being built to produce renewable energy. The solar and wind energy plants will each cost BD8 million to BD10m and will produce 5MW a year, incurring running costs of BD50m. "The Desertec plan is by a consortium of European governments, non-governmental organisations and industrial corporations," said Middle East Electricity exhibition director Anita Mathews. The aim is to provide 15 per cent or more of Europe and the Middle East's electricity needs with solar power by 2050, she added. A map of Desertec's plan shows a chain of solar power plants throughout the Arabian Gulf linked by the supergrid to the rest of the Middle East and North Africa and into southern Europe. A recent study by PricewaterhouseCoope Germany's Solar Millennium is on track to complete a 150 megawatt solar thermal plant in Egypt this year which is seen as a template for a series of Middle East and North Africa solar farms in the Desertec project. Morocco is also expected to be the site of further pilot schemes - a natural choice as the country is connected to Spain by a sub-sea electricity cable. The Desertec initiative, which includes Munich Re, E.ON, Siemens and others alongside the non-profit Desertec Foundation, was established in Germany last year. "Within six hours, deserts receive more energy from the sun than humankind consumes within a year," said foundation supervisory board chairman Dr Gerhard Knies. The initiative has given itself three years to set up a policy framework within the European Union and the Middle East and Northern Africa to adequately fund and transport renewable energy from the desert to Europe. Ms Mathews said the biggest challenge would be to secure the subsidies that would be necessary to allow renewable energy to become cost-competitive to fossil fuels. The sheer scale of the Desertec plan illustrates that the world is waking up to the fact that the Middle East has the potential to become one of the foremost producers of renewable energy, she added. "The task is already underway with Abu Dhabi being home to the Masdar project - the world's first carbon neutral city - and the headquarters of the International Renewable Energy Agency, which is considering projects to produce solar and wind energy in the UAE and the rest of the Gulf," said Ms Mathews. "Saudi Arabia is also planning to become a solar energy exporter and is building its first solar-powered desalination plant. "Qatar is in serious talks with investors to build a $1bn (BD3.77m) solar power project. "Solar projects are also at various stages of planning and implementation in Oman, Kuwait, Syria, Jordan, Iran and Iraq. "But for Middle East countries, to be part of the ambitious plans to export solar produced electricity to Europe, they will first need to show they can share it among themselves with further development of the GCC grid and links to neighbouring Arab countries. Revenue "One day, however, the sun may not only power the industries and buildings of the Middle East but also Europe, providing a new revenue stream and cutting back on the use of costly fuel oil, diesel and gas." Middle East Electricity is recognised as the region's international meeting place for the power industry with this year's show in February featuring almost 1,000 exhibitors with an attendance of 49,000 visitors from 105 countries, the organisers said. The region's largest trade show for the power and energy sector is now in its 36th year. The main focuses of Middle East Electricity include power generation, transmission and distribution; commercial, industrial and residential lighting; water; as well as new, renewable and nuclear energy. More than 60pc of exhibition space has already been sold for next year's event from February 8 to 10 at the Dubai International Exhibition Centre. becky@gdn.com.bh | waldron | |
21/4/2010 14:48 | Streuth. This one is getting a head of steam up. DL | davidlloyd | |
06/4/2010 15:08 | Great results, up 12% across the water | shroder | |
06/4/2010 12:07 | Return to profit. All signals pointing in the right direction now. Interesting to see how things open over the water as very little response this end.... DL | davidlloyd | |
29/3/2010 21:28 | Closed up 5% across the pond | shroder | |
25/3/2010 16:48 | Down 6% at one stage on the TSX now flat, no idea what caused that/ | shroder | |
24/3/2010 14:59 | What's your thoughts on SAND Cambium? | shroder | |
22/3/2010 14:20 | results date reveasled | cambium | |
19/3/2010 09:46 | Well it raced through the last resistnace level (~100p) so hoping for the same here too.... DL | davidlloyd | |
18/3/2010 14:20 | Historical resistance area being tested, | shroder | |
17/3/2010 15:55 | Up 5%, pushing thru $2 mark | shroder | |
17/3/2010 13:18 | closed up 4% across the pond | shroder | |
16/3/2010 13:00 | Very nice, RNS Number : 6212I Sandvine Corporation 16 March 2010 Attention: Technology Editors SANDVINE SECURES FUNDING TOWARDS INNOVATIVE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Waterloo, Canada; March 16, 2010 - Sandvine, (TSX:SVC; AIM:SAND) a leading provider of intelligent broadband network solutions for cable, DSL, FTTx, fixed wireless and mobile operators, today announced that it has entered into an agreement with the Province of Ontario in respect of certain innovative research and development activities. Under the agreement, Sandvine will be eligible to receive funding equal to 11% of related, eligible costs incurred in Ontario from February 2009 to February 2014 to a maximum of $18.7 million. In addition, at the end of the agreement, the company will be entitled to receive up to an additional 4% of such costs (to a maximum of $6.8 million) if certain Ontario-based job targets have been met. "The provincial government has demonstrated a real commitment to Ontario as a technology leadership centre, both within Canada and globally," said Dave Caputo, Sandvine's president and chief executive officer. "This funding gives Sandvine a tremendous opportunity to continue to advance our research and development activities right here at home." | shroder | |
16/3/2010 12:21 | Subsidised R&D - love it. DL | davidlloyd | |
11/3/2010 15:42 | RNS Number : 4084I Sandvine Corporation 11 March 2010 ? Attention Technology Editors SANDVINE AND PEERAPP DEPLOY IN FIVE NETWORKS Integrated content caching solution deployed in five residential service provider networks Waterloo, Canada; March 11, 2010 - Sandvine, (TSX:SVC; AIM:SAND) a leading provider of intelligent broadband network solutions for cable, DSL, FTTx, fixed wireless and mobile operators, today announced the successful deployment of content caching solutions in five service provider networks across the globe. The customers were won in previous quarters together with PeerApp as part of a technology partnership that began in 2008. Content caching is a sophisticated traffic optimization tool that targets popular file transfers such as Internet video (YouTube, Metacafe, etc) by developing a temporary local storage called a cache. When content is requested again by any other subscriber, the cache satisfies the request from its temporary storage, eliminating data transfer through expensive transit links and reducing network congestion. "Our interoperable content caching solution benefits both service providers and subscribers," said Frank Childs, PeerApp's vice president of marketing. "Subscribers experience faster downloads and video streaming while service providers relieve network congestion and optimize their networks." | shroder | |
10/3/2010 17:59 | Up 3% across the pond this eve, Should be a beneficiary from the Obama $7billion broadband stimulus. | shroder | |
09/3/2010 08:42 | The short answer is that I sort of drifted into it because I was too idle to get a job after losing the one I had had for twenty years. They had to pay me off to go quietly, so I paid off the mortgage and decided to take the summer off. By 9:30 the next morning I was bored, so I started playing with my portfolio. I went to one job interview. It was to be Director of something-or-other at somewhere-or-other and was offering a six figure salary. The interviewer asked "where do you see yourself in 5 years" and I remember thinking "not answering stupid questions like that". I just continued playing around with my portfolio over the summer and then I went on holiday to South Africa. When I came back, and 4 months after losing job, I announced to anyone who would listen that I was going to trade full time. How much prep? None as such but I had already been buying and selling shares for a good 15 years as a sort of buy and hold investor. Also, I was already posting here and I knew that mtg, black and a chap called samg were all making money in the markets. And then there was Lord Naked, who made it all look rather easy. All I had to do then was harness their collective talents and morph from investor to trader. It never occured to me that I could fail. I asked a lot of questions and I got a lot of answers. I went to a lot of free seminars and I asked a lot of questions. Slowly I started to tick boxes. Can do that (shares), can't do that (forex). Like that (rsi), hate that (elliot wave). It was all done at break-neck speed and much of it was written up on here. I set some basic rules. I wasn't to lose any capital (after the first three months) and I had to be in the top quartile of fund managers. Those two rules were to keep me and my capital safe in case I turned out to be no good at it but as I have already said, the thought of failure never really crossed my mind. I decided not to set performance targets. In my opinion performance targets just set one up to fail. Seems more postive to rejoice in what was has made than wallow in what one hasn't made! That said, I broadly knew how much money I needed to make and I knew how much money I wanted to make, so I just got on with making that. I'm having a wonderful journey and have made some wonderful new friends both here and through my various networking efforts. Nothing would entice me back to a 9-5. I hope that goes some way to answering your questions. | sandbank | |
08/3/2010 14:29 | make that four.. | shroder | |
05/3/2010 14:51 | 3 days on the trot now | shroder | |
04/3/2010 14:39 | US opens prompting further buying - up 8% now but still lagging the TSX listing by a couple of % | shroder |
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