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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Technology Minerals Plc | LSE:TM1 | London | Ordinary Share | GB00BP094P47 | ORD GBP0.001 |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 0.11 | - | 0.00 | 00:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Miscellaneous Metal Ores,nec | 47k | -3.91M | -0.0023 | -0.48 | 1.88M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
24/4/2023 16:11 | See RNS. Technology Minerals to present via Zoom tomorrow the latest developments at the company. | raleigh43 | |
24/4/2023 11:19 | Recycling machine ready to roll this month they said. Second one to follow soon after I guess. | raleigh43 | |
24/4/2023 09:36 | Is this a flag forming Hope so | jakes114 | |
24/4/2023 07:49 | Just be a little bit More patient for the Next rise!!😉 | shares188 | |
20/4/2023 18:39 | Well here’s a piece of after hours news. Jonathon Mark Swann now owns 7% of the company. Who he? The recent hi net wealth investor? | raleigh43 | |
17/4/2023 12:06 | This is news driven. They just t’had some good news and more coming once they press the green button on the machine. Then the second recycler. | raleigh43 | |
17/4/2023 10:26 | just look at the chart -more often than not gaps need to be filled-sub 2p gap for starters | pre | |
17/4/2023 08:49 | How do you mean? | raleigh43 | |
17/4/2023 07:37 | Big gap to fill lower down | pre | |
13/4/2023 19:57 | I agree. Things get started this month, the 8 weeks until the Lead-Acid one gets EA approval. Then one each per year. Meanwhile the mining partners come on board. Battery ingredients just as demand explodes. I am only annoyed I did not buy more for under 1p. Have added and will keep adding. Long term compounder. Great management. | raleigh43 | |
13/4/2023 18:37 | Significant upside here.The audioboom made good listening. | cacophony1 | |
13/4/2023 16:47 | Blocking Email Links: Why we use HXXP in emails July 22, 2022 This practice, also known as URL defanging, is in use to discourage the clicking of links in emails. Many malicious emails (e.g. phishing messages) gather personal information by tricking users to click on a URL that looks safe but that ultimately points to a malicious website set up to steal information. In an effort to discourage users from instinctively clicking on links in emails, we encourage staff and faculty to break the URLs in their emails by using “hxxp”. Answers to common questions related to this practice are available below: How can a clickable URL in an email be malicious? Standard clickable links can appear to go to one destination in an email, but actually direct users to another. As an example, none of the following clickable links actually take users to the expected destination: www.google.com hxxps://www.ubc.ca hxxp://bc.net Attackers can use this trick to make a URL appear trusted, and use that trust to their advantage on a malicious website by: Faking a login page and capturing CWL credentials. Tricking users into downloading and launching a malicious file or application. Making use of a known exploit in web browsers to compromise the workstation. What is URL defanging, and why is it used? URL defanging is the standard term for making URLs non-clickable (e.g. using hxxp vs http). Email remains the primary source of compromised accounts and workstations here at UBC, either through malicious attachments or clickable malicious URLs. Our anti-virus/anti-malw Defanging a URL ensures that users must make a deliberate decision to visit the intended destination by copying and pasting the URL into their browser address bar. This is intended to raise the security awareness of end users, which in turn decreases the likelihood of successful phishing attempts. Do the UBC mail filters defang URLs in the bodies of emails? No. Although UBC mail filtering systems have the capability to process and defang URLs, this functionality is not enabled. Should the decision be made in the future to do automated defanging of URLs, we would communicate this change clearly, in advance, to the UBC community. Note that Outlook Web Access [OWA] does modify URLs in the body of messages. Messages viewed through OWA will have their URLs changed to refer back to the OWA server, which then redirects users to the destination. Gmail does something similar, but you cannot tell by hovering over URLs in messages. Why do we use hxxp in email we send, and recommend it for mass internal communications? The use of hxxp is a common method used to defang a URL. When composing or receiving an email, email software [Outlook, Gmail, iOS mail, etc] will not automatically turn hxxp URLs into clickable links. We recommend it for mass internal communications to help raise security awareness amongst the UBC community. Why not just drop the http prefix instead of using hxxp? We wanted to choose a defanging method that would work everywhere. Before deciding to use hxxp, we did testing with different mail clients to see how we should handle our own URL defanging. What we found was: When composing an email, if content that looks like an URL is added to a message, some mail clients automatically make the URL a clickable link even when http/https is not present [Outlook, both web and desktop versions, is guilty of this]. When receiving an email, some mail clients automatically make anything that looks like an URL clickable [Gmail on web and iOS, and iOS mail do this. Outlook, both web and desktop versions, does not]. One way to ensure the desired behavior of ensuring that the URL is never clickable is to use hxxp instead of http. None of the mail clients we tested would transform URLs prefixed with hxxp into clickable links. Why not just use plain text emails? Plain text emails are not as effective at catching attention, arguably not as easy to read, and not as well received when communicating with non-technical members of the community. | solartech | |
13/4/2023 16:08 | Why this link does not work? hxxps://www.patriotb | solartech | |
13/4/2023 15:57 | Any news on drilling permit in Leinster? Technology Minerals and Patriot Battery Metals have the same spodumene pegmatite discovery, if TM drill assays will turn out the same as PMET.V, its share price will be at multiple GBP, not at pence. For unknown reason this link does not work, you have to copy and paste on the address bar, eliminate the space between : and // https: //www.patriotbattery | solartech | |
13/4/2023 15:53 | where is podcast posted? | solartech | |
13/4/2023 15:51 | Sorry i get you now and I agree. Def multi bagger from here. | raleigh43 | |
13/4/2023 15:51 | Isn't share price at 2.35 GBX (British pence) right now? I am Canadian, 1 GBX = 1.67 Canadian cents. | solartech | |
13/4/2023 15:49 | They discuss spodumene and Ireland in the above podcast interview. | raleigh43 | |
13/4/2023 15:48 | What do you mean at GBX? | raleigh43 | |
13/4/2023 15:32 | Any news on drilling permit in Leinster? Technology Minerals and Patriot Battery Metals have the same spodumene pegmatite discovery, if TM drill assays will turn out the same as PMET.V, its share price will be at multiple GBP, not at GBX. Copy this linkage on the address bar then eliminate the space between https: and //www.patriotbattery https: //www.patriotbattery | solartech | |
13/4/2023 12:53 | Very interesting TM1 longer audio. From 8 minutes in. Excellent insights. | raleigh43 | |
12/4/2023 10:26 | It will certainly head that way soon enough. And over time far higher. I think that the company should produce more easy to understand videos about recycling batteries. This would bring more retail investors on board. | raleigh43 | |
12/4/2023 10:19 | SP should be 10p right now | jambam | |
12/4/2023 10:17 | Bought more this morning and will keep adding. | raleigh43 |
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