Posts Tagged ‘secondary’

How to set up iphone 3G with no sim to use google voice as secondary phone?

Question by King: How to set up iphone 3G with no sim to use google voice as secondary phone?
I have an iPhone 3G that does not have a sim (upgraded to iPhone 3GS) I would like to turn it into a secondary phone that uses my google voice account. I also have a sipgate account if needed. Im just wanting to use it as a secondary phone to use on my wifi. . How would i set this up or would i need something else to?

Fast payday loans For Every One

Best answer:

Answer by Dave
it is very easy
just follow the instruction there are two ways you can do it
you also need voip app on your iphone siphone is very nice and free from cdiya

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The Primary Colors of Secondary Markets

Editor’s Note: Guest contributor Semil Shah is an entrepreneur interested in digital media, consumer Internet, and social networks. He is based in Palo Alto and you can follow him on Twitter @semilshah.

I find myself conflicted about secondary markets. My cautionary side wonders how these private stock sales can potentially distort incentives within companies and artificially impact valuations. The libertarian side of me, however, says all in business is fair game. Everything can be bought or sold. Everyone has a price.

Secondary markets for private shares, such as SecondMarket and SharesPost, provide founders, employees, angels, and institutional investors with a new avenue for liquidity, matching them and their shares with outside demand. While the U.S. economy has struggled for the past few years, the pace of investment in technology shows no sign of letting up. And while public markets may have been icy toward public offerings for some time, secondary markets filled the void, a valve to reduce liquidity pressures facing founders and employees, and providing an additional (and attractive) financial option for institutional shareholders.

Those holding shares in hot tech companies were often met with overwhelming demand from buyers, both here and abroad, willing to pay up to own a piece of the next thing. In some cases, demand outstripped supply to the point where private valuations rose to new, unseen heights. Despite these quick increases in valuation, demand persists; for some investors, bored with public markets, there’s more promise, potential, and possible upside in buying these types of shares, rather than ploughing more cash into traditional blue chip companies.

There’s clearly supply and demand in this market, but its effects are unclear and hard to quantify. On one hand, there’s something not-quite-right about the high wealth requirements needed to purchase shares on secondary markets, the opacity of financial information required to be disclosed within each transaction, and the indirect effects trade volatility can have on a private company’s valuation. For instance, Goldman Sachs raised eyebrows when they attempted to execute a special purpose vehicle (SPV) to enable its premium clients to get a piece of the Facebook pie, valuing the company around $ 50B. As Fortune’s Dan Primack reported, the SPV would’ve helped Goldman circumvent the 500-shareholder limit rules around private companies traded on secondary markets.

On the other hand, if capital markets aren’t ready for public offerings, especially in relatively new industries, and if founders and employees have worked long enough to have their shares vest, and if other investors are interested in owning a piece, why should the government or the company in question regulate or block the transaction? For instance, if I worked at a big company that couldn’t yet go public but I needed some liquidity for student loans or a mortgage, shouldn’t I be able to trade in my shares for some cold hard cash to help offset debts or the cost of living?

Successful entrepreneurs and influential investors also share a range of opinions on the matter. Earlier this year, Eventbrite CEO Kevin Hartz shared some details on why his company will go public in 2012, stating that a big part of his vision for the company is to IPO a bit early. It’s part of his strategic vision for the company to have a long life after IPO and remain independent, as he believes that the controls placed upon public companies instill discipline.

On the other hand, Fred Wilson of Union Square Ventures shared his views on public markets at Techcrunch Disrupt NYC in May 2011, making the case that public markets can potentially ruin a company’s culture and place onerous requirements on it. By remaining private as long as possible, founders, employees, and investors can sell shares while the company is able to maintain its culture and also keep the lid tight on potential technologies it has developed.

These are all great arguments made by experienced people. The truth is probably somewhere in the middle, and that it depends on each company. There may be something unique about Eventbrite that leads Hartz to make this calculation, or something specific to one of Wilson’s investments that has informed his own view. Facebook has been able to avoid an IPO for now by selling shares to private investors, but then there are public companies like Google and Apple which are currently demonstrating unbelievably strong signs of continued innovation.

Through it all, though, one thing keeps nagging me: consumers that will eventually buy public stocks.

It’s a risk to buy stocks on the public market, just like any other investment is a risk. There’s no guarantee Pandora will perform like General Electric, or that General Electric should perform like Apple. If you day trade on a site like Scottrade, well, to me that’s just as risky as taking your IRA to a Vegas roulette table. Other consumers buy positions through mutual funds, which consist of hand-picked stocks based on “equity research,” which I put in quotes because, well….you know why.

No matter how these stocks are purchased, it’s up to the individual investor to make sure that he or she knows the deal. The government mandates that warning labels adorn cigarette packs, but people still buy them despite all the risks. The SEC could put a softer version of a warning label on company offerings that have been traded on secondary markets, but would public investors even care?

One company stock that is sure to generate significan demand is Facebook’s. Some people believe the company’s business prospects are so hot that it could, by 2012, have the same market capitalization as Google. Others believe the company’s valuation has been artificially driven up by excess demand and volatile secondary market trades, and that once it goes public, regular consumers will be left holding the bag.

While I am in the former group, I can understand why someone would be cautious to buy public shares. But, when I line up to buy stock next year, I will be well aware of the fact that there are risks. Despite these obvious realities, it seems as if many have forgotten that even Facebook itself was a risk. There was no guarantee the service would mean anything outside a few dorms at Harvard, or that it would attract venture capital, or that it would become a major cultural phenomenon. Each private investment in Facebook to date carried its own risks, and the same can be said for each future public investment, too.

When the gates open, let the public have their shares. The government and the SEC can investigate or crack down on secondary markets, but that won’t eliminate the risk private and public investors face. The SEC can require more disclosures in S-1 filings, but not only is it unlikely the public will read those statements carefully, it’s also unclear whether experienced financial analysts or journalists will as well. You can put a picture of a tarred lung on a cigarette box, but if someone needs a drag right now, and there’s no promise for tomorrow, then what? Eventually, private companies traded on secondary markets will need some sort of exit. Secondary markets are a short-term solution to offer shareholders partial liquidity.

That said, there is one aspect to secondary markets that does concern me, and it has to do with the potential distortion of incentives of specific company shareholders. If I’m slated to buy a public stock of a red-hot technology company, I don’t just focus on fancy numbers or accounting, or what a journalist or my broker tells me. I mainly want to know who’s steering the ship. I want to know the crew and the deckhands. If a majority of the company’s equity has traded hands from founders and early employees to a range of faceless institutions and passive investors, and less so to current employees, then who will drive the ship once I place my bet?

This isn’t a calculus that generates any finite number—it’s a subjective bet. The public may think they are investing in the promise of rising numbers or other online metrics, but that’s only half of the story. The other half brings us back to how these technology companies start and grow in the first place—with people.

Consumers looking to buy public stocks in companies that have traded on secondary markets should reflect on some of these basic questions while making their decision to invest:

  • Who has owned significant chunks of shares in the company?
  • Who sold their shares on the secondary market, and who bought them?
  • Did the founders cash out and at what rate?
  • How much have investors cashed out, and what do they still hold?
  • Will financial analysts and reporters consider secondary market activity in their recommendations?
  • Will the public market price for shares in any company reflect these concerns accordingly?

These questions get to the essence of the primary colors in secondary markets. Everything around Facebook, for instance, or any company that offers shares publicly, is a risk. There’s no such thing as a sure bet in real life and certainly not in investing.

And, that’s all public investors need to be reminded of: there’s risk everywhere. Public investors shouldn’t expect that just because companies like Facebook go public that it’s a slam dunk investment. Public investors shouldn’t assume that only companies with healthy financials and solidified business models can convince Wall Street bankers to lead their offerings.

It’s all a big poker game, and as the world has economy demonstrated since 2008, the only thing that’s certain is uncertainty. Place your bets accordingly.

Photo credit: Images of Money



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iDisplay now ready to turn your Android device into a secondary display

While iPhone and iPad users have been able to use iDisplay to turn their device into a secondary display for some time now (with at least some degree of success), Android users have unfortunately been left to their own devices — until now, that is. The folks behind the app have finally made an Android version available as well, which is apparently compatible with all Android smartphones and tablets running Android 2.1 or later, and works in both portrait and landscape modes. As with the iOS version, it’s also compatible with both Windows and OS X, and it’ll set you back the same $ 4.99.

iDisplay now ready to turn your Android device into a secondary display originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 01:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceShape Services, Android Market  | Email this | Comments
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Sony Ericsson’s itty-bitty secondary display for Android phones to cost 69 euros?

At the tail-end of September, Sony Ericsson announced a rather peculiar accessory: the LiveView, an itty-bitty (1.3″), new-iPod-Nano-esque secondary display for their Android phones that could be worn as a watch or clipped onto clothes. While Sony Ericsson was happy to show the thing off and share some of the basic spec details, they kept hush on information like the launch date and pricing.

Things like that tend to make their way out one way or another though — and today, it seems they have.
Read the rest at MobileCrunch >>



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ZoneScreen: Use HTC HD2 as secondary screen


Video of me using my HD2 as a secondary screen on Windows XP. PS: I’m not the developer of the software, just a user ;) More info @ www.zoneos.com/zonescreen.htm Installation steps: 1. Make sure you’re running Windows XP, I couldn’t get this to work on Windows 7 :S 2. Connect your device via USB using Active Sync, this gives the best performance (WiFi & Bluetooth should work though) 2. Go to the website and download the ZIP for Windows Mobile & MSI installer for Windows XP 3. Install ZoneScreen on PC, start the wizard. 4. Select “Run as server” in PC wizard 5. Select “Display 2″ and set resolution (in my case I had to add a new resolution, using the Options menu in the wizard; 32 bits, 480 width, 800 height) Use default TCP port 6. Leave frames per second as is, tweak later. My HD2 works @ 32 fps. 7. Click start in wizard, minimize window to taskbar 8. Extract downloaded ZIP to Mobile device, run zserver.exe 9. Select “Run as client” 10. Use default TCP port, enter host computer name (use Winbutton + Pause on PC, go to second tab to find the computername) 11. Click next 12. Enjoy!

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