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DDD Group PLC - News (DDD)     

t999mrb - 27 Oct 2003 06:42

DDD Group (LSE: DDD.L - news) , has developed software and hardware products that enable the viewing of 3D images without the need to wear special spectacles. The company has just signed a 3-year deal with nWave Pictures to covert a number of movies into its TriDef format. Could be one for the watch list.

ticker - 05 Apr 2004 09:05 - 32 of 247

azhar, thank you, I hope you are right. I was away for a few days to come back last night only to see it down to 26p!!

drum - 05 Apr 2004 11:20 - 33 of 247

Looks a bit better today. Up 8.3%!

ticker - 05 Apr 2004 14:11 - 34 of 247

Yes, at least it is blue!!

ssanebs - 06 Apr 2004 22:15 - 35 of 247

an e-mail reply from DDD vice president

Dear Mr. xxxxx:

I apologize for the delay in responding to you, however, I wanted to obtain
a copy of the article you are referring to. It is in fact public knowledge
that we have been in discussions with the major Hollywood studios over the
last several years. Warren Littlefield, the former President of NBC
Entertainment, sits on our Board for that very reason.

The article uses the word "expects" as opposed to "would". As I am sure you
can appreciate, that language was not meant to be deceptive, however, it is
simply very difficult to predict with any level of precision how the terms
and timing of commercial agreements will proceed. I'm sorry that I can not
be more helpful, however, as mentioned in my previous response, we are not
able to comment individually with respect to the specifics and timing of our
anticipated news flow.

We do not believe there are communication problems with UK based brokers.
The cebit announcement was not a commercial agreement, Sanyo were simply
showing their new displays with our software driving them. As announced in
February 2004, we do have the European patent so I am a bit confused with
respect to your comment, our brokers, etc. We are focused on additional
commercial agreements / news flow and generating revenues. If we do this,
the share price will take care of itself.

Sincerely,

Mark McGowan, CPA. MBA
Vice President, Finance
DDD Group plc
2120 Colorado Avenue, Suite 100
Santa Monica, California 90404-3504

Adam Ant - 08 Apr 2004 10:32 - 36 of 247

I have just aquired some shares in DDD and am concerned that they have "placed" (what ever that is) over a million shares to raise cash. What will this do to the shares prices?? Is this normal??

ANy info gratefully received

WOODIE - 08 Apr 2004 10:48 - 37 of 247

the placing is to strength the balance sheet ie for working capital,the good thing was the price was not at a big discount from current levels you can use this price as a guide to use a stop loss.my view is that this appears to be a good risk reward trade if anybody ueses this.

sconradie - 27 Apr 2004 00:40 - 38 of 247

Does anybody have a news(good or bad...) about DDD. The shares is very quit lately?

ssanebs - 27 Apr 2004 21:44 - 39 of 247

I have dumped all my shares and will buy back if and when the news on the deals is announced.

sconradie - 28 Apr 2004 00:19 - 40 of 247

yea, sounds like a good idea.
I did manage to find some good news ( a happy client: )

----------------------------------
Harvey Nichols Specialty Retailer
April 21, 2004

The Business Problem
As a high end retailer in the upscale London Knightsbridge shopping area, Harvey Nichols creates unique and engaging experiences to attract customers. The retailer is known for its stunning, innovative window displays and is always looking for the best way to capture attention. Plasma displays as an advertising tool have become relatively common place, so Harvey Nichols took the next leap in presentation technology: autostereo (glasses-free) 3D plasma displays. Harvey Nichols commissioned retail creative agency Charles Mason Agency, StereoGraphics Corporation, and DDD Group plc to provide an eye-popping window display for the launch of Harvey Nichols new HN perfume. The animation and the display had to be worthy of Harvey Nichols' reputation for innovation and style and be a centerpiece for the critical Christmas holiday shopping season.

The Solution
Charles Mason proposed an innovative solution comprised of

Custom made 3D animation of the Harvey Nichols logo
An animated bottle of HN perfume floating off screen (DDD POPVert)
Four 42 inch SynthaGram 3D plasma displays powered by DDD TriDef Software
StereoGraphics' SynthaGram 42" 3D display is based on a high quality plasma display precisely fitted with a lenticular array designed to provide separate and slightly different views of the animation to the left and right eyes of the observers to produce the 3D effect. The SynthaGram provides up to nine different views of the animation, allowing multiple observers to appreciate the effect within a 150 viewing radius. The views themselves are generated by DDD's TriDef MoviePlayer software. DDD's TriDef software products provide the key link between 3D formatted content and stereo 3D displays like the SynthaGram series. DDD performed work to convert the custom animations from 2D into high quality 3D. The combination of a bright display (with great separation and wide viewing angles) and top-notch animation content and view generation from DDD made for a dramatic eye-catching experience for Harvey Nichols' passers-by.

The Benefits
Increased store traffic. Paul Harris of Charles Mason said, "Harvey Nichols is the first application of this technology in a retail environment in the U.K. The visual effect is not something that the public is accustomed to seeing in the high street which was significant in attracting the attention of passers-by and created a talking point at the counter."
Reinforced the Harvey Nichols' brand. As Janet Wardley, a Harvey Nichols' merchandising executive said, "We were seeking an innovative, high impact means of promoting the new HN perfume whilst also differentiating our holiday window display.We have been delighted by the impact this new display medium has delivered."
Garnered valuable press attention
Increased reputation as leader and innovator

Helly - 06 May 2004 11:29 - 41 of 247

Does anyone have any news on DDD ? Why the huge drop in the past couple of months ? I have written to the company today, asking the same question and will advise any response I get.

Haystack - 06 May 2004 12:45 - 42 of 247

I think that there may have been a gradual realisation that there is not much of a market for 3D. There seems to be no percebtible appetite for 3D and where are the devices to play 3D on.

TVs that are 3D capable are going to be very expensive. This technology is years away from making money and having a mass appeal.

The Sharp notebook that had some DDD software being given away as part of the bundle has received very poor reviews. Even Sharp have said it is only being marketed for specialist business applications.

http://reviews.cnet.com/Sharp_Actius_RD3D/4505-3121_7-30573410.html?tag=upidmlp

Some notable quotes from the Sharp review.

"this humongous 10-pounder is a low-performance slug that runs for only about two hours on battery and sells for twice the cost of a typical notebook"

"Unless you have a special need for a 3D screen, skip this novelty."

"but if you move slightly, the 3D effect is lost"

"Until we were used to the screen, we felt a little motion sickness".

"But the screen is not a completely satisfying experience: during particularly quick action, the screen can have blips, and sometimes you'll see a double image."

"it requires that the viewer's head be about 21 inches from the display for it to work."

"At 13.9 by 11.9 inches and between 1.9 and 2.1 inches thick, this is one big notebook; it stretches the definition of portable computer."

"The notebook tips the scales at 10 pounds, and its enormous AC adapter adds 1.7 pounds, making for an unwieldy travel weight of 11.7 pounds--roughly the equivalent of two thin-and-light notebooks."

"Unfortunately, despite a huge fan at the bottom, which seems to run more often than not, the machine has a large hot spot on the left side."

"The Actius RD3D's case may be fully equipped, but internally, the Actius RD3D leaves much to be desired"

"Its 6,000mAh lithium-ion battery can run this power hog for only 2 hours, 8 minutes, although a Sharp representative warned us that "this notebook is not designed to be used while unplugged." (why have one then?)

"Both the Sharp Actius RD3D and the Sony VAIO PCG-FRV37 have lower-than-top-rung video adapters. So, when it comes to 3D performance, they score lower than better-equipped notebooks, which is a shame for the Sharp. We expected higher scores from a notebook whose primary goal is displaying 3D graphics."

jfwinvestments - 06 May 2004 13:01 - 43 of 247

haystack

Don't you have anything else to do but deramp DDD. Obviously not you **** ****
You have the cheek to do this and then when your useless Robot Picked Stocks selects DDD you delete it within minutes.




Haystack - 06 May 2004 14:10 - 44 of 247

jwinvestments

There are several things worth saying about your post: -

I am just posting information and opinion about DDD.

The Robot Stocks software has not ever selected DDD. This is easily verified as I Email out the selections the night before and post them on this BB before trading starts the next day.

The third thing is that I am posting negative things about DDD as a stock investment and NOT about any of the posters or investors who may like it.

PS
Personal abuse of the type that you are indulging is not acceptable on MoneyAm.

PPS
The word is spelt deceitful!

IanT(MoneyAM) - 06 May 2004 14:21 - 45 of 247

jfwinvestments,

You are entitled to post your opinion, but please do not use personal abuse. I have edited your post accordingly.

Please refrain from this sort of posting.


Ian

azhar - 06 May 2004 20:52 - 46 of 247

I agree with jfwinvestments re: "Robot Picked Stocks selects DDD you delete it within minutes". I'm not sure about the latter part of the statement but I do remember seeing DDD on one of your Robot Stock picks. Please note I'm not a holder of this stock but have been through the recent good times. I have a feeling that this will drop to around 16/14p before any further upward trend. in reality nobody really knows otherwise we'd all be millionaires. As always DYOR

Haystack - 06 May 2004 21:47 - 47 of 247

azhar
I am sorry, you have never seen it on the Robot Picked stocks list. I have checked the archives. I have every selection since it started. You must be imagining it. I would have no reason to delete it as a selection as I do not personally agree with many of its picks and often post selection that I would not pick.
The other strange thing is that I am the one who posts the selection, so why would I post it and then delete it as I could just post it without DDD.

For someone to have seen it posted and then deleted "within minutes" they would have had to be watching at precisely the right time the night before as that is when it is posted. This is a rumour posted on another BB and should not be taken seriously.

As regards a price prediction is concerned, I expect DDD to be in single figures.

azhar - 07 May 2004 08:52 - 48 of 247

just before he massive increase in price was it not already 16p ish?

Pete Adams - 07 May 2004 09:52 - 49 of 247

Haystack,
Thanks for finding and posting the above information. I have had DDD on my watch list for some time, but held back as I was concerned about the risks. Needless to say, I have now dropped it.

ticker - 07 May 2004 09:59 - 50 of 247

Haystack,

Do you really think that DDD will fall below 10p mark? As far as I can understand DDD has good products in a growing market (unless I am not interpret the info correctly). How did you come to your prediction?

Thanks

Haystack - 07 May 2004 10:22 - 51 of 247

ticker
It is just my persoanl view. I really don't see a 3D market of any size. I know the 3D consortium has predicted a huge market, but it is a trade organisation and has its own reasons for hyping the market size. Even Sharp are only selling their 3D laptop to specialist business customers. They are not even attempting to sell any to ordinary consumers. It is also very expensive (about double the normal cost of a laptop these days).

I am not saying that DDD may not make substantial unexpected rises in price as it is that sort of stock. An announcement of another deal with a hardware company may well cause a jump in the share price for a short time. I cannot see substantial revenues for years ahead. The deal for the Sharp laptop was just to bundle some DDD software with it, so as to be able to demonstrate the laptop features. I cannot imagine that DDD got much per laptop for that and they are only going to sell a few of the laptops anyway.

The real question is whether people think that 3d TVs are on the way. There are rumours of 3D feature films. Well Imax has just closed down one of its huge 3D cimermas in UK a couple of weeks ago. That might indicate the interest in 3D.
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