Top Stocks Technology Special Report Newsletter
Had you invested $10,000 in Cisco Systems back in early 1990, your investment would now be worth $3,650,000!

$10,000 invested a decade ago in semiconductor giant Intel would be worth almost $500,000 today and fledgling Microsoft would be pushing $1 million. The tecnology revolution has created unprecedented wealth for innovators like Microsoft's legendary Bill Gates and the countless employees and investors who are sitting on millions in Microsoft stock.
Explosive Technology Stocks! Overnight our lives are spun around creating wealthy markets with explosive earning and growth for savy investors.

How do you get in on those deals—especially if you're not a Silicon Valley insider? How do you buy the high-tech win-ners and avoid the losers? How do you find the Yahoo!s, Microsofts, and Ciscos of tomorrow?
TELEMEDICUS (TMDI) REVOLUTIONIZES
THE DELIVERY OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL CARE!

DREAMSTM is the latest generation of mobile medical communication technology that allows a doctor to be “virtually on board” the ambulance or life flight as the patient is transported to the hospital or at the scene of an accident or at a remote location where traditional medical treatment is impractical or unavailable.

Investors

New Federal Government Recommendations Favor Telemedicus
February 27, 2008 - “The capabilities offered by TMDI’s DREAMS™ technology are precisely what the report is calling for,” said Steve Price, the new COO of Telemedicus. “The report validates what Telemedicus intends to accomplish in updating EMS and Homeland Security systems for emergency response in any crisis.”

First Commercial Remote Unit
Jan 17, 2008 - Telemedicus announced it will receive its initial commercial version of a DREAMS™ remote unit from Texas A&M at the end of January as the company prepares for market rollout anticipated in early 2008.

“Upon receipt of this unit, we will have all of the documentation necessary to complete technology transfer from Texas A&M to Telemedicus. This will allow for effective transfer from Telemedicus to supply chain partners for sourcing, manufacturing and commercialization of this exciting technology for remote situations,” said Thomas Cloud, CEO of Telemedicus.

Telemedicus owns the exclusive rights to an innovative breakthrough in rapid medical emergency response and communications technology called "Disaster Relief and Emergency Medical Services (DREAMSTM)", jointly developed by the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston, led by Dr. Red Duke and the Texas A&M University led by Dr. Richard Ewing, under a $18 million dollar Department of Defense grant.

Dr Red Duke, "How DREAMS Works" DREAMSTM is the latest generation of mobile medical communication technology that allows a doctor to be “virtually on board” the ambulance or life flight as the patient is transported to the hospital or at the scene of an accident or at a remote location where traditional medical treatment is impractical or unavailable.

”As an eminent telemedicine innovator, it is our mission to deliver medical communications technology employing our unique software communications capabilities and proven solutions for bi-directional audio, video and patient data communication between a remote unit and a physician."
-
Dr Red Duke


A revolution in the medical industry is right under our noses. Your personal doctor should be reading about it every day in his medical journals. Almost everything your doctor learned in medical school is affected by telemedicine.

“The ambulance and the technology have definitely improved the quality of care to the patients and increased the training that we receive as paramedics. The longer the unit is in the field the more lives that it will eventually save.” Mike Templeton (Senior Supervisor) Liberty Co EMS

New breakthroughs in diagnosis and treatment practices are strengthening the very foundations of Emergency Medical and Trauma Centers throughout North America and the World. Revolutionary changes n the delivery of life saving procedures to a trauma victim or even during local or national disasters will mean the difference in life-saving and life-giving practices.

The “Disaster Relief and Emergency Medical Services (DREAMSTM) Technology” developed by Texas A&M University and the University of Texas Health Science Center is the latest generation of mobile medical communication technology that allows a doctor to be “virtually on board” the ambulance or life flight as the patient is transported to the hospital, or ‘virtually connected” from any remote location.

“DREAMSTM technology turns practically any ambulance or medical transportation vehicle into a mobile trauma center, and it allows for better patient care in rural areas where medical specialists are not available.” Tommy Cloud, CEO Telemedicus, Inc.

Telemedicus is likely to participate in further mergers, acquisition, and/or technology commercialization opportunities as industry consolidation continues to change the face of medical technology.



Telemedicus (TMDI)
Symbol: TMDI.PK
Recent Price:    0.07 +0.02 (+27.273%)
Day Range:
0.07 - 0.07
Recent Volume: 10,500
Avg Volume:
66,584.6
52 Week Range:
$0.12 - 0.85
Shares Outstanding:   18.73M
Market Cap:
$3.00M
Pick Price:   $0.06 (11-Oct-06)
Total Gains:   +16.667%
Short Term Target Price:  $1.34
Long Term Target Price:  $2.45
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Telemedicine is Dominating an expanding medical technology marketplace!


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It was not that long ago technolgy stocks made investing look like falling off a log. All you needed to do was find a technology stock and throw money at it, bake at 250 degrees for three weeks and bingo - you're minting money. Everybody from your plumber to your dry cleaner was doling out "hot" stock picks. Skip a few years into the future and we gasped in horror as all those virtual traders jumped out of their MS Windows.

We were confirmed that reality had set in. The Real World had returned to Wall Street and now we have to do the hard thing - work for your investing dollars.

The Wall Street's darlings in the late 1990s were showng their age at the turn of 2001. Tech saturated Nasdaq Composite index bloated over 85% in 1999, 2001 the weight watchers support group had an intervention shedding 39%, 21% in 2001 and 32% in 2002. Those stretch tight pants started to look like baggy sweats in a few short months.

In 2003 and 2004 Nasdaq jumped 50% and 9%, no longer on a bing...but a healthy repectful weight mangement program that would make Richard Simmons blush with pride.

The pullback was for the most part a minor pain compared to the gains during the tech revolution during the late 1990's. $10,000 in Cisco late in 1994, you'd have been sitting on more than $99,000 as of the end of 2004. And that's even after Cisco's 28.6% loss in 2000, its 52.7% loss in 2001 and its 27.7% loss in 2002. Unfortunately, many tech investors weren't so lucky. They bought the wrong stocks at the wrong time and are still suffering.

Today tech stocks are now better understood. These periods of study and analysis has proved much of the conventional wisdom at the time was downright foolish. Tech stocks are subject to most all the pitfalls of other sectors. Hubris allowed many investors dream of the market where rules of business didn't apply.

Investors are demanding to see real earnings not just the promise of someday as well as a plan that can pull a company through rough economic times. Investors will return to the good companies once the dust has cleared. But unless you have patience and staying power, tech stocks can fray your nerves and your portfolio. (Source Smart Money)

Risk/Reward

Technology stocks as a group prove to be more volatile than the broader market. As the Tech Rev matures a Best of Breed stable high-tech stock emerges. Tech Stocks like Microsoft and Intel still tend to bounce around more than a traditional blue chip like General Electric. Technology Stocks and their earnings have become predictable enough to eliminate the wild volatility found among tech companies relatively new to the scene.

Some tech stocks are considered high-tech blue chips and have a place in many investors' long-term portfolios, since the volatility they do exhibit can be offset by their superior growth prospects over time. Many experienced investors then try to augment their returns with riskier stocks that offer the possibility of even greater growth.



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Fire up your investment portfolio with these Best of Breeds High Flying Technology Securities! A few years ago $10,000 invested in semiconductor giant Intel would be worth almost $500,000 today and Microsoft would be pushing $1 million. TechRev (technology revolution) has created wealth at an unprecedented rate both for innovators like Microsoft's legendary Bill Gates and the countless secretaries he employs who are sitting on millions in Microsoft stock. Anyone who has thought about investing has probably indulged at least one fantasy of discovering the next Dell Computer or Cisco Systems.

The companies behind them grow so quickly. We live in an age when technology can change our lives seemingly overnight, and that invariably creates rich new markets and explosive earnings growth for countless companies.

Networking leader Cisco has caught fire by developing better equipment to manage the Web's vast flow of digital information. Dell has become one of America's hottest stocks by providing cheap tools to access that information. America Online has grown from nothing to more than $3 billion in sales by making the information compelling. Add it up and those three companies alone generated $305 billion in new wealth for investors between 1995 and 1998.

Technology stocks can be treacherous. New markets are by nature filled with danger, and that means actual earnings -- or the prospect of future earnings -- can fluctuate wildly. News of a PC-sales slowdown at Christmas can cause investors to flee any number of related stocks -- from PC-maker Gateway to Novellus Systems, which makes the equipment that fabricates the chips that power the PCs that Gateway sells. Investors will return to the good companies once the dust has cleared. But unless you have patience and staying power, such crises can easily wipe you out.

Risk/Reward

The good news is that while technology stocks as a group tend to be more volatile than the broader market, they are not monolithic. Some classes of tech stocks are much more volatile than others. Indeed, as the revolution in computing and telecommunications matures, a new breed of more stable high-tech stocks is emerging. Microsoft, Intel, Cisco, Lucent Technologies -- these stocks tend to bounce around more than a traditional blue chip like General Electric. But their earnings have become predictable enough to eliminate the gut-wrenching volatility found among highflying startups like eBay or Amazon.com.

A selection of these high-tech blue chips should be in everyone's long-term portfolio, since the volatility they do exhibit is easily offset by their superior growth over time. Many experienced investors then try to augment their returns with riskier stocks that offer the possibility of even greater growth. But unless you have the time to monitor these stocks carefully and the wherewithal to weather the inevitable short-term blowups, this can quickly turn into a loser's game.

Our core advice is what we will tell you repeatedly: The key to investing in these uncertain waters is diversification. With a significant amount of time and effort, you can create a well-diversified portfolio yourself. Or you can buy one of the many fine technology mutual funds out there and hand the management responsibility over to a professional. The advantage to that is that the fund manager is paid to stay on top of the ever-changing world of technology and to pick the right set of investments to take advantage of the ripest opportunities. All you have to do is monitor him -- and keep your day job.

All penny stocks are high risk. You should not invest in any penny stock without significant due diligence and with no more than you can afford to lose.

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