awkuhn

3 Comments

    • Interview: Steven Sprague, CEO of Wave Systems Corp. (Nasdaq: WAVX) [view article]
      <i>“According to a recent broker survey we conducted, 84 percent of our originator base is interested in supporting an electronic signed solution,” explained Ellie Mae chief strategy officer Jonathan Corr. “We’re committed to listening to our customers and proactively responding with solutions to meet their needs. The addition of e-signature capabilities to Encompass illustrates this commitment. The time for e-signatures has certainly come, and we’ll help make e-signatures more commonly accepted through Encompass, which is already licensed by over 140,000 mortgage originators.” </i>

      1. The above is from Monday's PR with Ellie Mae. Can I interpret this so taht there is a possibility that Waves eTMS could ultimately be used by all 140K mortgage originators?

      2. Do any of the three licensed elements (SmartSafe, SmartSignature Server, SmartConnect web services) need to leverage TPM capabilities.

      Thank you
      Andy
      Mar 28 01:59 PM
    • Interview: Steven Sprague, CEO of Wave Systems Corp. (Nasdaq: WAVX) [view article]
      Steven,

      Great three days here on seekingalpha.com Thank you!

      I have one more question and it is in regard to the often discussed subject of "secure execution space"

      While the ARM "TrustZone" security extension is quite clear I am struggling with what Intel's VT and TXT in the upcoming processors will do in regard to "trusted execution". How will it affect Wave and how can Wave help and therefore benefit with these technologies? Will our E2 based "applet business" benefit from these technologies and possibly see a resurrection?

      Thank you
      Andy
      Mar 28 08:31 AM
    • Interview: Steven Sprague, CEO of Wave Systems Corp. (Nasdaq: WAVX) [view article]
      Hi Steven,

      We always hear that the market needs a lot of education yet about the TPM, what it is and what it can do. I am not surprised that this is indeed the case as the TCG has not exactly been very forthcoming with information about this technology. I think we'll see broader adoption once the press starts talking about it on a much broader base and on a technically much better level than they do today.

      It appears that the basic required elements for the TCG infrastructure (clients, servers, applications etc.) are finalyy coming together. Will the TCG and its member companies do the required - better - job better in the future or is what we've seen so far the extent of it?

      Thank you
      awk
      Mar 26 07:29 PM
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