RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:I've noticed alot of regularNo need for apologizes Rob, good discussion. for clarity for a few folks here about what exactly P O S Canada makes for the restaurant industry (I used these systems for 10 years) - When you give your order to your server, they enter it in the system. the drinks get sent to the printer at the bar for the bartender to make. the food items get sent to the kitchen for them to make the food. When you are finished the compiled bill is printed by the system. At the backend, the manager can pull up sales reports to show hoe much revenue was generated, and how many of each item was sold. The reason Isign is such a great fit to integrate into this chain is that now restaurants have a great fast, easy flexible way to promote items that have higher margins, or the restaurant has a lot of on hand, and show in the report how the sales during that offer period increased (or didn't). It also allows them a way to get fast easy feedback from customers. As for the actual payment processing, this is sometimes integrated into the system, and is often still separate. With the advent of mobile payments, I can see why having it integrated through Bluetooth would be desirable, but that could also be done through an independent payment system that has had a Bluetooth connectivity added. Isign did have a potential deal with one of these companies (Selectcore I think?), but it kinda faded out. As for why some here believe that P O S Canada customers would have been burdened with having to deal with two companies, I'm still lost. I think it's way simpler that than. Isign makes a deal with P O S for how much of the data revenue each gets - done. Maybe it's 50/50 or whatever. P O S has a network of sales people already interacting with their customers. P O S (NOT Isign) go in and sell in an Isign antenna as a valuable add on to the system, (integration is key because it allows the manager to gauge the ROI on using the antenna). When they sell it in they have the customer sign a form saying that the data will be collected also by P O S, and they and their partners may analyse it and/or sell it. As for how it works now, I would think they wouldn't try to confuse their customers by telling them they just got bought out by Isign, and that they are now focused on selling Isign hardware. They would continue to operate as P O S, and just sell the Isign antennas in as a value add on. I can understand why Isign would want to build their brand with the name, but it's easy to make that transition 6 months down the road and switch everything over to the Isign name after they've managed their customers through the change successfully by showing them that nothing has really changed. This keeps the customers from getting scared off by thinking that they will have to get to know a new rep, or somehow change how they deal with P O S. Sorry for the one long paragraph - my computer for some reason will not accept any attempts to separate paragraphs on these BB posts.