[X]
|
Quarterly
Report Under Section 13 or 15(d) of The Securities Exchange Act
of 1934
for the Quarterly Period Ended March 31,
2008
|
[
]
|
Transition
Report Under Section 13 or 15(d) of The Securities Exchange Act
of 1934
for the Transition Period from _______ to
_______
|
FLORIDA
|
65-0493217
|
(State
or other jurisdiction of
|
(IRS
Employer Identification No.)
|
incorporation
or organization)
|
Yes
[x]
|
No
[ ]
|
Large
accelerated filer
|
¨
|
Non-accelerated
filer
|
¨ (Do
not check if a smaller reporting company)
|
Accelerated
filer
|
¨
|
Smaller
reporting company
|
þ
|
PART
I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
|
|
ITEM
1. FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
|
3
|
ITEM
2. MANAGEMENT'S
DISCUSSION AND
ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF
OPERATION
|
10
|
ITEM
3. QUANITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES
ABOUT MARKET RISK
|
15
|
ITEM
4. CONTROLS
AND
PROCEDURES
|
15
|
PART
II. OTHER INFORMATION
|
|
ITEM
1. LEGAL
PROCEEDINGS
|
15
|
ITEM
1A. RISK FACTORS
|
15
|
ITEM
2. UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES
AND USE OF PROCEEDS
|
15
|
ITEM
3. DEFAULTS
UPON SENIOR
SECURITIES
|
15
|
ITEM
4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE
OF
SECURITY HOLDERS
|
15
|
ITEM
5. OTHER
INFORMATION
|
15
|
ITEM
6. EXHIBITS
AND REPORTS ON FORM
8-K
|
15
|
SIGNATURES
|
16
|
INDEX
TO
EXHIBITS
|
17
|
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS ASSOCIATES,
INC.
|
||||||||
ACCOUNTANT'S
REPORT......................................................................................................................
|
4
|
|||||||
FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
|
||||||||
Balance
Sheet...............................................................................................................................................
|
5
|
|||||||
Statements
of
Operations................................................................................................................................
|
6
|
|||||||
Statements
of Stockholders'
Equity................................................................................................................................
|
7
|
|||||||
Statements
of Cash
Flows...............................................................................................................
|
8
|
|||||||
Notes
to the Financial
Statements.......................................................................................................
|
9
|
|||||||
To
the Board of
Directors
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
Information
Systems Associates,
Inc.
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
2120
Danforth
Circle
|
|
|
|
||||||
Palm
City, Florida 34990
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I
have compiled the accompanying
balance sheet of Information Systems Associates, Inc. as
of
|
|||||||||
March
31, 2008, and the related
statements of operations, stockholders' equity, and cash flows
for
|
|||||||||
the
three months ended March 31,
2008 and 2007, in accordance with Statements on Standards
for
|
|||||||||
Accounting
and Review Services
issued by the American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants.
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A
compilation is limited to
presenting in the form of financial statements information
that is
the
|
|||||||||
representation
of management. I
have not audited or reviewed the accompanying financial
statements
|
|||||||||
and,
accordingly, do not express
an opinion or any other form of assurance on them.
|
|
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/s/
William
L. DeBay, C.P.A.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
William
L. DeBay,
C.P.A.
|
|
|
|
|
|||||
May
12,
2008
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS ASSOCIATES,
INC.
BALANCE
SHEET
MARCH
31,
2008
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Unaudited
|
||||||||
ASSETS
|
Unaudited
|
Audited
|
||||||
31-Mar-08
|
31-Dec-07
|
|||||||
CURRENT
ASSETS
|
||||||||
Cash
and cash
equivalent
|
$ | 6,369 | $ | 13,326 | ||||
Accounts
receivable
|
183,705 | 114,175 | ||||||
Prepaid
consulting
|
0 | 1,798 | ||||||
Income
tax claims
receivable
|
637 | 637 | ||||||
Deferred
income tax
credit
|
36,129 | 37,154 | ||||||
Total
current
assets
|
226,840 | 167,090 | ||||||
PROPERTY
AND EQUIPMENT
(net)
|
111,773 | 139,360 | ||||||
$ | 338,613 | $ | 306,450 | |||||
LIABILITIES
AND STOCKHOLDERS'
EQUITY
|
||||||||
CURRENT
LIABILITIES
|
||||||||
Note
payable - line of
credit
|
$ | 35,835 | $ | 9,030 | ||||
Accounts
payable
|
87,766 | 88,066 | ||||||
Accrued
payroll
taxes
|
4,459 | 2,476 | ||||||
Other
liabilities
|
600 | 1,100 | ||||||
Total
current
liabilities
|
128,660 | 100,672 | ||||||
STOCKHOLDERS'
EQUITY
|
||||||||
Common
stock - $.001 par value,
50,000,000 shares
|
||||||||
authorized,
11,403,834 shares
issued and outstanding
|
11,404 | 11,404 | ||||||
Additional
paid in
capital
|
366,097 | 366,097 | ||||||
Retained
earnings
(deficit)
|
(167,548 | ) | (171,723 | ) | ||||
Total
stockholders'
equity
|
209,953 | 205,778 | ||||||
$ | 338,613 | $ | 306,450 | |||||
SEE ACCOMPANYING NOTES AND ACCOUNTANT'S REPORT. |
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS ASSOCIATES,
INC.
|
|||||||||
STATEMENTS
OF
OPERATIONS
|
|||||||||
FOR
THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH
31, 2008 AND 2007
|
|||||||||
Unaudited
|
|||||||||
2008
|
2007
|
||||||||
EARNED
REVENUES
|
$ |
256,265
|
$56,218
|
||||||
OPERATING
EXPENSES
|
|||||||||
Administrative
and
general
|
92,442
|
26,297
|
|||||||
Payroll
and payroll
tax
|
35,623
|
14,341
|
|||||||
Professional
|
121,202
|
35,005
|
|||||||
Total
operating
expenses
|
249,267
|
75,643
|
|||||||
OPERATING
INCOME
(LOSS)
|
6,998
|
(19,425)
|
|||||||
OTHER
INCOME
(EXPENSE)
|
|||||||||
Consulting
-
financing
|
(1,798)
|
(9,876)
|
|||||||
INCOME
(LOSS) FROM
CONTINUING OPERATIONS
|
|||||||||
BEFORE
INCOME TAX
(CREDIT)
|
5,200
|
(29,301)
|
|||||||
PROVISION
FOR INCOME
TAX (CREDIT)
|
1,025
|
(5,645)
|
|||||||
NET
INCOME
(LOSS) FROM CONTINUING
OPERATIONS
|
4,175
|
(23,656)
|
|||||||
DISCONTINUED
OPERATIONS
|
|||||||||
INCOME
(LOSS) FROM OPERATIONS OF
DISCONTINUED
|
|||||||||
BUSINESS
BEFORE INCOME TAX
(CREDIT)
|
0
|
(9,631)
|
|||||||
PROVISION
FOR INCOME TAX
(CREDIT)
|
0
|
(1,855)
|
|||||||
NET
INCOME (LOSS) FROM
DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS
|
0
|
(7,776)
|
|||||||
NET
INCOME
(LOSS)
|
$ |
4,175
|
($31,432)
|
||||||
BASICALLY
AND FULLY
DILUTED INCOME (LOSS) PER SHARE
|
|||||||||
CONTINUING
OPERATIONS
|
$ |
0
|
($0)
|
||||||
DISCONTINUED
OPERATIONS
|
$ |
0
|
($0)
|
||||||
TOTAL
OPERATIONS
|
$ |
0
|
($0)
|
||||||
WEIGHTED
AVERAGE SHARES
OUTSTANDING
|
11,403,834
|
11,403,834
|
|||||||
SEE ACCOMPANYING NOTES AND ACCOUNTANT'S REPORT. |
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS ASSOCIATES,
INC.
|
|||||
STATEMENTS
OF CASH
FLOWS
|
|||||
FOR
THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH
31, 2008 AND 2007
|
|||||
Unaudited
|
|||||
2008
|
2007
|
||||
CASH
FLOWS FROM OPERATING
ACTIVITIES
|
|||||
Net
income
(loss)
|
$ |
4,175
|
($31,432)
|
||
Adjustments
to reconcile net
income (loss) to cash
|
|||||
provided
(used) by operating
activities
|
|||||
Depreciation
and
amortization
|
11,992
|
481
|
|||
Cumulative
change in deferred
income tax
|
1,025
|
(7,500)
|
|||
(Increase)
decrease in accounts
receivable
|
(69,530)
|
13,272
|
|||
(Increase)
decrease in prepaid
payroll taxes
|
0
|
(276)
|
|||
(Increase)
decrease in prepaid
consulting
|
1,798
|
9,876
|
|||
Increase
(decrease) in accounts
payable
|
(300)
|
15,898
|
|||
Increase
(decrease) in accrued
payroll
|
0
|
(6,041)
|
|||
Increase
(decrease) in accrued
payroll taxes
|
1,983
|
0
|
|||
Increase
(decrease) in other
liabilities
|
(500)
|
0
|
|||
Net
cash provided (used) by
operating activities
|
(49,357)
|
(5,722)
|
|||
CASH
FLOWS FROM INVESTING
ACTIVITIES
|
|||||
Computer
software development
costs
|
0
|
(30,174)
|
|||
Software
license agreement -
payments received
|
27,083
|
0
|
|||
Software
license agreement -
marketing costs
|
(9,020)
|
0
|
|||
Purchase
of property and
equipment
|
(2,468)
|
0
|
|||
Net
cash provided (used) by
investing activities
|
15,595
|
(30,174)
|
|||
CASH
FLOWS FROM FINANCING
ACTIVITIES
|
|||||
Proceeds
from note payable - line
of credit
|
28,805
|
0
|
|||
Payments
made on note payable -
line of credit
|
(2,000)
|
0
|
|||
Net
cash provided (used) by
financing activities
|
26,805
|
0
|
|||
NET
INCREASE (DECREASE) IN
CASH
|
(6,957)
|
(35,896)
|
|||
CASH,
BEGINNING OF
PERIOD
|
13,326
|
178,775
|
|||
CASH,
END OF
PERIOD
|
$ |
6,369
|
$142,879
|
||
SEE
ACCOMPANYING NOTES AND
ACCOUNTANT'S REPORT.
|
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS ASSOCIATES,
INC.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
STATEMENTS
OF STOCKHOLDERS'
EQUITY
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
FOR
THE THREE MONTHS ENDED MARCH
31, 2008 AND 2007
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unaudited
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Additional
|
Retained
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Common
Stock
|
Preferred
Stock
|
Paid-in
|
Earnings
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Shares
|
Amount
|
Shares
|
Amount
|
Capital
|
(Deficit)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
THREE
MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31,
2008
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Balance,
December 31,
2007
|
11,403,834 | $ | 11,404 | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 366,097 | $ | (171,723 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net
income (loss
)
|
4,175 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Balance,
March 31,
2008
|
11,403,834 | $ | 11,404 | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 366,097 | $ | (167,548 | ) | |||||||||||||
Additional
|
Retained
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Common
Stock
|
Preferred
Stock
|
Paid-in
|
Earnings
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
Shares
|
Amount
|
Shares
|
Amount
|
Capital
|
(Deficit)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
THREE
MONTHS ENDED MARCH 31,
2007
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Balance,
December 31,
2006
|
11,403,834 | $ | 11,404 | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 366,097 | $ | (119,568 | ) | |||||||||||||
Net
income (loss
)
|
(31,432 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Balance,
March 31,
2007
|
11,403,834 | $ | 11,404 | 0 | $ | 0 | $ | 366,097 | $ | (151,000 | ) | |||||||||||||
SEE
ACCOMPANYING NOTES AND
ACCOUNTANT'S REPORT.
|
INFORMATION
SYSTEMS ASSOCIATES,
INC.
|
||||||||
NOTES
TO THE FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
|
||||||||
MARCH 31, 2008 and 2007
|
||||||||
Note
1 -
Statement of Significant Accounting Policies
|
||||||||
(a)
Business
Activity
|
||||||||
Information
Systems Associates, Inc. (Company) was incorporated under the
laws of
the
|
||||||||
state
of Florida
on May 31, 1994. The Company provides services and software
system
design
|
||||||||
for
the planning
and implementation of Computer Aided Facilities Management
(CAFM)
based
|
||||||||
asset
management
tools. The Company also provided services through its insurance
sales
|
||||||||
business
(discontinued as of March 31, 2007).
|
||||||||
(b)
Cash and Cash
Equivalent
|
||||||||
For
the purposes
of the Statement of Cash Flows, the Company considers liquid
investments
|
||||||||
with
an original
maturity of three months or less to be a cash
equivalent.
|
||||||||
(c)
Management’s
Use of Estimates
|
||||||||
The
preparation
of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles
generally
|
||||||||
accepted
in the
United States of America requires management to make estimates
and
|
||||||||
assumptions
that
affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosures
of
|
||||||||
contingent
assets
and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and
the reported
amounts
|
||||||||
of
revenues and
expenses during the reporting period. Actual results could
differ from
those
|
||||||||
estimates.
|
||||||||
(d)
Revenue
Recognition
|
||||||||
The
Company
recognizes revenue in accordance with SEC Staff Accounting
Bulletin No.
104,
|
||||||||
"Revenue
Recognition" and Emerging Issues Task Force, or EITF, Issue
No.
00-21,
|
||||||||
"Revenue
Arrangements with Multiple Deliverables".
|
||||||||
Consulting
services and training revenues are accounted for separately
from
subscription
|
||||||||
and
support
revenues when these services have value to the customer on
a
standalone
|
||||||||
basis
and there
is objective and reliable evidence of fair value of each deliverable.
When
|
||||||||
accounted
for
separately, revenues are recognized as the services are rendered
for
time
|
||||||||
and
material
contracts, and when the milestones are achieved and accepted
by
the
|
||||||||
customer
for
fixed price contracts. The majority of our consulting service
contracts are on
|
||||||||
a
time and
material basis. Training revenues are recognized after the
services
are
|
||||||||
performed.
For
revenue arrangements with multiple deliverables, we allocate
the
total
|
||||||||
customer
arrangement to the separate units of accounting based on their
relative
fair
|
||||||||
values,
as
determined by the price of the undelivered items when sold
separately.
|
||||||||
In
determining
whether the consulting services can be accounted for separately
from
|
||||||||
subscription
and
support revenues, we consider the following factors for each
consulting
|
||||||||
agreement:
availability of the consulting services from other vendors,
whether
objective
|
||||||||
and
reliable
evidence for fair value exists for the undelivered elements,
the nature of
the
|
||||||||
consulting
services, the timing of when the consulting contract was signed
in
comparison
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Note
1 -
Statement of Significant Accounting Policies
(continued)
|
||||||||
(d)
Revenue
Recognition (continued)
|
||||||||
to
the
subscription service start date, and the contractual dependence
of the
subscription
|
||||||||
service
on the
customer's satisfaction with the consulting work. If a
consulting
|
||||||||
arrangement
does
not qualify for separate accounting, we recognize the
consulting
|
||||||||
revenue
ratably
over the remaining term of the subscription contract. Additionally,
in
these
|
||||||||
situations
we
defer the direct costs of the consulting arrangement and amortize
those
|
||||||||
costs
over the
same time period as the consulting revenue is recognized. We
did not
have
|
||||||||
any
revenue
arrangements with multiple deliverables for the period ending
December 31,
2007.
|
||||||||
(e)
Comprehensive
Income (Loss)
|
||||||||
The
Company
adopted Financial Accounting Board Statement of Financial
Accounting
|
||||||||
Standards
(SFAS)
No. 130, "Reporting Comprehensive Income”, which establishes standards
for
|
||||||||
the
reporting and
display of comprehensive income and its components in the
financial
|
||||||||
statements.
There
were no items of comprehensive income (loss) applicable to
the
Company
|
||||||||
during
periods
covered in the financial statements.
|
||||||||
(f)
Income
Taxes
|
||||||||
Income
taxes are
provided in accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards
|
||||||||
(SFAS)
No. 109,
"Accounting for Income Taxes". A deferred tax asset or liability
is
recorded for
|
||||||||
all
temporary
differences between financial and tax and net operating loss
carry
forwards.
|
||||||||
Deferred
tax
assets are reduced by a valuation allowance when, in the opinion
of
management,
|
||||||||
it
is more likely
than not that some portion or the entire deferred tax asset
will not be
realized.
|
||||||||
Deferred
tax
assets and liabilities are adjusted for the effect of changes
in tax laws
and rates on
|
||||||||
the
date of
enactment.
|
||||||||
(g)
Fair Value of
Financial Instruments
|
||||||||
The
carrying
amounts reported in the balance sheet for cash, accounts receivable
and
payables
|
||||||||
and
loans payable
approximate fair value based on the short-term maturity of
these
instruments.
|
||||||||
The
carrying
value of the Company’s long-term debt approximated its fair value based on
the
|
||||||||
current
market
conditions for similar debt instruments.
|
||||||||
(h)
Accounts
Receivable
|
||||||||
Accounts
receivable are stated at estimated net realizable value. Accounts
receivable are
|
||||||||
comprised
of
balances due from customers net of estimated allowances for
uncollectible
|
||||||||
accounts.
In
determining the collections on the account, historical trends
are
evaluated and
|
||||||||
specific
customer
issues are reviewed to arrive at appropriate
allowances.
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Note
1 -
Statement of Significant Accounting Policies
(continued)
|
||||||||
(i)
Property and
Equipment
|
||||||||
Property
and
equipment is stated at cost. Depreciation is provided by the
straight-line
method
|
||||||||
over
the
estimated economic life of the property and equipment (three
to ten
years). When
|
||||||||
assets
are sold
or retired, their costs and accumulated deprecation are eliminated
from
the
|
||||||||
accounts
and any
gain or loss resulting from their disposal is included in the
statement
of
|
||||||||
operations.
|
||||||||
The
Company
recognizes an impairment loss on property and equipment when
evidence,
such
|
||||||||
as
the sum of
expected future cash flows (undiscounted and without interest
charges),
indicates
|
||||||||
that
future
operations will not produce sufficient revenue to cover the
related future
costs,
|
||||||||
including
depreciation, and when the carrying amount of the asset cannot
be realized
through
|
||||||||
sale.
Measurement
of the impairment loss is based on the fair value of the
assets.
|
||||||||
(j)
Impairment of
Long-Lived Assets
|
||||||||
The
Company
evaluated the recoverability of its property, equipment, and
other assets
in
|
||||||||
accordance
with
Statements of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) No. 144,
“Accounting
|
||||||||
for
the
Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets”, which requires recognition
of
|
||||||||
impairment
of
long-lived assets in the event the net book value of such assets
exceeds
the
|
||||||||
estimated
future
undiscounted cash flows attributable to such assets or the
business to
which
|
||||||||
such
intangible
assets relate.
|
||||||||
(k)
Software
Development Costs
|
||||||||
The
Company
accounts for costs incurred to develop computer software for
internal use
in
|
||||||||
accordance
with
Statement of Position (SOP) 98-1, "Accounting for the Costs
of
Computer
|
||||||||
Software
Developed or Obtained for Internal Use". As required by SOP
98-1, the
Company
|
||||||||
capitalizes
the
costs incurred during the application development stage, which
include
costs to
|
||||||||
design
the
software configuration and interfaces, coding, installation,
and testing.
Costs incurred
|
||||||||
during
the
preliminary project along with post-implementation stages of
internal use
computer
|
||||||||
software
are
expensed as incurred. Capitalized development costs are amortized
over
a
|
||||||||
period
of three
years. Costs incurred to maintain existing product offerings
are expensed
as
|
||||||||
incurred.
The
capitalization and ongoing assessment of recoverability of
development
costs
|
||||||||
requires
considerable judgment by management with respect to certain
external
factors,
|
||||||||
including,
but
not limited to, technological and economic feasibility, and
estimated
economic life.
|
||||||||
After
the
development of the internal-use "On Site Physical Inventory
" software
(OSPI) was
|
||||||||
complete,
the
Company decided to market the software. Proceeds from the licenses
of
the
|
||||||||
computer
software, net of direct incremental costs of marketing, such
as
commissions,
|
||||||||
software
reproduction costs, warranty and service obligations, and installation
costs, are
|
||||||||
applied
against
the carrying cost of that software. No profit will be recognized
until
aggregate
|
||||||||
net
proceeds from
licenses and amortization have reduced the carrying amount
of
the
|
||||||||
software
to zero.
Subsequent proceeds will be recognized in revenue as
earned.
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Note
1 -
Statement of Significant Accounting Policies
(continued)
|
||||||||
(l)
Share-Based
Payments
|
||||||||
In
December 2004,
the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued
SFAS
|
||||||||
No.
123 (R),
“Share-Based Payments”, which establishes standards for transactions in
which
|
||||||||
an
entity
exchanges its equity instruments for goods and services. This
standard
replaces SFAS
|
||||||||
No.
123 and
supersedes Accounting Principles Board (APB) Opinion No. 25,
"Accounting
|
||||||||
for
Stock-Based
Compensation”. This standard requires a public entity to measure the
cost
|
||||||||
of
employee
services using an option-pricing model, such as the Black-Scholes
Model,
received
|
||||||||
in
exchange for
an award of equity instruments based on the grant-date fair
value of the
award.
|
||||||||
This
eliminates
the exception to account for such awards using the intrinsic
method
previously
|
||||||||
allowable
under
APB No. 25. Shares of common stock issued for services rendered
by a
third
|
||||||||
party
are
recorded at the fair market value of the shares issued or services
rendered, whichever
|
||||||||
is
more readily
determinable. The shares are valued using the most recent private
sale of
stock
|
||||||||
since
the Company
is not traded on a public market. The Company adopted this
standard
during
|
||||||||
year
ended
December 31, 2006 using the modified prospective
method.
|
||||||||
(m)
Dividends
|
||||||||
The
Company has
not yet adopted any policy regarding payment of
dividends. No
|
||||||||
dividends
have
been paid or declared since inception.
|
||||||||
(n)
Advertising
Expenses
|
||||||||
Advertising
costs
are expensed as incurred. For the three months ended March,
2008
|
||||||||
and
2007, no
advertising costs were incurred.
|
||||||||
(o)
Earnings
(Loss) Per Share
|
||||||||
The
Company
reports earnings (loss) per share in accordance with Statement
of
|
||||||||
Financial
Accounting Standard (SFAS) No.128. This statement requires
dual
|
||||||||
presentation
of
basic and diluted earnings (loss) with a reconciliation of
the
numerator
|
||||||||
and
denominator
of the loss per share computations. Basic earnings per
share
|
||||||||
amounts
are based
on the weighted average shares of common outstanding.
If
|
||||||||
applicable,
diluted earnings per share assume the conversion, exercise
or issuance
of
|
||||||||
all
common stock
instruments such as options, warrants and convertible
securities,
|
||||||||
unless
the effect
is to reduce a loss or increase earnings per share. Accordingly,
this
|
||||||||
presentation
has
been adopted for the periods presented. There were no
adjustments
|
||||||||
required
to net
income for the period presented in the computation of diluted
earnings
|
||||||||
per
share. There
were no common stock equivalents (CSE) necessary for
the
|
||||||||
computation
of
diluted loss per share.
|
||||||||
Note
1 -
Statement of Significant Accounting Policies
(continued)
|
||||||||
(p)
Recent
Accounting Pronouncements
|
||||||||
In
December 2007,
the FASB issued two new statements: (a) SFAS No. 141
(revised
|
||||||||
2007),
Business
Combinations, and (b) No. 160, Noncontrolling Interests
in
|
||||||||
Consolidated
Financial Statements. These statements are effective for fiscal
years
|
||||||||
beginning
after
December 15, 2008, and the application of these standards
will
|
||||||||
improve,
simplify
and converge internationally the accounting
for
|
||||||||
business
combinations and the reporting of noncontrolling interests
in
consolidated
|
||||||||
financial
statements. The Company is in the process of evaluating the
impact, if any,
|
||||||||
of
SFAS 141 (R)
and SFAS 160 and does not anticipate that the adoption of
these
|
||||||||
standards
will
have any impact on its financial statements.
|
||||||||
(a) SFAS
No. 141 (R) requires an acquiring entity in a business combination
to:
(i)
|
||||||||
recognize
all
(and only) the assets acquired and the liabilities assumed
in
the
|
||||||||
transaction,
(ii)
establish an acquisition-date fair value as the measurement
objective
|
||||||||
for
all assets
acquired and the liabilities assumed, (iii) disclose to investors
and
|
||||||||
other
users all
of the information they will need to evaluate and understand
the
nature
|
||||||||
of,
and the
financial effect of, the business combination, and (iv) recognize
and
|
||||||||
measure
the
goodwill acquired in the business combination or a gain from
a
bargain
|
||||||||
purchase.
|
||||||||
(b)
SFAS No. 160
will improve the relevance, comparability and transparency
of
|
||||||||
financial
information provided to investors by requiring all entities
to: (i)
report
|
||||||||
noncontrolling
(minority) interests in subsidiaries in the same manner as
equity
but
|
||||||||
separate
from the
parent's equity in consolidated financial statements, (ii)
net
|
||||||||
income
attributable to the parent and to the non-controlling interest
must be
clearly
|
||||||||
identified
and
presented on the face of the consolidated statement of income,
and
(iii)
|
||||||||
any
changes in
the parent's ownership interest while the parent retains the
controlling
|
||||||||
financial
interest in its subsidiary be accounted for
consistently.
|
||||||||
In
March 2008,
the FASB issued SFAS No. 161, "Disclosures about
Derivative
|
||||||||
Instruments
and
Hedging Activities, an amendment of FASB Statement No.
133"
|
||||||||
("SFAS
161").
This new standard requires enhanced disclosures for
derivative
|
||||||||
instruments,
including those used in hedging activities. It is effective
for fiscal
years
|
||||||||
and
interim
periods beginning after November 15, 2008, and will be applicable
to
the
|
||||||||
Company
in the
first quarter of fiscal 2009. The Company is currently evaluating
the
|
||||||||
impact
of this
statement and does not anticipate that it will have an impact
on
the
|
||||||||
Company's
financial position or results of operations.
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Note
2- Cash and
Cash Equivalent
|
||||||||
2008
|
2007
|
|||||||
Wachovia
Bank
(FDIC insured to $100,000.00)
|
$6,369
|
$142,879
|
||||||
Note
3 - Property
and Equipment
|
||||||||
2008
|
2007
|
|||||||
Computer
software
(developed for internal use)
|
$119,726
|
$0
|
||||||
Computer
software
(purchased)
|
1,307
|
1,307
|
||||||
Furniture,
fixtures, and equipment
|
27,166
|
16,750
|
||||||
148,199
|
18,057
|
|||||||
Less
accumulated
depreciation and amortization
|
36,426
|
11,402
|
||||||
$111,773
|
$6,655
|
|||||||
Depreciation
and
amortization expense
|
$13,513
|
$481
|
||||||
Note
4 - Computer
Software Developed for Internal Use
|
||||||||
During
the year
ended December 31, 2007, the Company completed the
development
|
||||||||
of
the of the
internal-use software, "On Site Physical Inventory" (OSPI).
The OSPI
software
|
||||||||
was
developed to
be used by the Company for collecting data for information
technology
|
||||||||
assets
installed
in data centers. The Company began using the OSPI software
in
|
||||||||
October
2007
while providing consultation services for managing the
physical
|
||||||||
infrastructure
of
data centers.
|
||||||||
After
implementing the use of the OSPI software, the Company decided
to market the
|
||||||||
software
and entered into a software license agreement with Aperture
Technologies, Inc.
|
||||||||
The
Company has
capitalized the cost of the OSPI software using Statement
of
|
||||||||
Position
(SOP)
98-1, "Accounting for the Costs of Computer Software Developed
or
|
||||||||
Obtained
for
Internal Use" as follows:
|
||||||||
2008
|
2007
|
|||||||
Development
costs
|
$139,900
|
$74,237
|
||||||
Software
license
agreement - payments received
|
(40,625)
|
0
|
||||||
Software
license
agreement - marketing costs
|
20,451
|
0
|
||||||
119,726
|
74,237
|
|||||||
Less
accumulated
depreciation and amortization
|
22,735
|
0
|
||||||
$96,991
|
$74,237
|
|||||||
Note
5
- Note Payable
|
||||||||
The
Company has a
line of credit with Wachovia Bank NA. The line of credit
provides
|
||||||||
for
borrowing up
to $40,000. The balance as of March 31, 2008 is
$35,835. The
|
||||||||
interest
rate is
Prime Rate plus 3%. The President is a personal guarantor on
the line
|
||||||||
of
credit.
|
||||||||
Note
6 - Income
Taxes
|
||||||||
2008
|
2007
|
|||||||
Provision
for
income tax (credit) consists of:
|
||||||||
Current
accrual
|
$0
|
$0
|
||||||
Cumulative
change
in deferred income tax
|
1,025
|
(7,500)
|
||||||
$1,025
|
($7,500)
|
|||||||
Income
tax
receivable consists of the following:
|
||||||||
Federal
claim for
refund
|
$637
|
|||||||
The
Company had
the following net operating loss carryovers
|
||||||||
for
income tax
purposes:
|
||||||||
Expiring
2020
|
$204
|
|||||||
Expiring
2021
|
82,899
|
|||||||
Expiring
2022
|
133,233
|
|||||||
$216,336
|
||||||||
Note
7 -
Supplemental Cash Flow Information
|
||||||||
Supplemental
disclosures of cash flow information for the periods ended
December 31,
2007 and
|
||||||||
2006
is
summarized as follows:
|
||||||||
2008
|
2007
|
|||||||
Cash
paid during
the periods for interest and income taxes:
|
||||||||
Income
taxes
|
$0
|
$0
|
||||||
Interest
|
$458
|
$311
|
||||||
Note
8 -
Operating Lease
|
||||||||
The
Company
leases its Palm City Florida facility. The lease requires
monthly
|
||||||||
payments
of
$1,400. The lease commenced on June 1, 2007 and expires
on May 31,
|
||||||||
2008.
|
||||||||
The
following is
a schedule of the lease payments by year under the
lease:
|
||||||||
2008
|
$7,000
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
Note
9 - Employee
Benefits
|
||||||||
The
Company has a
SIMPLE Plan (Plan) to provide retirement and incidental benefits
for
|
||||||||
its
employees.
Employees may contribute from 1% to 15% of their annual compensation
to
the
|
||||||||
Plan,
limited to
a maximum annual amount as set periodically by the Internal
Revenue
Service.
|
||||||||
The
Company
matches employee contributions dollar for dollar up to the
IRS maximum.
All
|
||||||||
matching
contributions vest immediately. Such contributions to the Plan
are
allocated among
|
||||||||
eligible
participants in the proportion of their salaries to the total
salaries of
all participants.
|
||||||||
Company
matching
contributions to the Plan for the periods ended March 31, 2008
and
2007
|
||||||||
totaled
$900 and
$750.
|
||||||||
The
Company has a
medical reimbursement plan that reimburses officers for all
out of
pocket
|
||||||||
medical
expenses
not covered by the Company provided insurance plan. Company
expenses
|
||||||||
under
the medical
reimbursement plan for the periods ended March 31, 2008 and
2007
totaled
|
||||||||
$7,077
and
$7,610.
|
||||||||
Note
10
- Discontinued Operation
|
||||||||
On
April 1, 2007,
the Company decided to cease its insurance business due
to
|
||||||||
decreasing
sales
and a change in corporate strategy. Sales for the
insurance
|
||||||||
business
for the
three months ended March 31, 2007 were $10,251. The
insurance
|
||||||||
business
pretax
loss reported in discontinued operations for the three months
ended
|
||||||||
March
31, 2007
was $9,631. No assets or liabilities existed for the
business.
|
–
|
Improve
impact analysis, minimize errors and reduce staff requirements
associated
with changes
|
–
|
Enable
proactive infrastructure capacity
planning
|
–
|
Facilitate
the planning and execution of consolidation or relocation
projects
|
–
|
Provide
alerts for key performance indicators and threshold
conditions
|
–
|
Enforce
adherence to redundancy requirements and design guidelines to
ensure
availability and business
continuity
|
–
|
Reduce
mean-time-to-repair for outages
|
–
|
Ensure
compliance with standard or regulated
processes
|
–
|
Speed
time-to-market for new application
deployments
|
–
|
All
devices, including Mainframe, Open System and Network
devices.
|
–
|
Internal
device features, control units, logical
partitioning.
|
–
|
All
device ports, CHPIDs, interface.
|
–
|
Warranty,
install/de-install dates, contract and leasing
information.
|
–
|
All
fiber cables including ESCON, FICON, Fiber Channel, FDDI,
etc.
|
–
|
All
copper cables including Bus & Tag, SCSI, CAT5, Coax,
etc.
|
–
|
All
physical connectivity between devices and internal connectivity
through
switching equipment.
|
–
|
All
power equipment and connectivity.
|
–
|
Device
racks.
|
–
|
Copper
and fiber patch panels and
cabinets.
|
–
|
SAN
Fabric definition including aliases, zone sets and zone
members.
|
–
|
All
asset and connectivity data defined once with multiple physical/logical
displays of the data from different physical/logical
viewpoints.
|
–
|
Able
to link an asset to external documents such as Word documents,
CAD
drawings, spreadsheets, etc.
|
–
|
Track
equipment, furniture and telecom assets in use and in
inventory.
|
–
|
Assign
assets to locations, employees and cost
centers.
|
–
|
Report
on condition, depreciation, warranties and maintenance
histories.
|
–
|
Inventory
analysis, including leased vs. owned
assets.
|
–
|
Track
assets as individual components or create an asset made up of
many
individual components by recording a bill-of-materials (i.e.
workstation).
|
–
|
Establish
product standards.
|
–
|
Create
purchase orders and track cost, approval and
supplier.
|
–
|
Receive
goods and specify installed
location.
|
–
|
Track
warranties, insurance policies and asset leases, including duration
and
payments.
|
–
|
Create
multiple stock locations including non-fixed locations such as
maintenance
trucks.
|
–
|
Track
parts in stock, establish recommended stock levels and reorder
parts for
stock. Work orders reserve and use parts in
stock.
|
–
|
Track
the lifecycle of assets from purchase, to relocation to
disposition.
|
–
|
Report
on assets by location, department and
employee.
|
–
|
Review
expiring insurance policies, warranties and
leases.
|
–
|
Review
an assets maintenance history including on-demand and preventative
maintenance work.
|
–
|
Manage
parts inventories including allocated parts and
reordering.
|
–
|
Compare
actual furniture to typical furniture by room
type.
|
–
|
Keep
asset locations up to date in AutoCAD drawings or by issuing
move
orders.
|
§
|
Graphical
Design & Modeling of Datacenters
|
§
|
Auto-Build
Visual Documentation From Imported Bill of Materials
|
§
|
Advanced
Operations & Reporting
|
§
|
Modeling
and Impact Analysis of Datacenter Designs
|
§
|
Space,
Power, Cooling, and Cable Management
|
§
|
Generate
Detailed Datacenter and Rack Visualizations
|
§
|
Ensure
Racks and the Datacenter are Within Design Limits
|
§
|
Instantly
Find Available Datacenter Resources
|
§
|
Improve
Utilization of Power and Space
|
§
|
Import,
& Document the Datacenter in
Minutes
|
1.
|
Updated
and customized data entry forms included in the standard VisionFM
product
|
2.
|
Added
new forms and workflow processes
|
3.
|
Created
a training video whose target audience is the end user submitting
Work
Orders and Move Requests
|
4.
|
Other
minor modifications to the VisionFM
solution.
|
•
|
Enterprise
asset management - related solutions -Visual Network Design,
Inc.,
ShowRack, NLyte, Visio)
|
|
•
|
Facilities
Management - related solutions -
Archibus)
|
DISCLOSURE
CONTROLS AND
PROCEDURES
|
|
Our
management, including our Principal Executive Officer and Principal
Financial Officer, has evaluated the design, operation, and effectiveness
of our disclosure controls and procedures pursuant to Rule 13a-15
under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”). There are
inherent limitations to the effectiveness of any system of disclosure
controls and procedures, including the possibility of human error
and the
circumvention or overriding of the controls and procedures. Accordingly,
even effective disclosure controls and procedures can only provide
reasonable assurance of achieving their control objectives. Based
upon the
evaluation performed by our management, including its Principal
Executive
Officer and Principal Financial Officer, it was determined that,
as of the
end of the period covered by this quarterly report, our disclosure
controls and procedures were effective to provide reasonable
assurance
that information required to be disclosed in the reports filed
or
submitted pursuant to the Exchange Act is recorded, processed,
summarized,
and reported within the time periods specified in the rules and
forms of
the SEC, and that such information is accumulated and communicated
to our
management, including its Principal Executive Officer and Principal
Financial Officer, or persons performing similar functions, as
appropriate
to allow timely decisions regarding disclosures
|
|
(1)
|
Exhibits:
Exhibits required to be attached
by Item 601 of Regulation S-B are listed in the Index to Exhibits
beginning on page 8 of this Form 10-Q, which is incorporated
herein by
reference.
|
(1)
|
None.
|
Information
Systems Associates, Inc.
|
||
Date:
May 15, 2008
|
By:
|
/s/ Joseph
P. Coschera
|
Joseph
P. Coschera
President
|
Exhibit
No.
|
Description
|
|
31.1
|
||
32.1
|