INFOCAST CORP /NV
10-12G/A, 1999-12-07
BUSINESS SERVICES, NEC
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                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                              WASHINGTON, DC 20549

                           ---------------------------



                                    FORM 10/A-2

                   GENERAL FORM FOR REGISTRATION OF SECURITIES
                      PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(B) OR 12(G) OF
                       THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934


                              INFOCAST CORPORATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
             (Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)


                  Nevada                          84-1460887
(State or Other Jurisdiction of                (I.R.S. Employer
Incorporation or Organization)                 Identification No.)


1 Richmond Street West, Suite 902, Toronto, Ontario M5H3W4
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)           (Zip Code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code:  (416) 867-1681


Securities to be registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

        Title of Each Class             Name of Each Exchange on Which
        to be so Registered             Each Class is to be Registered

               NONE                                  NONE


Securities to be registered under Section 12(g) of the Act:

                         Common Stock, $0.001 par value
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                (Title of class)


<PAGE>
         Unless  otherwise   indicated,   all  information   contained  in  this
Registration Statement gives effect to a 2-for-1 stock split effected on October
19, 1998 and all amounts are expressed in U. S. dollars. See "Glossary" at pages
62 to 64  for  the  definition  of  certain  terms  used  in  this  Registration
Statement.

ITEM  1.  BUSINESS.

                                     General

         InfoCast  Corporation  (the  "Company") is a development  stage company
that is in the process of  developing  the  infrastructure  to enable it to host
both  Company-customized  and  third-party  software  applications  that  can be
accessed remotely by businesses and their employees.  This  infrastructure  will
consist  of:   computer   hardware   purchased  from  third  parties;   software
applications;  and  communication  connections over private and public networks,
including the Internet.  The Company plans to provide its customers  with access
to its  infrastructure  and hosted  applications  on a per use basis.  Companies
providing  such services have recently come to be known as  application  service
providers or "ASPs."

         Traditionally,  businesses  have had to  purchase  their own  computing
systems,  including  hardware and  software,  as well as hire,  train and retain
highly skilled  employees to operate and maintain  these  systems,  all of which
require significant capital and ongoing operating  expenditures.  By outsourcing
these functions to an application  service provider,  an enterprise will be able
to:

         o   Reduce upfront and ongoing capital expenditures;
         o   Reduce its investment in information technology personnel;
         o   Access   up-to-date,   highly   scalable,   reliable  and  flexible
             technology;
         o   Focus its resources on its core business by  outsourcing a non-core
             function; and
         o   Potentially shorten implementation time for new computer systems.


         In order to host its customized and third-party software  applications,
the Company plans to establish a network of  strategically  placed data centers,
which the Company refers to as information  hubs or i-Hubs.  The Company expects
each  installation to be implemented on Sun Microsystems  Inc. servers using Sun
Solaris, Netscape and Java-related technologies, which the Company believes will
provide a high level of reliability,  scalability and  performance.  The Company
expects that these  information  hubs will deliver  information  to  information
users,  including  businesses and their  employees and customers  worldwide,  in
real-time, in any format - data, voice or animation, through satellite, cable or
private or public telecommunications  networks, including the Internet. To date,
the Company has installed two  information  hubs located in Calgary and Toronto,
Canada and has an  agreement  with AT&T Canada Long  Distance  Services  Company
("AT&T   Canada")   that   allows   the   Company   access   to  AT&T   Canada's
telecommunications  network to connect these information hubs to customers.  The
Company  expects its two  information  hubs to be  commercially  operational  by
December 31, 1999

                                      -2-

<PAGE>
and  expects  to  expand  these  information  hubs  and/or  install   additional
information hubs across North America as needed.

         The Company intends to host third-party software applications,  as well
as the  following  Company-customized  software  applications  that it is in the
process of developing:

         o Virtual  Call Center - This  application  will permit  businesses  to
service  inbound  and  outbound  customer  calls at any time  through a customer
service representative who can be located anywhere.

         o Distance  Learning  - This  application  will  permit  corporate  and
academic learners to access training on-line, from anywhere, at any time.

         o Teleworking - This application will permit businesses to enable their
employees to work via computer from remote locations.

         The Company is  currently  in the testing  and  demonstration  phase of
development with respect to these Company-customized  applications and currently
expects that all three applications will be commercially available by end of the
fiscal year ending March 31, 2000.


         The Company is a  development  stage  company.  Since the  inception of
Virtual  Performance Systems Inc., the predecessor to the Company, in July 1997,
the Company has not sold any products or services on a commercial  basis and has
had no revenues. The Company incurred losses of $96,161 for the period from July
29, 1997 (inception) to December 31, 1997,  $423,872 for the year ended December
31,  1998,  $3,083,921  for the three  month  period  ended  March 31,  1999 and
$16,613,840 for the six month period ended  September 30, 1999,  resulting in an
accumulated  deficit of $20,217,794 at September 30, 1999. Losses are continuing
through the date of this Registration Statement and the Company anticipates that
losses will continue for the foreseeable future. In addition, the market for the
Company's   expected  services  is  highly  competitive  and  subject  to  rapid
technological change. The Company expects to face significant competition in the
future. As a development stage company in a new and rapidly evolving market, the
Company faces risks and  uncertainties  relating to its ability to  successfully
implement its business  plan,  which are described in more detail in the section
entitled "Risk Factors" below. The Company may not  successfully  address all of
these issues.


                             History of the Company


         The Company was  incorporated on December 23, 1997.  Prior to 1999, the
Company's  sole  business  was  mining  and the  Company  held  certain  mineral
interests in the United States.  Due to changes in the United States  regulatory
environment,  management determined that it would be appropriate for the Company
to sell all of its mining assets,  which  represented  substantially  all of the
Company's  assets.  The Company  completed  the sale of its mining assets in the
fourth  quarter of 1998.  During 1998,  the Company  changed its name from

                                      -3-
<PAGE>
Grant Reserve  Corporation to InfoCast  Corporation.  Prior to changing its name
and  subsequent  to  the  sale  of  its  mining   assets,   the  Company  was  a
publicly-traded  company whose common stock was quoted on the OTC Bulletin Board
under the symbol (GNRS) without any ongoing business operations. During the year
ended December 31, 1998, the Company issued 5,000,000 pre-split shares of Common
Stock  to  Sheridan  Reserve  Incorporated  for the  acquisition  of two  mining
interests and in April 1998 issued 1,000,000 pre-split units at a price of $0.50
per unit in a private placement  financing  pursuant to Rule 504 of Regulation D
of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.  Each unit consisted of one pre-split
share of Common Stock and one pre-split  Common Stock  purchase  warrant with an
exercise  price of $0.50 per share  exercisable  before  December 31, 1998.  The
$500,000  issue  price of the units was  satisfied  through  the receipt of cash
proceeds  of $260,000  and the  settlement  of a  non-interest  bearing  note of
$240,000 that was due from the Company to Sheridan Reserve Incorporated.

         On October 13, 1998, the  shareholders of the Company voted to effect a
two-for-one  stock  split that  increased  the number of  outstanding  shares of
Common  Stock  from   6,000,000  to  12,000,000  and  increased  the  number  of
outstanding   Common  Stock  purchase  warrants  from  1,000,000  to  2,000,000.
Accordingly,  the  exercise  price of the Common  Stock  purchase  warrants  was
reduced to $0.25 per share. Subsequently, 1,580,000 of the Common Stock purchase
warrants  were  exercised  at $0.25  each for cash  proceeds  of  $395,000.  The
remaining 420,000 Common Stock purchase warrants expired.

         On January 29, 1999, the Company  consummated the acquisition of all of
the  voting  capital  stock of Virtual  Performance  Systems,  Inc.,  a Canadian
corporation, for 1,500,000 shares of InfoCast Canada Corporation, a wholly-owned
subsidiary  of the Company  ("InfoCast  Canada"),  which are  exchangeable  on a
one-for-one basis for shares of Common Stock of the Company. Virtual Performance
Systems,  Inc. was a development stage company that was developing  solutions to
permit  businesses to service  inbound and outbound  customer  calls at any time
through a customer  service  representative  who can be located  anywhere and to
permit  corporate  and  academic  learners  to  access  training  on-line,  from
anywhere, at any time. The consolidated  financial statements of the Company are
the continuing financial statements of Virtual Performance Systems, Inc.

         In March 1999, the Company  consummated a private  placement  financing
pursuant to which it issued  2,767,334  shares of Common  Stock for an aggregate
offering  price of $4,151,001  pursuant to Regulation S of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended.

         In March 1999, the Company  consummated a private  placement  financing
pursuant  to which it issued  265,002  shares of Common  Stock for an  aggregate
offering  price of $397,503  pursuant to Regulation D of the  Securities  Act of
1933, as amended.

Pursuant  to an  agreement  dated  December  15,  1998,  as  amended by a letter
agreement   dated  March  12,  1999,   between  the  Company  and  ITC  Learning
Corporation,   the  Company   purchased  from  ITC  Learning   Corporation   the
distribution  rights  for  all  current  and  future  ITC  Learning  Corporation
education and training  products in consideration for $975,000 in respect of the
first

                                      -4-
<PAGE>

150,000 user licenses and based on a shared revenue formula for user licenses in
excess of 150,000. The first $500,000 of the initial $975,000 purchase price was
paid in March 1999 and the final $475,000 of the initial $975,000 purchase price
was paid in April 1999.

         Pursuant to an  agreement  dated  March 22,  1999,  the Company  issued
60,000 shares of Common Stock to Thomson  Kernaghan & Co.  Limited,  a financial
investment consulting firm, for assistance in securing additional financing over
the following year.

         In May 1999, the Company and Call Center  Learning  Solutions  formed a
new company, Call Center Learning Solutions On-Line,  Inc., which is owned 50/50
by both  parties.  Call  Center  Learning  Solutions  Online,  Inc.  expects  to
initially  convert and market 11 browser-based  interactive  multimedia  courses
over a  12-month  period.  Call  Center  Learning  Solutions  has  developed  29
instructor-led  courses  that cover  substantially  all  aspects of call  center
operation.  Their training programs have been delivered to over 5,000 businesses
worldwide.  The agreement between Call Center Learning Solutions and the Company
provides for courseware conversion, hosting on the Company's information hub and
deployment of the courseware to the global market electronically.

         On May 13, 1999,  the Company  acquired all of the  outstanding  common
shares of HomeBase Work Solutions Ltd. HomeBase Work Solutions, headquartered in
Calgary,  Alberta,  Canada,  was  developing a solution to permit  businesses to
enable their employees to work from remote locations via computers. The purchase
price was satisfied by the issuance of 3,400,000 shares of InfoCast Canada which
are  exchangeable  on a  one-for-one  basis for  shares  of Common  Stock of the
Company.

         In June and  October  1999,  the  Company  issued  warrants to purchase
25,000 and 12,500 shares of Common Stock at an exercise price of $7.00 and $8.75
per share,  respectively,  to the Poretz Group, an investor relations consulting
firm, in consideration  for on-going  investor  relations  consulting  services,
including  reviewing the Company's public releases,  setting up meetings between
the Company and members of the investment  banking  community and developing the
Company's public image.

         In June  1999,  in return  for  consulting  services  in respect of the
development  of the  Company's  virtual  call  center  application  and  for the
InfoCast corporate name, the Company issued warrants to purchase an aggregate of
50,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise price of $7.00 per share to each of
Tsun Chow, Armin Roeseler, Paul Prabhaker and John J. Malley.

         In June 1999,  the Company  entered into a memorandum of  understanding
with Willow CSN (Canada) Inc. to launch  Canada's first  commercial  call center
with remotely located customer service representatives.

In  June  1999,  the  Company  entered  into  an  agreement  with  ITC  Learning
Corporation pursuant to which the Company will become ITC Learning Corporation's
exclusive  distance  learning   technology   distributor  for  the  delivery  of
educational material for the State of California for

                                      -5-

<PAGE>

consideration  of $2,000,000,  which was paid in three  installments  in August,
September and October 1999.

         On June 24, 1999, the Company consummated a private placement financing
pursuant  to which it issued  420,000  shares of Common  Stock and  warrants  to
purchase  70,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise  price of $7.00 per share
for an aggregate  offering  price of $2,100,000  pursuant to Regulation D of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

         From July to October  1999,  the  Company  issued  1,730,000  shares of
Common Stock in a private placement financing for an aggregate offering price of
$9,515,000  pursuant to Regulation S of the  Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
The Company may issue up to an additional  650,000 shares of Common Stock for an
aggregate offering price of $3,575,000 pursuant to such offering.

         In October 1999, the Company  issued options to purchase  60,000 shares
of Common  Stock at an exercise  price of $8.25 per share to Howard  Nichol,  an
investor relations  consultant,  for services,  including  assisting the Company
with  communications  with and  presentations  to stock  brokers,  analysts  and
private and  institutional  investors,  providing  access to financial media and
introducing the Company to potential acquisition or alliance opportunities.

         In October 1999, the Company  entered into a  non-exclusive  investment
banking and financial  advisory services  agreement with N.M.  Rothschild & Sons
Canada  Limited  and  N.M.  Rothschild  &  Sons  (Washington)  L.L.C.  (together
"Rothschild").  Pursuant to the  agreement,  Rothschild  will provide  financial
advisory  services to the Company  relating  primarily to advice with respect to
possible acquisitions,  mergers, business combinations,  strategic alliances and
the  raising  of up to $50 to $75  million  in an  equity  financing,  and  will
undertake  other related  tasks as specified  from time to time by the Company's
senior  management.  In  consideration  for its  services,  Rothschild  shall be
entitled  to a monthly  work fee of  $50,000,  payable  monthly  in  arrears  to
Rothschild  by the Company.  In the event a  Transaction  (as defined  below) is
implemented  during the term of Rothschild's  engagement,  or within a period of
one year after the termination of Rothschild's engagement under the agreement on
which Rothschild worked or with a party identified by Rothschild during the term
of the  agreement,  the Company will pay a further fee of 3% of the value of the
Transaction (the "Performance Fee") to Rothschild in recognition of Rothschild's
contribution   to  such   Transaction.   For  the  purposes  of  the  agreement,
"Transaction" means any acquisition,  merger,  alliance or business  combination
which  involves  the  Company  and which  shall be valued  for  purposes  of the
Performance  Fee to include  any debt  incurred or assumed by the  purchaser  or
parties in the  combination and any shares issued or to be issued as part of the
consideration  for any  possible  transaction.  In the event  there is a private
placement or sale of securities of the Company  during the term of the agreement
other than pursuant to a Transaction, Rothschild, as the agent for the offering,
will be paid a  commission  on the  total  value  of the  proceeds  raised.  Any
commission  Rothschild will receive as an agent with respect to any such sale of
securities  will be  determined  at the  time of such  transaction  and  will be
consistent with current  industry norms.  The agreement shall commence as of the
date  Rothschild  notifies the Company of its  completion  of  satisfactory  due


                                      -6-
<PAGE>

diligence.  Thereafter,  either party may  terminate  the agreement at any time,
with or without cause, by giving the other party 15 days written notice.

                                   Background

         The ability to deliver information to anyone, anywhere and at any time,
remains the cornerstone objective of today's communications systems. This is the
case whether that  information is  transmitted  over a private or public network
(including the Internet), via computers, telephone and/or satellite.

         The Company  believes  that rapid  growth of the  Internet,  electronic
commerce and corporate intranets is an indication that companies and individuals
are continuing to increase their use of corporate and home-based systems to send
and receive ever more complex information.

         The  technological  dilemma facing suppliers of information,  and those
wanting to receive  it, is the  inability  of the  various  networks,  operating
systems,   communication  protocols  and  communications  systems  to  interface
seamlessly.  This situation is analogous to people from different countries with
different languages all trying to communicate.

         A business  opportunity  exists in the near term for the  deployment of
technology that links different network  infrastructures so that information can
be either: (i) accessed remotely in near real-time across dedicated networks; or
(ii) reduced with regard to the fidelity and  resolution of its content and then
accessed through the Internet.

         As a development  stage  application  service  provider,  the Company's
focus is on developing the infrastructure to enable customers to access the best
software  applications  via a standard web browser and Internet  access  without
regard to  geographical  point of origin,  underlying  network  architecture  or
personal computer make or model.

                         The Company's Information Hubs

                                      -7-
<PAGE>

         In order to host its customized and third-party software  applications,
the Company is developing a network of strategically placed data centers,  which
the Company refers to as information  hubs or i-Hubs.  The Company  expects each
installation  to be implemented on Sun  Microsystems  servers using Sun Solaris,
Netscape and Java-related technologies,  which the Company believes will provide
a high level of reliability,  scalability and performance.  To date, the Company
has completed the  installation of two  information  hubs based on the following
server platforms:

         Calgary, Canada:
         o         One Sun Microsystems Enterprise 10,000 server
         o         Five Sun Microsystems Netra T-1 servers
         o         Two Sun Microsystems Enterprise 250 servers
         o         Two Sun Microsystems 450 servers

         Toronto, Canada:
         o         Four Compaq 450 servers
         o         Five Sun Microsystems Netra T-1 servers

         The Company is in the process of testing and  validating  the equipment
and  associated  systems.  The  Company  expects  both  information  hubs  to be
commercially  operational  by  December  31,  1999 and  expects to expand  these
information hubs and/or install additional information hubs across North America
as needed.  There can be no assurance  that the Company will be able to complete
the  development  of its  network of  information  hubs as  scheduled  or at all
because the Company may not be able to (i) raise the  additional  funds required
to  complete  such  development,  (ii) enter into  agreements  with  appropriate
hardware and network  providers,  and (iii)  attract and retain  technologically
skilled employees.

         In addition to the hosting servers,  the Company  anticipates that each
operational information hub will provide customers with the following:

         o  physical security;
         o  uninterruptable  power  supply with  optional  generator  backup;
         o  disaster recovery plan; o guaranteed  quality of service levels;
         o  help desk  support;
         o  highly  reliable  Internet  access;  and
         o  network monitoring and supervision.

         To execute  the  Company's  information  hub  strategy,  the Company is
currently negotiating to establish the following strategic relationships:

                                      -8-

<PAGE>

         Sun Microsystems,  Inc. The Company is in the process of negotiating an
agreement  with  Sun  Microsystems  pursuant  to  which  the  Company  would  be
designated under Sun Microsystems'  ServiceProvider.com(TM)  program. Under such
agreement,  the Company would not have any minimum  financial  commitments,  but
would be entitled  to  purchase  equipment  from Sun  Microsystems  at a minimum
prescribed  discount from Sun  Microsystems'  list prices.  The Company believes
that   there   are    approximately   12   companies    participating   in   the
ServiceProvider.com(TM) program, all of which are located outside of Canada. The
program does not include any exclusivity arrangements. There can be no assurance
that any such agreement will be reached with Sun Microsystems.  As a participant
in such  program,  the  Company  would have access to  preferential  pricing and
service treatment from Sun Microsystems, as well as:

         o   a recognized  network and Internet computer alliance with worldwide
             service and support;
         o   a stable  operating  system  environment,  further  enabled  by the
             networking   capability  of  Sun  Microsystems'   Java  programming
             language and environment;
         o   a clear  and  distinctive  processing  performance  that  meets the
             challenges of network computing;
         o   solid  communication  tools and programs to support  global network
             connectivity;
         o   Internet  firewall  technology  that  provides  support  users with
             seamless access; and
         o   professionals worldwide who can support complex network designs and
             problems.

         AT&T  Canada The  Company  has  entered  into a  non-binding  letter of
understanding  with AT&T Canada that  provides that the parties will endeavor to
negotiate and execute the  following  agreements:  (i) a development  and supply
agreement  whereby the Company  would  supply  software  learning  products  for
co-marketing with AT&T Canada; (ii) a telecommunications  agreement whereby AT&T
Canada would provide the telecommunications services necessary to facilitate the
delivery  of such  products  to  customers  and  (iii) a  cooperative  marketing
agreement  whereby the parties  would work jointly to market and promote  future
products and  services.  In addition,  the Company is currently  negotiating  an
arrangement  that would  define how AT&T Canada and the  Company  will offer the
virtual call center  application being developed by the Company to AT&T Canada's
customers.  To  date,  the  Company  and  AT&T  Canada  have  entered  into  the
telecommunications agreement, which defines pricing levels. The Company does not
have any financial commitments pursuant to such agreement.  The Company and AT&T
Canada will  negotiate the  remaining  agreements  once the  Company's  distance
learning application becomes commercially  available,  which the Company expects
will  occur by March 31,  2000.  No  assurance  can be given that any such other
agreements  will be entered into. Such agreements with AT&T Canada would provide
the Company with:

         o   a  relationship   with  a  recognized   global   telecommunications
             provider;
         o   connectivity  between  the  Company's   information  hubs  and  the
             information users;
         o   a marketing channel to access potential customers; and

         o   access to North American and international call center markets.

                                      -9-
<PAGE>
                 The Company's Customized Software Applications

Virtual Call Center Application

         The  traditional  method  of  providing  customer  support  has been to
establish a call center whereby customer service  representatives,  located in a
central "brick and mortar"  facility,  respond to incoming  client  inquiries or
make outgoing calls via telephone  banks.  Typically,  call centers are used for
help desk functions,  telemarketing,  catalog order taking and debt  collection.
Traditional call centers are generally limited by the following:

         o   physical limitations with respect to the number of customer service
             agents  able  to  work  based  on the  telephone  lines  and  desks
             available,  which in turn  limits  the  volume of calls that can be
             handled;
         o   employee dissatisfaction and high turnover;
         o   high operational costs; and
         o   difficult to staff for cycles in call frequency.

         The  Company  believes  that  outsourcing  of call  centers  is gaining
popularity in North America and Europe and there is an emerging  number of firms
offering call center outsourcing and management.

         The virtual  call  center  application  that the Company is  developing
would enable customer service  representatives  to be located anywhere,  without
having to be present at a central "brick and mortar" facility, and would allow a
caller or customer to reach a trained  customer  service  representative  at any
time, from almost anywhere.  The customer service  representative  would also be
able, if necessary,  to have secure  access to a merchant's  in-house  database.
Customer data would be protected by a dedicated  (non-shared)  network that uses
password access and firewalls to provide security, yet would be fully accessible
via a computer network or through a toll-free dial up service.

         The  Company's  concept of a virtual call center is  predicated  on the
ability to provide the  communication  software that allows the customer service
representative,  the buyer and the vendor to be linked together in real-time via
computers.  The application  that the Company is developing  would enable a high
volume of inbound  customer  calls to be routed  (without the caller  knowing to
where the call is going) to a customer service representative, located anywhere,
who answers and services the call. The customer service  representative would be
able to accept calls,  immediately  access the merchant's  database,  locate the
appropriate  product/service and process the caller's request  immediately.  The
virtual call center  application  that the Company is  developing is expected to
provide  the  necessary  communications  linkage  and  speed to allow  all three
parties to interact in real-time.

         The Company  expects  that,  when  completed,  its virtual  call center
application  will provide the  technology  that: (i) converts a call from analog
(voice) to digital (information) so it can be

                                      -10-

<PAGE>

transported  over a data  line;  (ii)  routes  a call  from  the  caller  to the
appropriate customer service representative based on the needs of the caller and
skills and availability of the customer service  representative  (for example, a
caller may indicate his or her preference for a customer service  representative
that speaks a certain  language and if such a representative  is available,  the
call will be routed  to such a  representative);  (iii)  provides  the  customer
service  representative  with access to the business'  database,  including both
product and caller  specific  information;  and (iv) converts the call back into
analog so the caller can communicate with the customer  service  representative,
all of which would take place in a secure,  supervised environment.  The Company
will use Voice  Over-IP  technology  to convert calls from analog to digital and
back  again.  While the  Company  does not intend to develop  the Voice  Over-IP
software itself, it believes it can successfully  select appropriate vendors and
implement such technology.  The application that the Company is developing would
also  support  automated  call  distribution  (routing)  and  interactive  voice
response  (choosing  options by pressing touch tone numbers on a phone), as well
as forward-looking call center technologies such as unified messaging (combining
voice mail, e-mail and facsimile) and web-based help desks.

         The essential  elements of the virtual call center application that the
Company is developing include:

         o   skills-based  routing,   which  routes  calls  to  the  appropriate
             customer service representative based on predetermined  parameters,
             such as language;
         o   secure  access to a business'  database,  including  both  customer
             specific and product information;
         o   conversion of the call to and from digital and analog; and
         o   training and supervision of customer service representatives.

         The virtual call center  application  that the Company is developing is
expected to result in the support of multiple  customers with a single  customer
service representative from any geographical location. This would result in: (i)
the  customer  service   representative  not  being  limited  to  a  traditional
"brick-and-mortar"  call center  building  and (ii) the  application  enabling a
single customer  service  representative  to service multiple vendors and access
corporate data from each vendor,  regardless of the firewall or virtual  private
network  solution  (security  measures)  the  vendor  may have  selected  as its
corporate standard.

         Virtual call centers would allow customer  service  representatives  to
work from home,  resulting  in lower  costs and greater  employee  satisfaction.
Using  technology  being  developed  by the  Company,  the Company  expects that
virtual call  centers will be able to provide all the features of a  traditional
call center,  while reducing capital and human resource  overhead.  Accordingly,
businesses  would be able to service  existing  and new clients with better cost
structures,  while both enhancing levels of service and reducing costly employee
turnover.

         The Company is  currently  in the testing  and  demonstration  phase of
development  with respect to its virtual call center  application  and currently
expects  that such  application  will be

                                      -11-

<PAGE>

commercially  available by end of the fiscal year ending  March 31, 2000.  There
can be no assurance that the Company will be able to complete the development of
its virtual call center  application  as scheduled or at all because the Company
may not be able to (i) raise the  additional  funds  required to  complete  such
development and (ii) attract and retain  technologically  skilled employees.  In
addition,  there can be no assurance that a substantial market for the Company's
virtual call center application will develop and grow.

Distance Learning Application

         Traditionally,  in order for a  business  to  provide  training  to its
employees,  the  business  would bring an on-site  instructor  to the  business'
offices and hold instructor-led  classes.  The drawbacks of holding such classes
include the difficulty and cost of assembling  employees in a physical space and
the loss of productive  work time.  More recently,  instructor-led  training has
been  augmented  through  the use of video  conferencing,  which  has  saved the
expense  of  physically  assembling  trainees,  but  still  has many of the same
drawbacks as live on-site classes.

         During the multimedia training boom of the early 1990's,  CD-ROM became
the de-facto standard for content delivery. Businesses would purchase sufficient
software  licenses to cover the number of employees to be trained.  Each trainee
would  then  install  a CD-ROM  containing  the  course  material  on his or her
computer  and commence the  training on an  individual  basis.  One problem with
CD-ROMs  is  that  they do not  permit  the  customization  required  by  large,
technologically  sophisticated  and globally oriented  companies.  Additionally,
CD-ROM  training  does not provide the sense of  community  and shared  learning
offered  by the  conventional  classroom  environment.  While  CD-ROMs  increase
flexibility in terms of where and when employees can be trained,  CD-ROMs do not
provide any  interaction,  monitoring  or feedback,  or the ability to customize
programs.

         The factors driving people and businesses to seek training include:

         o   business   requirements  for  staff  to  be  certified  in  certain
             technologies in order to assure performance and productivity;
         o   corporate downsizing,  resulting in increased training requirements
             for  ex-staff as well as for  employees  who perform  multiple  job
             tasks that require knowledge of various jobs;
         o   the  proliferation of computers and networks  throughout all levels
             of  organizations,  increasing  the  number of  employees  who need
             training;  and
         o   the  continuous  introduction  and  evolution of new  technologies,
             contributing to the need for continuing education.

         The distance  learning  application that the Company is developing will
enable learners to access digital content through a standard browser  interface.
Trainees  will be able to interact  with  subject  matter

                                      -12-
<PAGE>
to enhance and support their learning endeavors. By having the tools to interact
with  career  and  instructional  experts,  24 hours a day,  seven  days a week,
through e-mail,  chat rooms and other real-time  collaborative  tools across the
Internet or a dedicated network, the Company believes it will be able to offer a
higher  level of service,  compared to its  potential  competitors.  The Company
believes that through the distance  learning  application  it is  developing,  a
business  will be able to train its  employees  with the best  features  of live
training courses without the associated drawbacks and at a much lower cost.

         An important  component of the distance  learning  application that the
Company is developing is the learning management system. The learning management
system  consists of  proprietary  software  developed  by the Company  that will
support  multiple  corporations  and  learning  organizations  that offer course
content  on-line.  The software was designed from the ground up with  role-based
security  (different  users have access to  different  aspects of the  network),
multiple language support and multi-enterprise  billing and tracking facilities.
Acting as a "security  blanket"  around the  content,  the  learning  management
system will permit other organizations to embed their web-based training content
without fear of losing intellectual  property over the Internet and still permit
that organization's employees to remotely access their training.

         The distance learning  application that the Company is developing would
provide access to:

         o   a group of subject  matter  experts  (tutors) that give guidance to
             learners in real time;
         o   a team that gives learners guidance with career development;
         o   a library of high  quality  courses in single units or as part of a
             curriculum; and
         o   software  tools to help busy faculty  members  develop or customize
             courses rapidly.

         The  Company's  distance  learning  application  is expected to deliver
skills-based  interactive  multimedia content to corporate,  academic and retail
learners. The Company expects the distance learning application to differentiate
itself from other  training  methodologies  by  delivering  a complete  learning
solution over any network,  including the Internet. The Company expects that the
technology it is developing  will provide  content  vendors with confidence that
their  intellectual  property will not be compromised and will allow  self-paced
learning  to  maximize  personal  and  career  success  of  learners  over their
lifetime.  The Company expects the distance learning  application to support the
learner with live on-line telephone  coaching within a standard Internet browser
(i.e., Netscape Navigator or Internet Explorer) and enable the learner to access
a browser for  interactive  learning,  producing a more  collaborative  learning
experience.  In  addition,  the  Company  expects  the  application  to  enhance
conventional classroom-based and current distance learning delivery methods.

         The Company expects that the software it is developing will support the
distance  learning  initiatives  of  third-parties,  including  the "AT&T Canada
Learning Partner Program(TM)". The objective of the AT&T Canada Learning Partner

                                      -13-

<PAGE>

Program(TM) is to be a leader for real-time  interactive  electronic delivery of
distance  learning to corporate and academic  organizations and their respective
end-users.  The Company  expects  that its  technology  will act as the enabling
technology for this initiative to permit distance  education over any electronic
medium.

         In addition, the Company expects that its relationship with AT&T Canada
will provide the Company will access to AT&T  Canada's  customer  base to launch
its distance  learning  application,  beginning in Canada. As a component of the
AT&T Canada  Learning  Partner  Program(TM),  the  Company  has entered  into an
agreement with College Boreal of Sudbury  (Ontario)  Canada to provide  academic
support and market course content for distribution  using the Company's software
and  infrastructure.  Pursuant to the  agreement,  College  Boreal is to provide
non-exclusive  educational  services to the  Company  and/or its clients and the
Company is to utilize such services in connection  with the AT&T Canada Learning
Partner  ProgramTM from December 10, 1998 to December 9, 2001,  which term shall
be automatically  renewed unless  terminated by either party upon 90 days notice
at any time after  December 9, 2001.  Pricing,  revenue,  structure,  financing,
schedule of payments and budgets for the  specific  products and services are to
be covered by a separate agreement to be negotiated by the parties. No assurance
can be  given  that  such  agreement  will  be  entered  into.  College  Boreal,
headquartered in Sudbury,  Ontario, has seven campuses in Northern Ontario, each
connected to the largest  telecommunications network among academic institutions
in Canada,  which currently  services the needs of the francophone  community in
Northern  Ontario.  This program would provide  access to  interactive  learning
anywhere,  anytime for both corporate and academic  studies and blend electronic
learning and on-line  support  utilizing  browser-  enabled  applications  being
developed by the Company and distributed over AT&T Canada's advanced fiber optic
and digital microwave network.

         The  Company  has  also  entered  into  agreements  with  ITC  Learning
Corporation   pursuant  to  which  the  Company   purchased  from  ITC  Learning
Corporation  the  distribution  rights for all current  and future ITC  Learning
Corporation  education  and  training  products  and will  become  ITC  Learning
Corporation's   exclusive  distance  learning  technology  distributor  for  the
delivery of  educational  material for the State of  California.  Pursuant to an
agreement dated December 15, 1998, as amended by a letter  agreement dated March
12,  1999,  between  the  Company  and ITC  Learning  Corporation,  the  Company
purchased from ITC Learning  Corporation the distribution rights for all current
and  future  ITC  Learning  Corporation   education  and  training  products  in
consideration  for $975,000 in respect of the first  150,000  user  licenses and
based on a shared  revenue  formula for user licenses in excess of 150,000.  The
first $500,000 of the initial $975,000 purchase price was paid in March 1999 and
the final  $475,000 of the  initial  $975,000  purchase  price was paid in April
1999.  In June 1999,  the Company  entered into an  agreement  with ITC Learning
Corporation pursuant to which the Company will become ITC Learning Corporation's
exclusive  distance  learning   technology   distributor  for  the  delivery  of
educational   material  for  the  State  of  California  for   consideration  of
$2,000,000,  which  was paid in three  installments  in  August,  September  and
October 1999. In addition, the Company and Call Center Learning Solutions formed
a new company,  Call Center Learning  Solutions  On-Line,  Inc.,  which is owned
50/50 by both parties.  Call Center Learning  Solutions Online,  Inc. expects to
initially  convert and market 11 browser-based  interactive


                                      -14-
<PAGE>
multimedia  courses over a 12-month period.  Call Center Learning  Solutions has
developed 29 instructor-led courses that cover substantially all aspects of call
center operation.  The agreement between Call Center Learning  Solutions and the
Company provides for courseware conversion, hosting on the Company's information
hub and deployment of the courseware to the global market electronically.

         The Company is  currently  in the testing  and  demonstration  phase of
development  with respect to its distance  learning  application  and  currently
expects  that such  application  will be  commercially  available  by end of the
fiscal year ending  March 31, 2000.  There can be no assurance  that the Company
will be able to complete the development of its distance learning application as
scheduled  or at all  because  the  Company  may not be able  to (i)  raise  the
additional  funds  required  to  complete  such  development,  (ii)  enter  into
agreements with appropriate  content and network providers and (iii) attract and
retain technologically skilled employees. In addition, there can be no assurance
that a substantial market for the Company's  distance learning  application will
develop and grow.

Teleworking Application

         Working  through the use of remote access is no longer merely an option
in many types of work. Instead,  remote access has become a necessary feature in
competitive sales, customer relationship  management and flexible work programs.
The Company is  developing  the software and network  infrastructure  to connect
individuals  working from their homes with their corporate offices.  The Company
will seek to make this system reliable,  secure and highly accessible so that it
can provide complete  management and  administration  to individuals who need to
connect to corporate data  resources.  The Company  expects that the teleworking
application it is developing will provide:

         o   the  ability  to connect  telecommuters  with  their  offices  over
             high-speed, secure data and voice networks;

         o   psychological  profiling conducted through a 70-item questionnaire
             to assess an  individual's  ability to work well from  home,  which
             questionnaire will be compared to a database of similar information
             on successful teleworkers;

         o   a single source  solution  that  supplies the  hardware,  software,
             furniture  and  telecommuting  training  to enhance  an  employee's
             ability to work from home; and
         o   ongoing monitoring and mentoring, evaluation, coaching and training
             certification.

         The  Company  plans to enter  into  agreements  with  third  parties to
provide  hardware and  furniture as part of its product  offerings.  The Company
expects  to offer a  customized  bundled  solution  that  will  provide  all the
components,  including "best of breed" software from third-party  suppliers,  to
implement a successful telework program.

         The Company is  currently  in the testing  and  demonstration  phase of
development  with respect to its teleworking  application and currently  expects
that such application  will be



                                      -15-
<PAGE>
commercially  available by end of the fiscal year ending  March 31, 2000.  There
can be no assurance that the Company will be able to complete the development of
its  teleworking  application as scheduled or at all because the Company may not
be able to (i) raise the additional  funds required to complete such development
and (ii)  attract and retain  technologically  skilled  employees.  In addition,
there  can  be  no  assurance  that  a  substantial  market  for  the  Company's
teleworking application will develop and grow.

                    Hosting Third-party Software Applications

         In addition to its customized applications, the Company intends to host
third-party  applications.  The Company expects that its  information  hubs will
permit  businesses to outsource certain  components of their computing  systems,
including e-mail messaging, remote backup of databases, software development and
testing platform. By outsourcing these components,  businesses would not have to
own or manage  their own  complex  computer  systems.  This would  also  provide
businesses  access  to  up-to-date,   highly  scalable,  reliable  and  flexible
technology  that they  might  otherwise  not be able to  afford  due to the high
capital  costs  involved  and the  necessity of hiring,  training and  retaining
experienced computer personnel. The Company believes that businesses will employ
selective information technology outsourcing to increase competitiveness or gain
access to new resources and skills.

         The Company expects to host  third-party  applications and convert them
to support e-commerce.  For example, the Company is in the process of converting
the conventional client-server architecture of Applied Terravision Systems Inc.,
an oil and gas financial  software vendor, so that it can be hosted on a Company
information hub.  Applied  Terravision  Systems'  customers will then be able to
access  these  software  applications  from their  offices  using a standard web
browser.  The  Company is in the  process  of  negotiating  similar  third-party
application hosting  arrangements.  However,  there can be no assurance that the
Company will enter into any such agreements.

         The Company is  currently  in the testing  and  demonstration  phase of
development  with  respect  to  its  hosting  of  third-party  applications  and
currently  expects  that  it  will  host  its  first   third-party   application
commercially  by December 31, 1999.  There can be no assurance  that the Company
will be able to host third-party applications as scheduled or at all because the
Company may not be able to (i) complete the development of its infrastructure or
(ii) successfully convert its customers'  client/server  architecture so that it
can be hosed on the Company's  information  hubs.  In addition,  there can be no
assurance that a substantial  market for the hosing of third-party  applications
will develop and grow.

                                      -16-
<PAGE>
                          Marketing and Sales Strategy

         The  Company's  marketing  strategy will be to bundle its services with
the existing  products and services of companies such as AT&T Canada,  with whom
the   Company   has   an   agreement;   Sun   Microsystems,   Inc.   under   the
ServiceProvider.com(TM)  program;  and companies whose third-party  applications
the  Company  will  host.  The  Company  believes  that  the  existing  customer
relationships will provide the Company with a sales advantage.  The Company will
employ a small  direct sales force of  approximately  12  salespeople  with both
selling and technical  expertise,  to support the initiatives of these companies
as well as to focus on a limited number of targeted  customers/niche markets. In
addition,  the  Company  plans to market  its  services  through  attendance  at
tradeshows,  advertising  and articles in industry  periodicals,  referrals from
customers and its website. To date, the Company has had no sales.

         A major component of the Company's  marketing and sales strategy is the
pricing structure for the Company's  services which will be offered to customers
on a per-use basis,  which will allow customers the ability to pay only for what
they use, thus converting a fixed cost into a variable one. The Company believes
that  this  flexible  pricing  strategy  will be very  attractive  to  potential
customers.

                                   Competition

         The  market  for  the   Company's   products  and  services  is  highly
competitive and subject to rapid  technological  change There are many companies
that act as application  service  providers,  offering  third-party  application
hosting to their  customers,  including U.S.  Internetworking  Inc.,  FutureLink
Corp.  and Corio Inc.  Management  does not know of any other company  currently
offering the virtual call center,  distance  learning and telework  applications
that  the  Company  is  developing.   With  respect  to  the  distance  learning
application that the Company is developing,  competition  currently  consists of
many  companies  offering  learning  via  CD-ROM  and  the  Internet,  including
SmartForce,  DigitalThink,  Inc. and  click2learn.com,  inc. With respect to the
virtual call center  application  being  developed  by the Company,  competition
currently  consists of the many  traditional  "brick and mortar"  call  centers,
including  Convergis  Corp. and APAC Customer  Services Inc. With respect to the
telework  application  being  developed  by the Company,  competition  currently
consists of those  technology  companies that offer remote access to a company's
central computer system, including TManage Inc. and Rhythms Net Connections. The
Company believes that its ability to compete depends on many factors both within
and beyond its control, including the success of the marketing and sales efforts
of the Company and its  competitors,  the price and  reliability of products and
services  developed by the Company and its competitors and the timing and market
acceptance of the products and services  being  developed by the Company and its
competitors.  Competitors may quickly deploy products and e-commerce  technology
that could limit the Company's  expansion.  The Company  expects  competition to
increase  in the  future.  Many  of the  Company's  potential  competitors  have
substantially  greater  financial,  technical and marketing  resources  than the
Company.  Increased  competition  could  materially  and  adversely  affect  the
Company's business,  financial condition and results of operations. There can be
no assurance that

                                      -17-
<PAGE>
the  Company  will  be  able  to  compete  successfully.  See  "Risk  Factors  -
Competition" for a description of the risks of the Company's competition.

               Intellectual Property and Other Proprietary Rights

         The  Company's  success is dependent in part on  intellectual  property
rights,  including information  technology,  some of which is proprietary to the
Company  such as the  software  developed  by the  Company  that  comprises  the
learning  management  system,  a filtering  engine,  a corporate  hosted  e-mail
service that integrates the Company's  filtering  engine with industry  standard
e-mail and directory servers from Netscape and Sun  Microsystems,  a methodology
that allows the Company to rapidly host applications  from independent  software
vendors on the  Company's  information  hub,  and various  software  integration
tools.  The  Company  relies  on  a  combination  of  nondisclosure  agreements,
technical  measures,  trade secret and trademark laws to protect its proprietary
rights.  The  Company  does not  presently  hold any  patents  for its  existing
products or services  and  presently  has no patent  applications  pending.  The
Company has entered into confidentiality  agreements with most of its employees,
and anticipates  that any future employees will also enter into such agreements.
The Company also  attempts to limit access to and  distribution  of  proprietary
information.  There can be no  assurance  that the steps taken by the Company in
this  regard  will  be  adequate  to  deter   misappropriation   of  proprietary
information or that the Company will be able to detect  unauthorized use or take
appropriate steps to enforce  intellectual  property rights. In addition,  there
can be no  assurance  that the  Company's  competitors  will  not  independently
develop  technologies  that are  substantially  equivalent  or  superior  to the
Company's technology. Further, the laws of many foreign countries do not protect
the Company's intellectual property rights to the same extent as the laws of the
United States. The failure of the Company to protect its proprietary information
could  have a  material  adverse  effect on the  Company's  business,  financial
condition and results of operations.

         From  time  to  time,  third  parties  may  assert  exclusive   patent,
copyright, trademark and other intellectual property rights to technologies that
are used by the Company.  Litigation may be necessary to defend against  claimed
infringements  of the rights of others or to determine the scope and validity of
the  proprietary  rights of others.  Future  litigation may also be necessary to
enforce and protect trade secrets and other  intellectual  property rights owned
by the  Company.  Any such  litigation  could be costly and cause  diversion  of
management's attention,  either of which could have a material adverse effect on
the Company's business,  financial condition and results of operations.  Adverse
determinations  in such  litigation  could  result in the loss of the  Company's
proprietary rights,  subject the Company to significant  liabilities  (including
possible  indemnification  of its  customers),  require  the  Company  to secure
licenses from third parties or prevent the Company from manufacturing or selling
its products or services,  any one of which could have a material adverse effect
on the Company's business,  financial  condition and results of operations.  The
Company has not been a party to any such  litigation to date.  However,  Applied
Courseware  Technology Inc. ("ACT") has indicated that the Company has access to
and possesses intellectual property belonging to ACT and that the Company has no
right to use or derive any benefit from such  intellectual

                                      -18-
<PAGE>

property.  See  "Risk  Factors  -  Possible  Litigation"  and  Item  8  -  Legal
Proceedings.  The Company  has not  conducted a formal  patent  search  relating
generally to the technology used in its products or services. In addition, since
patent  applications  in the United States are not publicly  disclosed until the
patent  issues  and  foreign  patent  applications  generally  are not  publicly
disclosed for at least a portion of the time that they are pending, applications
may have been filed which,  if issued as patents,  would relate to the Company's
products or services. Software comprises a substantial portion of the technology
in the Company's products.  The scope of protection accorded to patents covering
software-related   inventions  is  evolving  and  is  subject  to  a  degree  of
uncertainty  that may  increase  the risk and cost to the Company if the Company
discovers the existence of third-party  patents related to its software products
or if such patents are asserted against the Company in the future.  Patents have
been granted recently on fundamental  technologies in software,  and patents may
issue which relate to fundamental  technologies  incorporated into the Company's
products or services.

         While  the  Company  employs   proprietary   software   technology  and
algorithms and conducts ongoing research and development,  the future success of
the Company  will  depend in part upon its  ability to keep pace with  advancing
technology,   evolving  industry  and  changing   customer   requirements  in  a
cost-effective  manner. There can be no assurance that the Company's proprietary
software  technology  and  algorithms  will not be  rendered  obsolete  by other
technology incorporating technological advances designed by competitors that the
Company is unable to  incorporate  into its  products  or  services  in a timely
manner.

         The market for the Company's  products and services is characterized by
rapidly  changing  technologies.  The  rapid  development  of  new  technologies
increases the risk that current or new  competitors  could  develop  products or
services  that would reduce the  competitiveness  of the  Company's  products or
services.  The Company's  success will depend to a  substantial  degree upon its
ability to respond to changes in technology and customer requirements. This will
require the timely  selection,  development  and  marketing  of new  products or
services and  enhancements on a  cost-effective  basis.  The development of new,
technologically  advanced  products  or  services  is a  complex  and  uncertain
process,  requiring  high  levels of  innovation.  The  introduction  of new and
enhanced products or services also requires that the Company manage  transitions
from older products or services in order to minimize  disruptions.  There can be
no assurance that the Company will be successful in  developing,  introducing or
managing the transition to new or enhanced products or services or that any such
products or services will be responsive  to  technological  changes or will gain
market acceptance.  The Company's  business,  financial condition and results of
operations  would be  materially  adversely  affected if the Company  were to be
unsuccessful, or to incur significant delays, in developing and introducing such
new products, services or enhancements.


                                      -19-

<PAGE>
                                    Employees

         At September 30, 1999, the Company had 35 full-time employees.  None of
the Company's employees is represented by a collective  bargaining agreement nor
has the  Company  experienced  any work  stoppage.  The  Company  considers  its
relations with its employees to be good.

                                      -20-

<PAGE>
Risk Factors

         An investment in the Common Stock of the Company is highly speculative,
involves a high degree of risk and should be  considered  only by those  persons
who are able to afford a loss of their  entire  investment.  In  evaluating  the
Company and its business,  prospective  investors should carefully  consider the
following  risk  factors in addition to the other  information  included in this
Registration Statement.

            Risks Relating to the Financial Condition of the Company



         Development  Stage  Company;  Limited  Operating  History and Revenues;
Historical and Anticipated Losses and Working Capital Deficits.  The Company was
organized in December 1997 and has a very limited  operating  history upon which
an evaluation of the Company's future performance and prospects can be made. The
Company is a  development  stage  company  and has not yet sold any  products or
services on a commercial  basis.  The Company's  prospects must be considered in
light of the risks,  expenses,  delays,  problems  and  difficulties  frequently
encountered in the  establishment  of a new business in an emerging and evolving
industry.  As a development  stage company in a new and rapidly evolving market,
the  Company  faces  risks  and   uncertainties   relating  to  its  ability  to
successfully  implement  its business  plan,  which are described in more detail
below.  The Company may not successfully  address these risks.  Since inception,
the Company has generated no revenues and has incurred losses of $96,161 for the
period from July 29, 1997  (inception)  to December 31,  1997,  $423,872 for the
year ended December 31, 1998,  $3,083,921 for the three month period ended March
31, 1999 and  $16,613,840  for the six month  period ended  September  30, 1999,
resulting in an accumulated deficit of $20,217,794 at September 30, 1999. Losses
are continuing through the date of this Registration Statement.  Inasmuch as the
Company  will  continue to have a high level of  operating  expenses and will be
required to make  significant  up- front  expenditures  in  connection  with the
proposed  development of its business,  the Company may continue to incur losses
for at least the next 12 months and until such time,  if ever, as the Company is
able to generate  sufficient revenues to finance its operations and the costs of
continuing expansion. There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to
generate  significant  revenues  or  achieve  profitable  operations.   See  the
financial   statements  and  the  notes  thereto  included   elsewhere  in  this
Registration Statement.


         Need  for  Additional  Financing.  The  Company  will  need  additional
financing to meet its current plans for expansion.  The Company  expects to need
additional financing of at least $15 million over the next 12 months to fund its
full development  plans. Such financing may be debt or equity financing.  To the
extent that the Company  incurs  indebtedness  or issues  debt  securities,  the
Company  will  be  subject  to  risks  associated  with  incurring   substantial
indebtedness,  including  the risks that  interest  rates may fluctuate and cash
flow may be insufficient to pay principal and interest on any such indebtedness.
There can be no assurance  that  additional  financing  will be available to the
Company on commercially  reasonable terms or at all. If the Company is unable to
obtain  additional  financing,  its  ability  to  meet  its  current  plans  for
development and expansion could be materially adversely affected.

                                      -21-
<PAGE>

         Environmental  Liabilities.  Prior to 1999, the Company's sole business
was mining exploration and development. The Company owned 100% of Madison Mining
Corporation  ("Madison") and 94% of Gold King Mines  Corporation  ("Gold King").
Madison  controlled  1,500 acres in the Adler Gulch mining  district in Montana,
owned mining and milling  equipment and certain patented and unpatented  mineral
claims. The Madison property  contained several past producing mines,  including
the Cornucopia,  El Fleeda,  U.S. Grant,  Bamboo Chief,  St. Lawrence and Silver
Bell. Gold King owned 82% of three properties  including the Gold King Mines and
the Minnehaha Mine in the mining  district near  Silverton,  Colorado.  The Gold
King  properties  included  a lease of 212  acres of  patented  mineral  claims,
ownership of 11 unpatented mineral claims covering 29 acres and ownership of 219
acres of fee land.  In November  1998,  the  electorate  of the State of Montana
approved an initiative to ban cyanide leach processing in that State for all new
open pit gold and silver mines and to prohibit expansion of existing mines using
cyanide leaching. In the Company's opinion, these initiatives seriously affected
the future planned operations of the Company. In late 1998, the Company sold its
mining-related assets.

         The mining and mineral  processing  industries are subject to extensive
governmental  regulations  for  the  protection  of the  environment,  including
regulations  relating  to air and water  quality,  mine  reclamation,  solid and
hazardous waste handling and disposal and the promotion of occupational  safety.
The Company is not aware of any  environmental  liabilities faced by the Company
and its prior management. However, the Company could be held responsible for any
environmental  liabilities  relating to the mining  businesses that were sold by
the Company which  liabilities could have a material adverse effect on financial
condition of the Company.

         Possible Litigation. The Company and Applied Courseware Technology Inc.
("ACT") signed a share purchase agreement dated May 13, 1999 whereby the Company
was to purchase all of the outstanding shares of ACT. As a result of the failure
of ACT to satisfy its  representations  and warranties  under the share purchase
agreement and the lapse of the escrow  agreement  dated May 10, 1999 (as amended
by the extension  agreement dated June 29, 1999),  the share purchase  agreement
was not  consummated  or  completed.  ACT has  indicated to the Company that ACT
believes the Company unlawfully  terminated the share purchase agreement and has
access to and  possesses  intellectual  property  belonging  to ACT and that the
Company  has no  right to use or  derive  any  benefit  from  such  intellectual
property.  ACT has indicated  that it expects to commence an action  against the
Company for damages.  Whether or not  determined  in favor of the  Company,  any
litigation  with ACT could  result in  significant  expense to the  Company  and
divert the efforts of the Company's  technical  and  management  personnel  from
productive tasks. An unfavorable  decision in any litigation with ACT could have
a material  adverse effect on the business,  financial  condition and results of
operations of the Company. See "Item 8 - Legal Proceedings."


                                      -22-

<PAGE>
                    Risks Relating to the Company's Business

         New Industry;  Uncertainty  of Market  Acceptance.  As is typically the
case in an emerging industry,  demand and market acceptance for newly introduced
services and products are subject to a high level of uncertainty.

         Risks Associated with Growth Strategy and Rapid Expansion.  The Company
is a development  stage company and has not yet sold any products or services on
a  commercial  basis.  Implementation  of the  Company's  business  plan will be
substantially  dependent on, among other things,  the Company's  ability to hire
and retain  skilled  management,  financial,  marketing and other  personnel and
successfully manage growth (including monitoring  operations,  controlling costs
and  maintaining  effective  quality  controls).  The Company expects to hire an
additional 25 employees  and, based on customer  demand,  expand the capacity of
its  information  hub network by an  additional 10 hubs over the next 12 months.
There can be no assurance  that the Company will be able to hire and retain such
personnel  and expand  such  capacity.  If it is unable to do so, the  Company's
growth strategy may be materially  adversely  affected.  The Company's plans are
subject  to change as a result of a number of  factors,  including  progress  or
delays in the  development  of its  technologies,  availability  of  funding  on
commercially  reasonable  terms,  changes in market  conditions and  competitive
factors. There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to successfully
implement its business strategy or otherwise expand its operations.

         Failure to Enter into Agreements with AT&T Canada, Sun Microsystems and
College Boreal. The Company is in the process of negotiating  certain agreements
with AT&T Canada,  Sun Microsystems and College Boreal.  The Company's  business
plans are predicated on the benefits the Company  expects to receive as a result
of such  agreements,  as well as  additional  agreements  it may enter into with
other  network and  courseware  providers.  There can be no  assurance  that the
Company will enter into any such agreements.  If the Company does not enter into
such  agreements,  the Company may have to delay its plans until such time as it
enters into comparable agreements with other entities.

         Competition.  The market for the  Company's  products  and  services is
highly  competitive and subject to rapid  technological  change.  There are many
companies  that  act as  application  service  providers,  offering  third-party
application  hosting to their  customers.  Management does not know of any other
company  currently  offering  the virtual  call  center,  distance  learning and
telework  applications  being  developed  by the  Company.  With  respect to the
distance  learning  application  being  developed  by the  Company,  competition
currently  consists  of many  companies  offering  learning  via  CD-ROM and the
Internet. With respect to the virtual call center application being developed by
the Company,  competition  currently consists of the many traditional "brick and
mortar" call centers.  With respect to the telework  application being developed
by the Company,  competition  currently  consists of those technology  companies
that offer remote access to a company's  central  computer  system.  The Company
believes  that its ability to compete  depends on many  factors  both within and
beyond its control,  including the success of the marketing and sales efforts of
the Company  and its  competitors,  the price and  reliability  of products  and
services
                                      -23-
<PAGE>

developed  by the  Company  and  its  competitors  and  the  timing  and  market
acceptance of the products and services  being  developed by the Company and its
competitors.  Competitors may quickly deploy products and e-commerce  technology
that could limit the Company's  expansion.  The Company  expects  competition to
increase  in the  future.  Many  of the  Company's  potential  competitors  have
substantially  greater  financial,  technical and marketing  resources  than the
Company.  Increased  competition  could  materially  and  adversely  affect  the
Company's business,  financial condition and results of operations. There can be
no assurance that the Company will be able to compete successfully.

         Attraction and Retention of Qualified Personnel.  The Company's ability
to continue to develop and market its services and  products  depends,  in large
part, on its ability to attract and retain qualified personnel.  Competition for
such personnel is intense and no assurance can be given that the Company will be
able to retain and attract such personnel.

         Limited Intellectual Property Protection; Risk of Third-Party Claims of
Infringement.  The  Company's  success  is  dependent  in part  on  intellectual
property rights, including information technology,  some of which is proprietary
to the Company such as the software  developed by the Company that comprises the
learning  management  system,  a filtering  engine,  a corporate  hosted  e-mail
service that integrates the Company's  filtering  engine with industry  standard
e-mail and directory servers from Netscape and Sun  Microsystems,  a methodology
that allows the Company to rapidly host applications  from independent  software
vendors on the  Company's  information  hub,  and various  software  integration
tools.  The  Company  relies  on  a  combination  of  nondisclosure  agreements,
technical  measures,  trade secret and trademark laws to protect its proprietary
rights.  The  Company  does not  presently  hold any  patents  for its  existing
products or services  and  presently  has no patent  applications  pending.  The
Company has entered  into  confidentiality  agreements  with its  employees  and
anticipates  that any future  employees  will enter  into such  agreements.  The
Company  also  attempts  to limit  access  to and  distribution  of  proprietary
information.  There can be no  assurance  that the steps taken by the Company in
this  regard  will  be  adequate  to  deter   misappropriation   of  proprietary
information or that the Company will be able to detect  unauthorized use or take
appropriate steps to enforce  intellectual  property rights. In addition,  there
can be no  assurance  that the  Company's  competitors  will  not  independently
develop  technologies  that are  substantially  equivalent  or  superior  to the
Company's technology. Further, the laws of many foreign countries do not protect
the Company's intellectual property rights to the same extent as the laws of the
United States. The failure of the Company to protect its proprietary information
could  have a  material  adverse  effect on the  Company's  business,  financial
condition and results of operations.

         From  time  to  time,  third  parties  may  assert  exclusive   patent,
copyright, trademark and other intellectual property rights to technologies that
are used by the Company.  Litigation may be necessary to defend against  claimed
infringements  of the rights of others or to determine the scope and validity of
the  proprietary  rights of others.  Future  litigation may also be necessary to
enforce and protect trade secrets and other  intellectual  property rights owned
by the  Company.  Any such  litigation  could be costly and cause  diversion  of
management's attention,  either of which could have a material adverse effect on
the Company's business,  financial condition and results of operations.

                                      -24-
<PAGE>

Adverse  determinations  in such  litigation  could  result  in the  loss of the
Company's  proprietary  rights,  subject the Company to significant  liabilities
(including  possible  indemnification of its customers),  require the Company to
secure licenses from  third-parties or prevent the Company from manufacturing or
selling its products or services, any one of which could have a material adverse
effect on the Company's business, financial condition and results of operations.
The  Company  has not  been a party  to any such  litigation  to date.  However,
Applied  Courseware  Technology Inc.  ("ACT") has indicated that the Company has
access to and  possesses  intellectual  property  belonging  to ACT and that the
Company  has no  right to use or  derive  any  benefit  from  such  intellectual
property.  See  "Risk  Factors  -  Possible  Litigation"  and  Item  8  -  Legal
Proceedings.  The Company  has not  conducted a formal  patent  search  relating
generally to the technology used in its products or services. In addition, since
patent  applications  in the United States are not publicly  disclosed until the
patent  issues  and  foreign  patent  applications  generally  are not  publicly
disclosed for at least a portion of the time that they are pending, applications
may have been filed which,  if issued as patents,  would relate to the Company's
products or services. Software comprises a substantial portion of the technology
in the Company's products.  The scope of protection accorded to patents covering
software-related   inventions  is  evolving  and  is  subject  to  a  degree  of
uncertainty  that may  increase  the risk and cost to the Company if the Company
discovers the existence of third-party  patents related to its software products
or if such patents are asserted against the Company in the future.  Patents have
been granted recently on fundamental  technologies in software,  and patents may
issue which relate to fundamental  technologies  incorporated into the Company's
products or services.

         Impact of Technological  Change.  While the Company employs proprietary
software   technology  and  algorithms   and  conducts   ongoing   research  and
development,  the future  success of the  Company  will  depend in part upon its
ability to keep pace with advancing  technology,  evolving industry and changing
customer requirements in a cost-effective manner. There can be no assurance that
the  Company's  proprietary  software  technology  and  algorithms  will  not be
rendered  obsolete  by other  technology  incorporating  technological  advances
designed  by  competitors  that the  Company is unable to  incorporate  into its
products or services in a timely manner.

         The market for the Company's  products and services is characterized by
rapidly  changing  technologies.  The  rapid  development  of  new  technologies
increases the risk that current or new  competitors  could  develop  products or
services  that would reduce the  competitiveness  of the  Company's  products or
services.  The Company's  success will depend to a  substantial  degree upon its
ability to respond to changes in technology and customer requirements. This will
require the timely  selection,  development  and  marketing  of new  products or
services and  enhancements on a  cost-effective  basis.  The development of new,
technologically  advanced  products  or  services  is a  complex  and  uncertain
process,  requiring  high  levels of  innovation.  The  introduction  of new and
enhanced products or services also requires that the Company manage  transitions
from older products or services in order to minimize  disruptions.  There can be
no assurance that the Company will be successful in  developing,  introducing or
managing the transition to new or enhanced products or services or that any such
products or services will be responsive  to  technological  changes or will gain
market acceptance.  The Company's  business,  financial condition and results of
operations

                                      -25-
<PAGE>

would be  materially  adversely  affected if the Company  were to be
unsuccessful, or to incur significant delays, in developing and introducing such
new products, services or enhancements.

                                   Other Risks

         Dividends  Unlikely.  The  Company has not paid cash  dividends  on its
Common  Stock  since its  inception.  The  Company  does not  intend to pay cash
dividend on its Common Stock in the  foreseeable  future so that it may reinvest
earnings, if any, in the development of its business.

         No Assurance of Public Market; Possible Volatility of Market. There has
been  only a limited  public  trading  market  for the  Common  Stock on the OTC
Bulletin Board.  There can be no assurance that a regular trading market for the
Common Stock will ever develop or that, if developed, it will be sustained.  The
market  price of the Common  Stock may be highly  volatile  as has been the case
with the  securities of many emerging  companies.  Factors such as the Company's
operating  results and  announcements  by the Company or its  competitors of new
products or services may significantly  impact the market price of the Company's
securities.  In addition,  in recent years,  the stock market has  experienced a
high level of price and volume  volatility  and market prices for the securities
of many companies have experienced wide fluctuations not necessarily  related to
the operating performance of such companies.

         Foreign  Exchange.  The Company  receives the proceeds from its private
placements in U.S. dollars.  It is the Company's practice to maintain all excess
cash in U.S. dollars and to invest these funds in short term,  interest bearing,
U.S. dollar  deposits.  The Company converts U.S. dollars to Canadian dollars on
an as needed  basis to meet  Canadian  dollar  expenses.  The  Company  incurs a
significant portion of its expenses in Canadian dollars and therefore is exposed
to  fluctuations  in the foreign  exchange  rate  between the  Canadian and U.S.
dollar.

         Year  2000.  Certain  computer  hardware  and  software  is  unable  to
appropriately  interpret  the upcoming  calendar  Year 2000.  These  systems and
software  refer  to  years in terms  of  their  final  two  digits  only and may
interpret the year 2000 as the year 1900 in error. Therefore,  they will need to
be modified  prior to the year 2000 in order to remain  functional.  The Company
has  established a Year 2000 program that  involves  assessing the Company's key
hardware and  software,  assessing  Year 2000  compliance  by third parties with
which the Company has a material relationship, assessing Year 2000 compliance of
the  applications  being  developed by the Company,  and  modifying  and testing
hardware and software in the Company's  internal systems,  where necessary.  The
majority  of the  Company's  hardware  and  software  has been  acquired  and/or
developed  within the last  twelve  months and a Year 2000  assessment  was done
prior to the acquisition or development.

         The Company has completed an assessment of the hardware and software in
its core  business  information  systems  and has  substantially  completed  the
necessary modifications. The Company has extended the assessment and remediation
process to the hardware and  software in other  information  systems used in its
operations.  The Company has also extended its  assessment  and


                                      -26-

<PAGE>

remediation to other areas of its business to include  hardware and software not
supported by the Company's information systems department.  The Company utilizes
third-party   equipment,   software  and  content,   including   non-information
technology  systems  and  embedded  micro-controllers  that may not be Year 2000
compliant.

         The Company has  contacted  key vendors and  suppliers  and other third
parties whose systems failures could  potentially  have a significant  impact on
the  Company's  operations  to determine  the extent to which its systems may be
vulnerable and was referred to the Year 2000 section of their webpage.

         The Company believes that the assessment and remediation  phases of its
Year 2000  conversion  program is  substantially  complete.  The Company has not
incurred  material costs to date for such program and does not  anticipate  that
the total  cost of such  program  will have a material  effect on its  business,
results of operations or financial condition.

         The most reasonably likely worst case scenarios regarding the Year 2000
issue would include a hardware failure, the corruption or loss of data contained
in the  Company's  internal  information  system,  and a failure  affecting  the
Company's key vendors, suppliers or customers.

         The  Company  has  determined  that  it  does  not  need  a  Year  2000
contingency plan at this time.

         There can be no assurance that conversion of the Company's hardware and
software  will be  successful,  that  key  third-parties  will  have  successful
conversion programs, that the Company's systems do not contain undetected errors
or defects  associated  with Year 2000 date  functions,  or that  other  factors
relating to Year 2000 compliance,  including but not limited to litigation, will
not have a  material  adverse  effect  on the  Company's  business,  results  of
operations or financial condition.


                           Corporate Governance Risks

         Substantial  Shares of Common Stock Reserved for Issuance.  The Company
has  reserved  2,250,000  shares of Common  Stock for  issuance  pursuant to the
Company's  1998  Stock  Option  Plan,  pursuant  to which  options  to  purchase
2,075,000  shares of Common  Stock at an  exercise  price of $1.00 per share are
outstanding.  The Company has also reserved 2,000,000 shares of Common Stock for
issuance  pursuant to the  Company's  1999 Stock  Option Plan  pursuant to which
options to purchase  1,180,500  shares of Common  Stock at an exercise  price of
$7.00 per share are  outstanding.  The Company has also issued  options  outside
such plans to purchase 810,000 shares of Common Stock at exercise prices ranging
from $7.00 to $8.25 per share and  warrants to purchase  an  additional  307,500
shares of Common Stock at exercise prices ranging from $7.00 to $8.75 per share.
The  existence  of the  outstanding  options  and  warrants  may  hinder  future
financings  by the  Company.  In  addition,  the exercise of any such options or
warrants in the future could dilute the net tangible book value of the Company's
Common  Stock.  Further,  the holders of such  options and warrants may

                                      -27-
<PAGE>

exercise  them at a time  when the  Company  would  otherwise  be able to obtain
additional equity capital on terms more favorable to the Company.

         Authorization  and  Discretionary  Issuance  of  Preferred  Stock.  The
Company is  authorized  to issue up to  100,000,000  shares of preferred  stock,
$.001 par value per share (the  "Preferred  Stock").  The Preferred Stock may be
issued in one or more series,  on such terms and with such  rights,  preferences
and designations as the Board of Directors of the Company may determine, without
action by stockholders.  No shares of Preferred Stock are currently outstanding.
However,  the issuance of any Preferred Stock could adversely  affect the rights
of the holders of Common  Stock,  and  therefore  reduce the value of the Common
Stock.  In  particular,  specific  rights granted to future holders of Preferred
Stock could be used to restrict the Company's  ability to merge with or sell its
assets to a third-party,  thereby  preserving  control of the Company by present
owners.

                                      -28-

<PAGE>
ITEM     2.       FINANCIAL INFORMATION.


         The  selected  financial  data set  forth  below are  derived  from the
financial  statements  of the Company  included  elsewhere in this  Registration
Statement  and are  qualified by reference to and should be read in  conjunction
with such financial  statements,  including the notes thereto, and "Management's
Discussion  and  Analysis of  Financial  Condition  and  Results of  Operations"
included elsewhere in this Registration  Statement.  The financial statements of
the Company as of and for the three months ended March 31, 1999,  the year ended
December 31, 1998 and the period from July 29, 1997  (inception) to December 31,
1997  have been  audited  by Ernst & Young  LLP,  independent  certified  public
accountants.  The  information as of and for the six months ended  September 30,
1999 and 1998 and for the three months ended March 31, 1998 is unaudited and, in
the opinion of management  contains all adjustments  (consisting  only of normal
recurring  adjustments)  necessary  for a fair  presentation  of  the  Company's
financial position and results of operations at such dates and for such periods.
The  results for the six months  ended  September  30, 1999 are not  necessarily
indicative  of the results  for the full year.  The  historical  results for the
periods ended December 31, 1997 and 1998,  March 31, 1998 and September 30, 1998
are  those of  Virtual  Performance  Systems.  The  historical  results  are not
necessarily  indicative  of the  results of  operations  to be  expected  in the
future.


                             Selected Financial Data
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                                         Period from
                                                                                                                       July 29, 1997
                                                                                                    Year ended        (inception) to
                            Six months ended                  Three months ended                    December 31,            December
                               September 30,                      March 31,                           1998                  31, 1997
                               -------------                      ---------                          ----             --------------
                                  1999              1998           1999              1998
                                  ----              ----           ----              ----
Statement of
Operations Data:
<S>                          <C>                 <C>            <C>                <C>               <C>                  <C>
Revenues..............       $    58,464         $     99       $      4,478       $    43,446       $    43,446          $   3,508
Expenses..............        17,206,409           89,703          3,088,399            63,067           467,318             99,669
Net loss for the
period................        16,613,840           89,604          3,083,921            19,621           423,872             96,161
Net loss per share....             $0.78            $0.11              $0.27           $478.56             $0.55             $2,345
Dividends paid........                -                 -                  -                 -                 -                  -
Balance Sheet Data:
Total assets..........       $33,201,093          $65,524         $4,025,076           $47,510          $143,467            $28,604
</TABLE>


                                      -29-
<PAGE>
Management's  Discussion  and Analysis of Results of  Operations  and  Financial
Condition

         The consolidated financial statements of the Company are the continuing
financial statements of Virtual Performance  Systems,  Inc., a development stage
company  and an  Ontario  corporation  incorporated  on July 29,  1997.  Virtual
Performance  Systems  had a 100%  interest  in, and  subsequently  merged  with,
Cheltenham  Technologies  Corporation  ("Cheltenham  Technologies"),  an Ontario
corporation.  Virtual  Performance  Systems has a 100%  interest  in  Cheltenham
Interactive  Corporation   ("Cheltenham   Interactive"),   an  inactive  Ontario
corporation,  and Cheltenham  Technologies  (Bermuda)  Corporation  ("Cheltenham
Bermuda"),  a Barbados corporation that owns certain intellectual  property.  On
January 29, 1999,  Virtual  Performance  Systems  acquired the net assets of the
Company  (formerly  known  as  Grant  Reserve  Corporation),   a  United  States
non-operating  company traded on the Nasdaq OTC Bulletin Board, which had a 100%
interest  in  InfoCast  Canada  Corporation   ("InfoCast  Canada").   After  the
acquisition,  the  accounting  entity  continued  under  the  name  of  InfoCast
Corporation. InfoCast Corporation, InfoCast Canada, Virtual Performance Systems,
Cheltenham  Technologies,  Cheltenham  Interactive  and  Cheltenham  Bermuda are
collectively referred to in this section as the "Company."

         The  following  discussion  should  be read  in  conjunction  with  the
Company's  historical  financial statements and notes thereto included elsewhere
in this Registration Statement.

         The following  discussion  includes  forward looking  statements.  Such
forward  looking  statements  involve risks and  uncertainties,  including among
other things, statements regarding the Company's anticipated costs and expenses.
Such  forward  looking  statements  contain,  but are not  limited to, the words
"expects,"  "anticipates,"  "intends,"  "predicts"  and  similar  language.  The
Company's  actual results may differ  significantly  from those projected in the
forward  looking  statements.  Factors that might cause future results to differ
materially from those described in the forward looking statements  include,  but
are not limited to, those discussed in the section entitled "Risk Factors."


                                      -30-
<PAGE>
Overview

         The Company is a  development  stage  company that is in the process of
developing the infrastructure to enable it to host both  Company-customized  and
third-party  software  applications  that can be accessed remotely by businesses
and their  employees.  This  infrastructure  will consist of: computer  hardware
purchased  from  third  parties;   software   applications;   and  communication
connections  over  private and public  networks,  including  the  Internet.  The
Company plans to provide its  customers  with access to its  infrastructure  and
hosted  applications on a per use basis.  Companies providing such services have
recently come to be known as application service providers or "ASPs."

         The Company has incurred  operating  losses since its inception in July
1997.  The  Company has not yet sold any  products  or services on a  commercial
basis and has had no revenues. The Company has sustained itself through the sale
of its Common Stock and warrants to purchase Common Stock in a series of private
placements and shareholder loans. There can be no assurance that such funds will
be available in the future if additional capital is required.

         The Company  acquired  HomeBase Work  Solutions in May 1999 in exchange
for 3,400,000  shares of InfoCast  Canada,  which shares are  exchangeable  into
Common Stock of the Company.  The HomeBase Work Solutions  acquisition  provided
the Company with the core  technology  for its  information  hub  strategy.  The
acquisition also introduced the telework application and third-party application
hosting  initiatives  to the  Company,  both  of  which  will be  hosted  on the
Company's  information  hub.  The virtual call center  application  and distance
learning  library  being  developed  by the  Company  will also be hosted on the
information hub.

         The Company  changed its fiscal year end from  December 31 to March 31.
Therefore financial statements have been prepared for the three month transition
period ended March 31, 1999.

Results of Operations


Six months ended  September 30, 1999 vs.  six months ended  September 30, 1998

         Consulting income decreased from $99 for the six months ended September
30, 1998 to zero for the six months ended  September 30, 1999.  This decrease is
due  to  the  Company's  decision  to no  longer  provide  computer  programming
services.

         Interest income  increased from zero for the six months ended September
30, 1998 to $58,464 for the six months ended  September  30, 1999.  The proceeds
received  from the  private  placements  in 1999  were  invested  in short  term
deposits which  generated  interest  income for the Company during the six month
period ended September 30, 1999, consistent with the Company's investment policy
discussed under "Risk Factors - Foreign Exchange" elsewhere in this Registration
Statement.


                                      -31-
<PAGE>


         General, administrative and selling expenses increased from $35,310 for
the six months ended  September 30, 1998 to $4,023,321  for the six months ended
September  30,  1999.  The  consolidation  of the  operations  of HomeBase  Work
Solutions  for the period May 13,  1999 to  September  30,  1999  accounted  for
$147,000 of the increase.  The Company incurred  expenses of $284,000 related to
the HomeBase Work Solutions  acquisition  in the form of incentive  compensation
paid to  three  key  officers  of  HomeBase  Work  Solutions.  The  Company  had
approximately  seven more  employees  involved  in general,  administrative  and
selling  functions in the six month period ended September 30, 1999 than for the
same period ended September 30, 1998, contributing approximately $111,000 to the
increase in expenses.  The Company paid consulting  fees to an additional  three
consultants during the six month period ended September 30, 1999 compared to the
same period ended September 30, 1998, contributing approximately $400,000 to the
increase in general,  administrative  and selling expenses.  Investor  relations
costs of $687,000  were  incurred for the six month period ended  September  30,
1999,  $607,700 of which was spent on national  media  consulting  services  and
financial  community investor  relations  consulting  services.  Additional rent
expenses of $75,500 were incurred for the two U.S. offices that were not open in
September  1998 and the expanded  Toronto  office  space.  The Company  expensed
$595,083  for  warrants  issued for  services  during the six month period ended
September 30, 1999 and expensed an additional  $254,149  related to common stock
issued for services  during the six month period ended  September 31, 1999.  The
Company  incurred  sales  and  marketing  expenses  related  to the Call  Center
Learning  Solutions  On-Line Inc. joint venture of $103,000 during the six month
period ended September 30, 1999.

         Stock  option  compensation  expense  increased  from  zero for the six
months ended September 30, 1998 to $9,506,548 for the six months ended September
30, 1999. This increase is due to the amortization of the deferred  compensation
amount resulting from the grant of stock options to various individuals involved
in the management of the Company.



                                      -32-
<PAGE>


         Research and  development  expenses  increased from $52,498 for the six
months ended September 30, 1998 to $1,783,346 for the six months ended September
30, 1999.  This  increase is primarily  due to continued  efforts to develop and
expand the  Company's  product  offerings.  The  Company  incurred  expenses  of
approximately  $618,000 for services  related to the  electronic  conversion  of
courseware and the Call Center  Learning  Solutions  On-Line joint venture up to
September 30, 1999. The Company also wrote off a $95,000 receivable from Applied
Courseware Technology in September 1999 to research and development expense. The
Company  had  approximately   six  more  employees   involved  in  research  and
development  functions in the six month period ended September 30, 1999 than for
the same period ended September 30, 1998, contributing approximately $129,000 to
the increase in expenses.  The Company paid consulting fees to an additional six
consultants during the six month period ended September 30, 1999 compared to the
same period ended September 30, 1998, contributing approximately $178,000 to the
increase in research and development expense.


         Amortization  expenses  increased  from zero for the six  months  ended
September  30, 1998 to $1,863,286  for the six months ended  September 30, 1999.
Amortization of the acquired  intellectual  property and goodwill resulting from
the  acquisition  of HomeBase Work  Solutions  accounted for the majority of the
increase in the amortization expense for the period.


         Depreciation  expenses  increased  from $1,895 for the six months ended
September 30, 1998 to $29,908 for the six months ended  September 30, 1999. This
increase is a result of the  acquisition  of additional  capital  assets between
October 1, 1998 and September 30, 1999.


         Deferred  income  taxes  increased  from zero for the six months  ended
September 30, 1998 to $534,105 for the six months ended  September 30, 1999 as a
result of the  drawdown  of the  deferred  income tax  liability  created by the
purchase of HomeBase Work  Solutions by the Company in respect of the difference
in the tax and accounting basis of various intellectual property assets.



Three months ended March 31, 1999 compared to three months ended March 31, 1998

         The three month period  ended March 31, 1999 is a transition  period in
respect of the change in the Company's fiscal year end from December 31 to March
31.


                                      -33-

<PAGE>
         Consulting  income  decreased  from  $43,446 for the three months ended
March 31, 1998 to zero for the three months ended March 31, 1999.  This decrease
is due to the  Company's  decision  to no longer  provide  computer  programming
services.

         Interest  income  increased  from zero for the three months ended March
31, 1998 to $4,478 for the three  months  ended  March 31,  1999.  The  proceeds
received  from the March 1999  private  placement  were  invested  in short term
deposits,  which  generated  interest  income for the Company  during the period
ended March 31, 1999.  It is the  Company's  policy to invest all excess cash in
U.S. dollar short term interest bearing term deposits.

         General, administrative and selling expenses increased from $42,494 for
the three  months  ended March 31, 1998 to $635,334  for the three  months ended
March 31,  1999.  The majority of this  increase is due to the  expansion of the
Company,  including  an  increase  in the number of  employees  and  consultants
providing  services to the Company,  additional  rent expenses of  approximately
$40,000 for the two offices in the United States,  opened in late 1998 and early
1999,  and the  additional  space  required in the Toronto office and additional
travel  expenses  of  approximately  $85,000.  As a result of the  January  1999
reverse merger, the Company incurred investor relations costs of $151,000 during
the three month period ended March 31, 1999.

         Stock option  compensation  expense  increased  from zero for the three
months ended March 31, 1998 to  $2,256,938  for the three months ended March 31,
1999.  This  increase is due to the  amortization  of the deferred  compensation
amount  resulting from the grant of 2,250,000  stock options under the Company's
1998 Stock Option Plan to various individuals  involved in the management of the
Company.  These  stock  options  were  granted on February 8, 1999 at a price of
$1.00 per share,  expire three years from the date of grant and are subject to a
vesting  period of at least six months.  As of April 19, 1999,  175,000 of these
stock options were canceled due to the  termination of certain  individuals  and
the  renegotiation  of  employment  terms,  leaving  a  balance  outstanding  of
2,075,000 options.

         Research and development  expenses increased from $19,703 for the three
months  ended March 31, 1998 to $162,914  for the three  months  ended March 31,
1999.  The majority of this increase is due to the continued  development of the
Company's technology.

         Interest  and loan  fees  expenses  increased  from  zero for the three
months  ended  March 31, 1998 to $23,562  for the three  months  ended March 31,
1999. The interest and loan fees resulted from a short term loan received by the
Company and repaid within the three month period ended March 31, 1999.

         Amortization  expenses  increased  from zero for the three months ended
March 31,  1998 to $4,144  for the  three  months  ended  March 31,  1999.  This
increase is due to the  amortization  of certain  intellectual  property  rights
related  to  remote  banking  software  acquired  from  a  company  owned  by  a
shareholder and former officer of the Company.


                                      -34-

<PAGE>
         Depreciation  expenses  increased  from $870 for the three months ended
March 31,  1998 to $5,507  for the  three  months  ended  March 31,  1999.  This
increase is a result of the acquisition of additional  capital assets from April
1, 1998 to March 31, 1999.

Year ended  December 31, 1998 compared to the 156 day period ended  December 31,
1997

         Consulting  income  increased  from $3,508 for the 156 day period ended
December 31, 1997 to $43,446 for the year ended December 31, 1998. This increase
is due to the timing of the provision of one-time computer programming services,
as the Company began  providing  these services at the end of 1997 and continued
to provided these services in the first calendar  quarter of 1998. In early 1998
the Company discontinued providing these consulting services.

         General, administrative and selling expenses increased from $47,954 for
the 156 day  period  ended  December  31,  1997 to  $375,302  for the year ended
December 31, 1998.  This increase is due to the expenses  being incurred for the
full year ended  December 31, 1998  compared to a 156 day period ended  December
31, 1997 and the continuing  expansion of business  operations.  Consulting fees
were higher in 1998 as the Company engaged  additional  consultants to assist in
building the management team and enhancing the business model and infrastructure
of the Company.  The Company  incurred higher legal costs in 1998 as a result of
legal services  rendered during 1998 for the reverse  takeover  transaction,  as
well as for  the  HomeBase  Work  Solutions  acquisition,  both  of  which  were
completed in 1999.

         Research and  development  expenses  increased from $51,257 for the 156
day period ended  December  31, 1997 to $88,180 for the year ended  December 31,
1998.  This  increase is due to the  expenses  being  incurred for the full year
ended December 31, 1998 compared to a 156 day period ended December 31, 1997 and
the continuing expansion of the Company's research and development efforts.

         Depreciation  expenses increased from $458 for the 156 day period ended
December 31, 1997 to $3,836 for the year ended December 31, 1998.  This increase
is a result of depreciation  being incurred for the full year ended December 31,
1998 compared to a 156 day period ended December 31, 1997 and the acquisition of
additional capital assets during the year ended December 31, 1998.

Liquidity and Capital Resources


Inception to  September 30, 1999


         At September  30, 1999,  the Company had cash and cash  equivalents  of
$5,300,965  and  working  capital of  $4,286,298.  The  Company's  cash and cash
equivalent  position has been generated through a series of equity offerings net
of  development  stage  expenditures.  The  Company  has not yet  generated  any
significant revenues.



                                      -35-
<PAGE>
         From its  inception  on July 29,  1997 to  January  29,  1999,  Virtual
Performance Systems issued 3,624,100 shares of Common Stock for cash proceeds of
Cdn $3,732 (or $2,540 in U.S. dollars as of September 30, 1999). Pursuant to the
reverse  takeover  transaction on January 29, 1999, the  shareholders of Virtual
Performance  Systems sold their 100% interest in Virtual  Performance Systems to
the Company in  consideration  for 1,500,000  shares of InfoCast  Canada,  which
shares are  exchangeable  into Common  Stock of the  Company  for no  additional
consideration.  Such  exchangeable  shares  have been deemed as shares of Common
Stock of the Company  because they are the economic  equivalent of the Company's
Common Stock. At the time of the reverse  takeover,  the Company (formerly Grant
Reserve  Corporation) had 13,580,000  shares of Common Stock  outstanding  which
continued as shares of Common Stock of the continuing entity.  Subsequent to the
reverse  takeover and up to September  30, 1999,  the Company  issued  3,023,333
shares of Common Stock at $1.50 per share in a private  placement in March 1999,
60,000 shares of Common Stock in consideration for consulting  services in March
1999 , 420,000 shares of Common Stock at $5.00 per share in a private  placement
in June  1999 and  1,720,000  shares  of  Common  Stock at $5.50  per share in a
private  placement in July,  August and September  1999.  The Company has raised
$14,710,000 from these private placements, net of share issuance costs.

         From its  inception,  the Company  has used  $6,104,000  for  operating
activities  before  changes in non-cash  working  capital  balances  mainly as a
result of general ,  administrative  and selling and  research  and  development
expenditures,  net of incidental revenues. The Company used a further $1,064,000
for the purchase of capital  assets and  software  licenses,  $2,975,000  on the
purchase of distribution rights and $324,000 on the placement of deposits.


         The  Company  relied on term loans  from  shareholders,  directors  and
officers  during the period from its  inception to the  completion  of the March
1999  private  placement to fund its  operations.  These loans were repaid as at
June 30, 1999 from the proceeds of the private placements.


         The Company is currently  raising funds through a private  placement of
its shares of Common Stock.  In October 1999,  the Company  received  $55,000 in
consideration  for  10,000  shares of Common  Stock,  bringing  the total  gross
proceeds to $9,515,000  in  consideration  for 1,730,000  shares of Common Stock
under this current private placement.  The Company may issue up to an additional
650,000 shares of Common Stock for an aggregate  offering price of $3,575,000 in
such offering. The Company expects to use these proceeds for the following:

         o        The Company  plans to continue to invest in the  research  and
                  development of its telework and  information  hub products and
                  services and anticipates spending approximately  $4,800,000 on
                  these efforts from October 1, 1999 to September 30, 2000.  The
                  Company  anticipates  that it will begin  earning  revenue and
                  collecting cash from sales of the telework and information hub
                  products  and  services


                                      -36-
<PAGE>

in the third  quarter of the  current  fiscal year which will help fund the cash
requirements of this division but there can be no assurance that it will do so.

        o         The  Company  will  contribute   approximately  $540,000  from
                  October 1, 1999 to March 31, 2000 to fund the marketing, sales
                  and  technical  support  efforts of the Call  Center  Learning
                  Solutions  On-Line joint venture,  of which it is a 50% owner.
                  The  Company has entered  into an  agreement  with Call Center
                  Learning Solutions Inc. to form a new corporation, Call Center
                  Learning Solutions On-Line. This new corporation will develop,
                  own and exploit  courseware in an electronic format capable of
                  electronic distribution.



        o         The Company will use approximately  $1,000,000 from October 1,
                  1999  to  September  30,  2000 to  enhance  and  complete  the
                  development of its virtual call center application.

        o         The Company expects to use approximately $800,000 from October
                  1, 1999 to March 31, 2000 in the  development  and  electronic
                  conversion   of   courseware   for   the   distance   learning
                  application.

        o         The Company will use the remaining  capital  resources to fund
                  possible complementary acquisitions, develop new technologies,
                  and other corporate and working capital needs.

         At October 31, 1999, the Company had  approximately  $3,602,000 of cash
and cash equivalents on hand. The Company believes that this cash as well as the
additional  proceeds of up to $3,575,000  expected to be received by the Company
from the completion of the current Regulation S financing by the end of December
1999 will be sufficient to support the Company's  growth for  approximately  the
next seven months.  Based on its current  plans,  which  include  receipt of the
foregoing  proceeds,  the  Company  anticipates  that it will  begin  generating
revenue  within the next six  months.  This  revenue is  expected to provide the
Company with  additional  cash  resources to support the  Company's  development
until  approximately  September  2000.  In the event the  current  Regulation  S
financing  is not  concluded , the Company will  curtail its  development  plans
commencing in January 2000 and reduce expense levels materially . In such event,
the Company  believes  that its  current  cash  reserves  will  support  limited
activities  until November 2000. The Company will be required to seek additional
funds and there can be no  assurance  that any  financing  will be  available on
terms acceptable to the Company or at all.

         On a long term basis,  the Company will need to raise  additional funds
through  private or public  financings,  strategic  or other  relationships.  In
October 1999, the Company entered into an agreement with Rothschild  pursuant to
which  Rothschild  is to assist the  Company in raising up to


                                      -37-

<PAGE>

$50 to $75 million over the next six months. See "Item 1 - Business - History of
the Company."  There can be no assurance  that the Company will be able to raise
any additional funds.


Year 2000 Compliance

         Certain  computer  hardware  and  software  is unable to  appropriately
interpret the upcoming  calendar Year 2000.  These systems and software refer to
years in terms of their final two digits only and may interpret the year 2000 as
the year 1900 in error.  Therefore,  they will need to be modified  prior to the
year 2000 in order to remain functional. The Company has established a Year 2000
program that  involves  assessing  the  Company's  key  hardware  and  software,
assessing  Year 2000  compliance  by third  parties with which the Company has a
material relationship,  assessing Year 2000 compliance of the applications being
developed by the Company, and modifying and testing hardware and software in the
Company's  internal  systems,  where  necessary.  The majority of the  Company's
hardware and software has been acquired and/or  developed within the last twelve
months  and a  Year  2000  assessment  was  done  prior  to the  acquisition  or
development.

         The Company has completed an assessment of the hardware and software in
its core  business  information  systems  and has  substantially  completed  the
necessary modifications. The Company has extended the assessment and remediation
process to the hardware and  software in other  information  systems used in its
operations.  The Company has also extended its  assessment  and  remediation  to
other areas of its business to include  hardware  and software not  supported by
the Company's  information systems department.  The Company utilizes third-party
equipment,  software and content,  including non-information  technology systems
and embedded micro-controllers that may not be Year 2000 compliant.

         The Company has  contacted  key vendors and  suppliers  and other third
parties whose systems failures could  potentially  have a significant  impact on
the  Company's  operations  to determine  the extent to which its systems may be
vulnerable and was referred to the Year 2000 section of their webpage.

         The Company believes that the assessment and remediation  phases of its
Year 2000  conversion  program is  substantially  complete.  The Company has not
incurred  material costs to date for such program and does not  anticipate  that
the total  cost of such  program  will have a material  effect on its  business,
results of operations or financial condition.

         The most reasonably likely worst case scenarios regarding the Year 2000
issue would include a hardware failure, the corruption or loss of data contained
in the  Company's  internal  information  system,  and a failure  affecting  the
Company's key vendors, suppliers or customers.

         The  Company  has  determined  that  there is no need  for a Year  2000
contingency plan at this time.

                                      -38-
<PAGE>

         There can be no assurance that conversion of the Company's hardware and
software  will be  successful,  that key  third  parties  will  have  successful
conversion programs, that the Company's systems do not contain undetected errors
or defects  associated  with Year 2000 date  functions,  or that  other  factors
relating to Year 2000 compliance,  including but not limited to litigation, will
not have a  material  adverse  effect  on the  Company's  business,  results  of
operations or financial condition.


Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk

         The  Company  is  exposed  to  immaterial  levels of market  risks with
respect to changes in foreign currency exchange rates and interest rates. Market
risk is the  potential  loss arising  from  adverse  changes in market rates and
prices, such as foreign currency exchange and interest rates. To the extent that
the Company  consummates  financings  outside of Canada, it receives proceeds in
currency  other  than  the  Canadian  dollar.  Most of the  Company's  operating
expenses  are  incurred in Canadian  dollars.  Thus,  the  Company's  results of
operations  will tend to be  adversely  affected  if there is a strong  Canadian
dollar.  The  Company  does  not  enter  into  derivatives  or  other  financial
instruments  for  trading  or  speculative  purposes,  nor  does it  enter  into
financial  instruments  to manage  and  reduce  the impact of changes in foreign
currency exchange rates.



ITEM     3.       PROPERTIES.

         The Company's operational  headquarters is located in 2,190 square feet
of leased  office  space in  Chicago,  Illinois  and it has  additional  offices
located  in 5,404  square  feet of  leased  office  space in  Toronto,  Ontario.
HomeBase  Work  Solutions  has  offices  located in 6,400  square feet of leased
office space in Calgary, Canada. The Company's lease in Toronto, Ontario expires
in November 2000, its lease in Chicago,  Illinois  expires in March 2002 and the
HomeBase Work Solutions lease in Calgary expires in August 2005. The Company and
its  subsidiaries  also lease  other  facilities  that are not  material  to the
Company's  business.  The Company  believes  that its  existing  facilities  are
adequate for its needs for the foreseeable  future and that if additional  space
is needed, it would be available on favorable terms.


                                      -39-


<PAGE>
ITEM  4.   SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT.

         The  following  table sets forth  information  as of September 30, 1999
with  respect to the  beneficial  ownership  of Common  Stock by (i) each person
known by the Company to own beneficially  more than 5% of the Common Stock, (ii)
each  executive  officer of the Company,  (iii) each Director of the Company and
(iv) all Directors and executive officers as a group.



      Name and Address of                Number of Shares             Percentage
       Beneficial Owner(1)               Beneficially Owned          of Class(2)
       -------------------               ------------------          -----------

Darcy Galvon                                  617,000(3)                  3.18%
A. Thomas Griffis                           9,204,997(4)                 32.85%
James Leech                                 9,250,000(5)                 32.96%
Michael Sheehan                             9,100,000(6)                 32.60%
James Hines                                 9,100,000(7)                 32.60%
Richard Shannon                               310,993(8)                  1.63%
George Shafran                              9,100,000(9)                 32.60%
Alexander Walsh                             9,200,000(10)                32.84%
Jennifer Scoffield                             25,000(11)                  *
Treetop Capital Inc.                        9,000,000(12)                47.84%
   c/o Griffis International
   1 Richmond Street West,
   Suite 901, Toronto,
   Ontario M5H3W4


                                      -40-

<PAGE>

Don Jeffrey                                 9,925,749(13)                34.54%
Sheridan Reserve
  Incorporated
    181 University Avenue,
    Suite 2110, Toronto,
    Ontario M5H3M7                          1,000,000                     5.32%
All officers and                           10,907,990                    36.70%
   directors as a group
   (9 persons)

- ---------------------
*        Less than one percent (1%) of outstanding Common Stock.

(1)      Except  as  otherwise  indicated,  the  address  for each of the  named
         individuals is c/o InfoCast Corporation,  1 Richmond Street West, Suite
         902, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5H 3W4.

(2)      Except as otherwise  indicated,  the  stockholders  listed in the table
         have sole  voting and  investment  power with  respect to all shares of
         Common  Stock  beneficially  owned by them.  Pursuant  to the rules and
         regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission, shares of Common
         Stock that an individual  or group has a right to acquire  within sixty
         (60) days pursuant to the exercise of warrants or options are deemed to
         be outstanding  for the purposes of computing the percentage  ownership
         of such  individual or group,  but are not deemed to be outstanding for
         the purpose of computing the  percentage  ownership of any other person
         shown in the table.

(3)      Represents (i) 517,000 shares to be issued in exchange for  outstanding
         exchangeable  shares of Virtual  Performance  Systems and (ii)  100,000
         shares  issuable upon  exercise of options  granted to Mr. Galvon under
         the 1998 Stock Option Plan.

(4)      Represents (i) 124,997 shares to be issued in exchange for  outstanding
         exchangeable   shares  of  Virtual   Performance   Systems  by  Griffis
         International  Limited, of which Mr. Griffis, the Chairman of the Board
         of the Company,  owns 100%,  (ii) 100,000 shares issuable upon exercise
         of options  granted to Mr. Griffis under the 1998 Stock Option Plan and
         (iii)  9,000,000  shares held by Treetop Capital Inc.  ("Treetop"),  of
         which Griffis International  Limited is a shareholder.  Mr. Griffis and
         Griffis  International Limited have no control over Treetop or power to
         direct  Treetop's  voting or disposition of its interest in the

                                      -41-

<PAGE>

         Company  other than with respect to 1,020,000  shares of which  Griffis
         International  Limited  is the  beneficial  owner.  Thus,  Mr.  Griffis
         disclaims  beneficial ownership with respect to 7,980,000 of the shares
         of the  Company's  Common  Stock owned by Treetop.  Treetop  expects to
         distribute  in the near  future the shares it holds in the Company on a
         pro rata basis to Treetop's  shareholders.  Virtual Performance Systems
         was  acquired  by the Company on January 29,  1999.  Such  exchangeable
         shares are  exchangeable  at any time for the shares of Common Stock of
         the Company on a share for share basis.

(5)      Represents (i) 250,000 shares issuable upon exercise of options granted
         to Mr. Leech in June 1999 and (ii) 9,000,000  shares held by Treetop of
         which Mr.  Leech is an option  holder.  Mr.  Leech has no control  over
         Treetop  or power to  direct  Treetop's  voting or  disposition  of its
         interest in the Company  other than with  respect to 300,000  shares of
         which he is the beneficial owner. Thus, Mr. Leech disclaims  beneficial
         ownership  with  respect to  8,700,000  of the shares of the  Company's
         Common Stock owned by Treetop.  Treetop  expects to  distribute  in the
         near  future the shares it holds in the  Company on a pro rata basis to
         Treetop's shareholders.

(6)      Represents (i) 100,000 shares issuable upon exercise of options granted
         to Mr.  Sheehan  under the 1998 Stock  Option  Plan and (ii)  9,000,000
         shares  held by Treetop,  of which Mr.  Sheehan is a  shareholder.  Mr.
         Sheehan has no control over Treetop or power to direct Treetop's voting
         or  disposition  of its interest in the Company other than with respect
         to  200,000  shares  of which he is the  beneficial  owner.  Thus,  Mr.
         Sheehan disclaims beneficial ownership with respect to 8,800,000 of the
         shares of the Company's Common Stock owned by Treetop.  Treetop expects
         to  distribute in the near future the shares it holds in the Company on
         a pro rata basis to Treetop's shareholders.

(7)      Represents (i) 100,000 shares issuable upon exercise of options granted
         to Mr. Hines under the 1998 Stock Option Plan and (ii) 9,000,000 shares
         held by Treetop, of which Mr. Hines is a shareholder.  Mr. Hines has no
         control over Treetop or power to direct Treetop's voting or disposition
         of its  interest  in the  Company  other  than with  respect to 630,000
         shares of which he is the beneficial  owner.  Thus, Mr. Hines disclaims
         beneficial  ownership  with  respect to  8,370,000 of the shares of the
         Company's Common Stock owned by Treetop.  Treetop expects to distribute
         in the near  future  the  shares it holds in the  Company on a pro rata
         basis to Treetop's shareholders.

(8)      Includes (i) 219,993  shares to be issued in exchange  for  outstanding
         shares of InfoCast Canada and (ii) 90,000 shares issuable upon exercise
         of options granted to Mr. Shannon under the 1999 Stock Option Plan.

(9)      Represents (i) 100,000 shares issuable upon exercise of options granted
         to Mr.  Shafran  under the 1998 Stock  Option  Plan and (ii)  9,000,000
         shares  held by Treetop,  of which Mr.

                                      -42-

<PAGE>
         Shafran is a  shareholder.  Mr.  Shafran has no control over Treetop or
         power to direct  Treetop's voting or disposition of its interest in the
         Company  other than with  respect to 250,000  shares of which he is the
         beneficial owner. Thus, Mr. Shafran disclaims beneficial ownership with
         respect to 8,750,000 of the shares of the Company's  Common Stock owned
         by Treetop. Treetop expects to distribute in the near future the shares
         it holds in the Company on a pro rata basis to Treetop's shareholders.

(10)     Represents (i) 200,000 shares issuable upon exercise of options granted
         to Mr. Walsh under the 1999 Stock Option Plan and (ii) 9,000,000 shares
         held by Treetop, of which Mr. Walsh is a shareholder.  Mr. Walsh has no
         control over Treetop or power to direct Treetop's voting or disposition
         of its  interest  in the  Company  other  than with  respect to 300,000
         shares of which he is the beneficial  owner.  Thus, Mr. Walsh disclaims
         beneficial  ownership  with  respect to  8,700,000 of the shares of the
         Company's Common Stock owned by Treetop.  Treetop expects to distribute
         in the near  future  the  shares it holds in the  Company on a pro rata
         basis to Treetop's shareholders.

(11)     Represents  25,000 shares  issuable upon exercise of options granted to
         Ms. Scoffield under the 1999 Stock Option Plan.

(12)     Represents  shares to be distributed to its  shareholders on a pro rata
         basis in the near future.

(13)     Represents (i) 825,749 shares to be issued in exchange for  outstanding
         exchangeable shares of Virtual Performance Systems by Mr. Jeffrey, (ii)
         100,000 shares issuable upon exercise of options granted to Mr. Jeffrey
         under the 1998 Stock Option Plan,  and (iii)  9,000,000  shares held by
         Treetop,  of  which  Mr.  Jeffrey  or  his  wholly-owned  company  is a
         shareholder. Mr. Jeffrey has no control over Treetop or power to direct
         Treetop's  voting or  disposition  of its interest in the Company other
         than with  respect to  1,479,000  shares of which he is the  beneficial
         owner. Thus, Mr. Jeffrey disclaims beneficial ownership with respect to
         7,521,000 of the shares of the Company's  Common Stock owned by Treetop
         . Virtual  Performance  Systems was  acquired by the Company on January
         29, 1999. Such shares are  exchangeable,  at any time for the shares of
         Common Stock of the Company on a share for share basis. Treetop expects
         to  distribute in the near future the shares it holds in the Company on
         a pro rata basis to Treetop's shareholders.


                                      -43-

<PAGE>
ITEM 5.  DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.

         The directors and executive officers of the Company, and their ages and
positions with the Company will be as follows:

       Name                Age                Position
       ----                ---                --------

Darcy Galvon               43      Co-Chairman of the Board, Director
A. Thomas Griffis          58      Co-Chairman of the Board, Director
James Leech                52      President, CEO and Director
Jennifer Scoffield         29      Vice President, Finance & Administration
Michael Sheehan            58      Vice President, Virtual Call Center, Director
James Hines                34      Executive Vice President, Director
Richard Shannon            54      President of HomeBase Work Solutions Ltd.
Alexander "Sandy" Walsh    33      Chief Technology Officer
George Shafran             73      Director

         The  officers of the Company are elected by the Board of  Directors  at
the first meeting after each annual meeting of the Company's  stockholders,  and
hold office until their death, until they resign or until they have been removed
from office.  No committees of the Board of Directors  have been  established to
date.

         The following is a brief summary of the background of each director and
executive officer of the Company:

         Mr. Galvon has been Co-Chairman and a director of the Company since May
13, 1999. In 1986,  Mr. Galvon founded Sun  MicroSystems,  Inc.'s Western Canada
office  in  Calgary,   Alberta,  where  he  was  responsible  for  covering  the
transportation,  utilities, education, manufacturing,  retail, entertainment and
software  developers in Calgary and the entire  province of  Saskatchewan.  From
1995 to the present,  Mr.  Galvon  served as a director of Sun Computer  Systems
Inc.  Alberta Ltd. and HomeBase Work Solutions  Ltd.,  which was acquired by the
Company in May 1999, and is currently a subsidiary of the Company. Mr. Galvon is
also a director of Facet  Petroleum  Solutions,  Inc.,  with which HomeBase Work
Solutions has entered into a licensing and  distribution  agreement.  He is also
Chairman of the Board of HomeBase Work Solutions.

         Mr.  Griffis  has been the  Chairman of the Board and a director of the
Company since January 12, 1999 and a Co-Chairman since May 13, 1999. Since 1986,
Mr.  Griffis  has  been the  founder  and sole  owner of  Griffis  International
Limited,  a  management   consulting  and  business  development  firm.  Griffis
International  Limited has focused its activities on the structuring,  financing
and management of emerging  companies,  particularly in the natural resource and
high-tech sectors.

                                      -44-
<PAGE>

         Mr. Leech has been President, Chief Executive Officer and a director of
the Company since  September 4, 1999.  From 1996 until September 1999, Mr. Leech
was Vice  Chairman and  Director at Kasten Chase  Applied  Research  Limited,  a
publicly-traded  data networking and wireless technology  company,  where he was
responsible for corporate strategy, finance, administration and production. From
1993 to 1996, Mr. Leech was President,  Chief Executive  Officer and Director of
Disys Corporation,  a publicly-traded  wireless  technology  company,  which was
later merged into Kasten Chase Applied Research Limited.

         Ms. Scoffield has been the Vice President,  Finance and  Administration
of the  Company  since  July 7,  1999.  From  February  1997 to June  1999,  Ms.
Scoffield held various positions at PRI Automation Inc. (formerly Promis Systems
Corporation Ltd.), a software  development  company,  most recently as Director,
Financial Projects.  From August 1996 to January 1997, Ms. Scoffield was Manager
of Finance for Pet Valu Canada,  Inc., a retail pet supply company.  From August
1993 to August 1996, Ms.  Scoffield was an accountant  with Ernst & Young in the
Entrepreneurial  Services  group where she  obtained  her  Chartered  Accountant
designation.

         Mr.  Sheehan has been Vice  President  of the  Company's  virtual  call
center  division  since July 6, 1999 and a director of the Company since January
12, 1999. He served as the Chief  Executive  Officer of the Company from January
12,  1999 to July 6,  1999.  From  1960 to 1998,  Mr.  Sheehan  held a number of
positions at AT&T,  most recently as Director of Call Center  Solutions for AT&T
Labs. At AT&T, Mr. Sheehan was  responsible for managing the building of complex
telecommunication  systems and networks and helped  create  strategic  marketing
plans for introducing new AT&T services and products.

         Mr. Hines has been the  Executive  Vice  President of the Company since
September 4, 1999 and a director of the Company  since  January 12, 1999. He was
the  President of the Company  from January 12, 1999 to September 3, 1999.  From
1996 to November 1998, Mr. Hines was President of Lasso  Communications Inc., an
international  affiliate of the Grey Worldwide Network of advertising companies.
Lasso is a marketing  communications company aimed at developing e- commerce web
sites and concepts to support more advanced  interaction  between  merchants and
buyers.  From  1994 to  1996,  Mr.  Hines  was  Vice  President  of  TransActive
Communications Inc., a company that marketed smart cards.

         Mr.  Shannon  has been the  President  and Chief  Executive  Officer of
HomeBase Work Solutions Ltd. since March 1999.  Since 1990, Mr. Shannon has been
a founding shareholder and managing director of Baycor Capital, Inc., a merchant
bank based in Calgary,  Alberta, as well as a founding  shareholder and director
of Nevada Bob's Canada Inc., a  publicly-traded  golf  retailer  with 85 company
stores and 200 franchised stores located in 10 countries.

         Mr. Walsh has been the Chief  Technology  Officer of the Company  since
May 1999.  From March 1998 to April 1999, Mr. Walsh was Director of Research and
Development - Business Intelligence Group for Hummingbird Communications Ltd., a
data networking company where he led product conceptualization and architectural
design  and  worked   with   industry   partners  to   integrate

                                      -45-
<PAGE>

complementary  technologies.  From March 1994 to February  1998,  Mr.  Walsh was
Project  Lead  for  Andyne  Computing  Limited,  a data  networking  company  of
Kingston,  Ontario.  Prior to joining Andyne Computing  Limited,  Mr. Walsh held
various positions in the software design field.

         Mr.  Shafran has been a director of the Company since February 8, 1999.
Mr.  Shafran has been the  President  of Geo. P. Shafran &  Associates,  Inc., a
management, marketing and investment consulting firm, for at least the last five
years. Mr. Shafran serves as Senior  Consultant for The High  Performance  Group
and as an associate  with the Technical  Analysis  Corporation.  Mr.  Shafran is
vice-chairman of The Heritage Bank and a director of NVR Mortgage, Missing Kids,
International  and is chairman of the  Advisory  Board of the AAA  Potomac.  Mr.
Shafran also serves as a consultant  to various  other  companies.  He currently
serves  on  President  Clinton's  Legislative  Council  of the U.S.  Chamber  of
Commerce  and on the Board of the National  Capital  Chapter of the American Red
Cross.


ITEM  6.   EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION.

         William R. Wilson was the Company's Chief Executive  Officer during the
year ended December 31, 1998. He received no compensation for his service as the
Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer.  Michael  Sheehan was the Company's  Chief
Executive  Officer from  January 12, 1999 to July 6, 1999.  Mr.  Sheehan  earned
$18,750  from  January  12,  1999 to March  31,  1999 for his  service  as Chief
Executive  Officer.  Mr. Leech became the Company's Chief  Executive  Officer on
September  4,  1999.   See  "Item  6  -  Executive   Compensation  -  Employment
Agreements."  No executive  officer  received  compensation  of a least $100,000
during the year ended  December 31, 1998.  No stock  options were granted to any
executive officer in 1998.

                               Stock Option Plans

         In 1998,  the  Company  adopted a stock  option  plan (the "1998  Stock
Option  Plan")  pursuant  to which  2,250,000  shares of Common  Stock have been
reserved for  issuance  upon the  exercise of options  designated  as either (i)
options intended to constitute  incentive stock options under the U.S.  Internal
Revenue  Code of 1986,  as amended  (the  "Code"),  or (ii)  nonqualified  stock
options.  Incentive stock options and nonqualified  stock options may be granted
to employees of the Company.

         The  purpose  of the  1998  Stock  Option  Plan is to  encourage  stock
ownership by officers and other key  employees and  consultants  and advisors of
the  Company.  The  1998  Stock  Option  Plan is  administered  by the  Board of
Directors of the Company.  The Board,  within the  limitations of the 1998 Stock
Option Plan,  determines the persons to whom options will be granted, the number
of shares to be covered by each option,  the option purchase price per share and
the manner of exercise,  and the time,  manner and form of payment upon exercise
of an option.

                                      -46-

<PAGE>
         The Company  granted no stock  options in the year ended  December  31,
1998 and there were no option  exercises in the year ended December 31, 1998. No
stock options were  outstanding  at December 31, 1998. As of September 30, 1999,
2,075,000  options  were  outstanding  under the 1998  Stock  Option  Plan at an
exercise price of $1.00 per share.

         The Company's 1999 Stock Option Plan (the "1999 Stock Option Plan") was
approved  by the Board of  Directors  of the Company on April 1, 1999 and by the
stockholders  of the  Company on July 29,  1999.  The  purpose of the 1999 Stock
Option Plan is to create  additional  incentives  for the  Company's  employees,
directors  and  others  who  perform  substantial  services  to the  Company  by
providing an opportunity to purchase  shares of the Common Stock pursuant to the
exercise of options  granted  under the 1999 Stock Option Plan.  The Company may
grant  options that qualify as incentive  stock options under Section 422 of the
Code, and non-qualified stock options. Incentive stock options may be granted to
employees  (including  officers and directors who are employees).  Non-qualified
stock  options may be granted to  employees,  officers,  directors,  independent
contractors and consultants of the Company. As of September 30, 1999,  2,000,000
shares were reserved for issuance under the 1999 Stock Option Plan and 1,180,500
options had been granted at an exercise price of $7.00 per share.

         The  maximum  number of shares  that may be subject to options  granted
under the 1999 Stock Option Plan to any  individual in any calendar year may not
exceed  800,000 and the method of  counting  such  shares  shall  conform to any
requirements applicable to "performance-based" compensation under Section 162(m)
of the Code. It is intended that  compensation  realized upon the exercise of an
option  granted  under the 1999 Stock Option Plan will  thereupon be regarded as
"performance-based"  under Section 162(m) of the Code and that such compensation
may be deductible without regard to the limits of Section 162(m) of the Code.

         The Board of Directors or the Compensation  Committee  thereof composed
of two or more non-management directors that are "non-employee directors" within
the meaning of Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
as amended,  and "outside directors" within the meaning of Section 162(m) of the
Code, is  authorized  to administer  the 1999 Stock Option Plan in a manner that
complies with Rule 16b-3 under the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.
The Board of Directors  or  Compensation  Committee  determines  which  eligible
individuals  are granted  options and the terms of such  options  including  the
exercise  price,  number of shares  subject to the option  and the  vesting  and
exercisability thereof;  provided, the maximum term of an incentive stock option
granted under the 1999 Stock Option Plan may not exceed five years.

         The exercise price of an incentive  stock option granted under the 1999
Stock  Option  plan must  equal at least  100% of the fair  market  value of the
subject stock on the date of grant and the exercise  price of all  non-qualified
stock  options  must equal at least 80% of the fair market  value of the subject
stock on the date of grant; provided,  however, that if an option granted to the
Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer or to any of the Company's  other four most
highly  compensated  officers  is  intended  to qualify  as  "performance-based"
compensation  under Section 162(m) of the Code, the exercise price must equal at
least 100% of the fair market  value of the subject  stock on the date of


                                      -47-
<PAGE>

grant.  With  respect  to any  participant  who owns more than 10% of the voting
power of the  Common  Stock of the  Company,  the  exercise  price of any option
granted  must equal at least 110% of the fair market value on the date of grant.
The  aggregate  fair  market  value on the date of grant of the  stock for which
incentive stock options are exercisable for the first time by an employee of the
Company during any calendar year may not exceed $100,000.

         Options shall become exercisable at such times and in such installments
as the Board of Directors or Compensation Committee shall provide. Non-qualified
and  incentive  stock  options  granted under the 1999 Stock Option Plan are not
transferable other than by will or the laws of descent or distribution, and each
option that has not yet expired is exercisable only by the recipient during such
person's lifetime,  or for 12 months thereafter by the person or persons to whom
the option passes by will or the laws of descent or distribution. The 1999 Stock
Option  Plan may be  amended  at any time by the  Board of  Directors,  although
certain amendments require stockholder approval. The 1999 Stock Option Plan will
terminate on April 8, 2009, unless earlier terminated by the Board of Directors.

                              Employment Agreement

         James  Leech is  employed  by the  Company  pursuant  to an  employment
agreement  dated as of August 5, 1999.  The agreement  provides that Mr. Leech's
employment  with the Company  shall  continue  unless it is terminated by either
party in accordance with the terms of the agreement.  The agreement provides for
an initial  base  salary of Cdn  $330,000  (or  $224,500  in U.S.  dollars as of
September  30,  1999) per annum,  a minimum  bonus of Cdn $30,000 (or $20,400 in
U.S.  dollars as of September 30, 1999) for the period ending March 31, 2000 and
a minimum  bonus of Cdn $50,000 (or $34,000 in U.S.  dollars as of September 30,
1999) for each twelve-month  period thereafter during the term of the agreement.
Mr.  Leech's  salary  shall be annually  reviewed  and may be  increased  at the
discretion of the Board of Directors.

         The agreement also provides that if Mr. Leech is terminated  other than
for "cause," he shall  receive the base salary  provided for under the agreement
through  the date of  termination,  plus a lump sum  payment  equal to twice his
annual base salary and bonus.  He will also receive his accrued bonus,  continue
to  participate  in  certain  benefit  plans  for the 24 months  following  such
termination  and any options issued to Mr. Leech will  immediately  vest. If Mr.
Leech's  employment is terminated due to death or "disability," he shall be paid
the base salary under the agreement  until the date of termination and receive a
pro rata payment for all bonuses  (calculated  as the greater of the bonus which
would be paid under the Company's  bonus plan on the basis that targets were met
and 50% of Mr. Leech's base salary),  as well as any benefits  accrued until the
date of termination and any options issued to Mr. Leech will  immediately  vest.
"Cause" is defined as a wilful  refusal on the part of Mr.  Leech to perform the
services  required  of  him  under  the  agreement  (including  the  wilful  and
intentional  withholding  of  services  thereunder),  any breach of Mr.  Leech's
fiduciary  duties to the Company  likely to cause  material harm to the Company,
fraud  or any  conviction  for a  felony  or  indictable  offense  or any  crime
involving  moral  turpitude or any of theft or  dishonesty  relating to a matter
material to the Company,  provided that a wilful refusal to perform the services
required


                                      -48-
<PAGE>

under the agreement will  constitute  cause only if Mr. Leech fails to terminate
the  relevant  actions or cure the  relevant  failure to act and remedy any harm
therefrom  within 10  business  days after  receipt  of  written  notice of such
wrongful act,  failure to act or harm from the Company.  "Disability" is defined
as the  eligibility  of Mr. Leech for long term  disability  benefits  under the
disability insurance provided by the Company.

         In the event Mr. Leech is  terminated  within 24 months of a "change of
control" of the Company,  Mr. Leech shall receive a payment equal to three times
his annual  base  salary and bonus.  He will also  receive  his  accrued  bonus,
continue to  participate in certain  benefit plans for 36 months  following such
termination and any options issued to Mr. Leech will immediately  vest.  "Change
of control" is defined as (i) the direct or indirect  sale,  lease,  exchange or
other  transfer of all or  substantially  all (50% or more) of the assets of the
Company to any person or entity or group of persons or entities  acting  jointly
or in concert as a partnership  or other group (a "Group of Persons");  (ii) the
merger,  consolidation or other business combination of the Company with or into
another  corporation  with the  effect  that  the  shareholders  of the  Company
immediately  following the merger,  consolidation or other business combination,
hold 50% or less of the combined voting power of the then outstanding securities
of the surviving  corporation  of such merger,  consolidation  or other business
combination   ordinarily   (and  apart  from  rights   accruing   under  special
circumstances) having the right to vote in the election of directors;  (iii) the
replacement  of a majority  of the Board of  Directors  of the Company or of any
committee of the Board of Directors of the Company in any given year as compared
to the directors who  constituted  the Board of Directors of the Company or such
committee at the  beginning of such year,  and such  replacement  shall not have
been  approved by the Board of Directors of the Company,  as the case may be, as
constituted  at the  beginning  of such year;  (iv) a person or Group of Persons
shall,  as a result  of a tender  or  exchange  offer,  open  market  purchases,
privately  negotiated  purchases,   merger,   consolidation  or  other  business
combination,  or otherwise, have become the beneficial owner (within the meaning
of Rule  13d-3  under  the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934,  as  amended)  of
securities of the Company  representing 20% or more of the combined voting power
of the then  outstanding  securities of such  corporation  ordinarily (and apart
from rights  accruing under special  circumstances)  having the right to vote in
the election of directors;  or (v) the  voluntary  liquidation,  dissolution  or
winding-up of the Company in connection with which a distribution is made to the
holders of the Company's common shares.

         In addition, on June 1, 1999, Mr. Leech was granted options to purchase
750,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise  price of $7.00.  Such options are
currently  exercisable  as to 250,000  shares and  become  exercisable  as to an
additional  250,000 shares on September 4, 2000 and as to the remaining  250,000
shares on September 4, 2001.


ITEM 7.  CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS.

         During the six months  ended  September  30,  1999,  the  Company  paid
consulting  fees to A.  Thomas  Griffis,  the  Co-Chairman  of the  Board of the
Company, who is the sole owner of Griffis  International  Limited, in the amount
of Cdn  $150,000  (or  $102,045

                                      -49-
<PAGE>

in  U.S.  dollars  as of  September  30,  1999)  for  financial  and  management
consulting  services  rendered.  The  Company  will  continue  to pay a  monthly
consulting  fee of Cdn $15,000 (or $10,200 in U.S.  dollars as of September  30,
1999) while services are being rendered.

         During the six months  ended  September  30,  1999,  the  Company  paid
consulting fees to Don Jeffrey, a shareholder  beneficially  owning greater than
5% of the outstanding  shares of the Company,  in the amount of Cdn $105,000 (or
$71,400 in U.S.  dollars  as of  September  30,  1999) for  consulting  services
related to business development and advice on potential acquisitions,  including
introducing  the Company to HomeBase Work Solutions Ltd. and Applied  Courseware
Technology and identifying potential customers.

         During the six months  ended  September  30,  1999,  the  Company  paid
consulting  fees totaling  $80,000 and accrued an  additional  $20,000 to George
Shafran, a director of the Company,  for consulting services related to business
development  and advice on potential  acquisitions,  including  introducing  the
Company to an  acquisition  candidate  and attending  numerous  sales calls with
potential  customers.  The Company will continue to pay a monthly consulting fee
of $10,000 while services are being rendered.

         During the six months  ended  September  30,  1999,  the  Company  paid
incentive  compensation  fees to Darcy Galvon,  its Co-Chairman of the Board, of
Cdn $140,000 (or $95,250 in U.S. dollars as of September 30, 1999) in connection
with the Company's acquisition of HomeBase Work Solutions.

         From  July 29,  1997 to March  31,  1999,  the  Company  received  cash
advances from View Media,  a company  controlled  by Don Jeffrey,  a shareholder
beneficially  owning  approximately  12.6%  of  the  outstanding  shares  of the
Company, totaling approximately $109,000. The Company repaid such advances prior
to June 30, 1999.

         Darcy Galvon, Co-Chairman of the Board of the Company, is a Director of
Facet  Petroleum  Solutions,  Inc.  Pursuant  to a  licensing  and  distribution
agreement  dated  March 30,  1999  between  HomeBase  Work  Solutions  and Facet
Petroleum  Solutions Inc.,  HomeBase Work Solutions acquired the exclusive right
in the telework market to distribute Facet Petroleum's Telework Operational Data
Store  software  for a period of two  years in  consideration  for 6,910  common
shares of HomeBase  valued at Cdn $200,678  (or  $136,500 in U.S.  dollars as of
September 30, 1999).  Facet Petroleum  received 25,000 shares of Common Stock of
the Company in exchange for the 6,910 HomeBase Work Solutions shares as a result
of the acquisition of HomeBase Work Solutions by the Company on May 13, 1998.

ITEM  8.  LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.

         The Company and Applied  Courseware  Technology  Inc.  ("ACT") signed a
share purchase  agreement dated May 13, 1999 whereby the Company was to purchase
all of the  outstanding  shares


                                      -50-
<PAGE>

of ACT.  As a result of the failure of ACT to satisfy  its  representations  and
warranties  under  the share  purchase  agreement  and the  lapse of the  escrow
agreement  dated May 10, 1999 (as amended by the extension  agreement dated June
29, 1999),  the share purchase  agreement was not consummated or completed.  ACT
has indicated to the Company that ACT believes the Company unlawfully terminated
the  share  purchase  agreement  and has  access to and  possesses  intellectual
property belonging to ACT and that the Company has no right to use or derive any
benefit from such  intellectual  property.  ACT has indicated that it expects to
commence an action against the Company for damages. Whether or not determined in
favor of the  Company,  any  litigation  with ACT could  result  in  significant
expense to the  Company and divert the efforts of the  Company's  technical  and
management  personnel from  productive  tasks.  An  unfavorable  decision in any
litigation  with ACT could  have a  material  adverse  effect  on the  business,
financial  condition  and  results  of  operations  of the  Company.  See  "Risk
Factors-Possible Litigation."

         The  Company is not  currently  involved  in any other  material  legal
proceedings.  From time to time,  however,  the Company may be subject to claims
and lawsuits arising in the normal course of business.


ITEM  9.    MARKET PRICE OF AND DIVIDENDS ON THE REGISTRANT'S  COMMON EQUITY AND
            RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS.

         The  Company's  Common  Stock is  currently  traded on the OTC Bulletin
Board  under  the  symbol  "IFCC."  Prior  to  changing  its  name  to  InfoCast
Corporation on December 31, 1998,  the Company's  Common Stock traded on the OTC
Bulletin Board under the symbol "GNRS." The following  table sets forth the high
and low closing prices on the OTC Bulletin Board for the periods  indicated,  as
reported by the OTC Bulletin Board (as adjusted to reflect a 2 for 1 stock split
effected on October 20, 1998).  The  quotations are  interdealer  prices without
adjustment for retail  markups,  markdowns or commissions and do not necessarily
represent actual transactions. These prices may not necessarily be indicative of
any reliable market value.

                                          High                          Low
                                          ----                          ---
1998
Third Quarter.....................        $0.50                        $0.25
Fourth Quarter....................        $5.00                        $0.19

1999
First Quarter.....................        $7.00                        $4.25


                                      -51-

<PAGE>
                                          High                          Low
                                          ----                          ---
Second Quarter....................       $10.13                        $4.50
Third Quarter.....................       $13.00                        $7.00
Fourth Quarter (through
 November 22, 1999)...............        $8.88                        $5.56

         On November 22, 1999,  the last reported sale price of the Common Stock
on the OTC Bulletin Board was $7.06 per share.

                                 Dividend Policy

         The Company has not paid cash  dividends  on its Common Stock since its
inception. The Company does not intend to pay cash dividends on its Common Stock
in the foreseeable  future.  The Company currently intends to reinvest earnings,
if any, in the  development  and expansion of its business.  The  declaration of
dividends in the future will be at the  election of the Board of  Directors  and
will depend upon the earnings,  capital  requirements and financial  position of
the Company, general economic conditions and other relevant factors.


ITEM  10.   RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES.

         In 1998,  the Company  issued  5,000,000  (pre-split)  shares of Common
Stock  to  Sheridan  Reserve  Incorporated  for the  acquisition  of two  mining
interests  pursuant to an exemption  under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended.

         In April 1998, the Company consummated a private placement of 1,000,000
(pre-split)  units  at a price  of $0.50  per  unit to 20  accredited  investors
pursuant to Rule 504 of Regulation D of the  Securities Act of 1933, as amended.
Each unit  consisted of two shares of Common Stock and two Common Stock purchase
warrants. Each Common Stock purchase warrant was exercisable for one (pre-split)
share of Common  Stock at an  exercise  price of $0.25 per share.  The  $500,000
aggregate  issue  price of the units was  satisfied  through  the receipt by the
Company of cash  proceeds  of  $260,000  and the  settlement  of a  non-interest
bearing  note of  $240,000  that was due from the  Company to  Sheridan  Reserve
Incorporated.

         On October 13, 1998, the  shareholders of the Company voted to effect a
two-for-one  stock  split that  increased  the number of  outstanding  shares of
Common  Stock  from   6,000,000  to  12,000,000  and  increased  the  number  of
outstanding   Common  Stock  purchase  warrants  from  1,000,000  to  2,000,000.
Accordingly,  the  exercise  price of the Common  Stock  purchase  warrants  was
reduced to $0.25 per share. Subsequently, 1,580,000 of the Common Stock purchase
warrants  were  exercised  at $0.25  each for cash  proceeds  of  $395,000.  The
remaining 420,000 Common Stock purchase warrants expired.


                                      -52-
<PAGE>
         On January 29, 1999, the Company consummated the acquisition of Virtual
Performance  Systems,  Inc. for  1,500,000  shares of InfoCast  Canada which are
exchangeable on a one-for-one basis for shares of Common Stock of the Company to
17 persons  pursuant to an exemption under Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended, and Regulation D promulgated thereunder.

         On February 8, 1999, the Company  issued options to purchase  2,250,000
shares of Common Stock at an exercise  price of $1.00 per share  pursuant to the
Company's  1998 Stock  Option Plan.  Such  options were issued to the  Company's
directors, officers and consultants.

         In March 1999, the Company  consummated a private  placement  financing
pursuant  to which it issued  2,767,334  shares of Common  Stock to 25  non-U.S.
persons for an aggregate  offering price of $4,151,001  pursuant to Regulation S
of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

         In March 1999, the Company  consummated a private  placement  financing
pursuant  to which it issued  265,002  shares of  Common  Stock to Paul  Kalvin,
George and Angela  Shafran,  Tom  Shafran,  Robert L.  Frome,  Jeffrey and Renee
Spindler, Douglas W. Fitzgerald and Amy Ladd, Marc Schinderman, Gary L. Roberts,
Alan  DeClerck and David Olson,  all of whom were  accredited  investors  for an
aggregate  offering price of $397,503 pursuant to Regulation D of the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended.

         Pursuant to an  agreement  dated  March 22,  1999,  the Company  issued
60,000 shares of Common Stock to Thomson  Kernaghan & Co.  Limited,  a financial
investment consulting firm, for assistance in securing additional financing over
the following year.

         On May 13, 1999, the Company  consummated  the  acquisition of HomeBase
Work Solutions for 3,400,000 shares of InfoCast Canada which are exchangeable on
a  one-for-one  basis for  shares of Common  Stock of the  Company to 51 persons
pursuant to an exemption  under Section 4(2) of the  Securities  Act of 1933, as
amended, and Regulation D promulgated thereunder.

         In June and  October  1999,  the  Company  issued  warrants to purchase
25,000 and 12,500 shares of Common Stock at an exercise price of $7.00 and $8.75
per share,  respectively,  to the Poretz Group, an investor relations consulting
firm, in consideration for ongoing investor relations consulting  services.  The
Company may issue  warrants to purchase an  additional  62,500  shares of Common
Stock to such firm for similar services to rendered.

         In June  1999,  in return  for  consulting  services  in respect of the
development of the Company's  virtual call center  application  and the InfoCast
corporate  name, the Company issued  warrants to purchase an aggregate of 50,000
shares of Common  Stock at an exercise  price of $7.00 per share to each of Tsun
Chow, Armin Roeseler, Paul Prabhaker and John J. Malley.

         On June 1, 1999,  the  Company  issued  options to  purchase  1,180,500
shares of Common Stock to officers,  employees,  consultants  and advisors under
the 1999 Stock  Option  Plan and options to  purchase  750,000  shares of Common
Stock to James Leech, its President,  Chief Executive  Officer and a director of
the Company.


                                      -53-
<PAGE>
         On June 24, 1999, the Company consummated a private placement financing
pursuant  to which it issued  420,000  shares of Common  Stock and  warrants  to
purchase  70,000 shares of Common Stock at an exercise  price of $7.00 per share
to  Canadian  Advantage  LT  Partnership  for an  aggregate  offering  price  of
$2,100,000 pursuant to Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

         From July to October  1999,  the  Company  issued  1,730,000  shares of
Common Stock in a private placement financing for an aggregate offering price of
$9,515,000 to 74 non-U.S. persons pursuant to Regulation S of the Securities Act
of 1933, as amended. The Company may issue up to an additional 650,000 shares of
Common Stock to non-U.S.  persons for an aggregate  offering price of $3,575,000
in such offering.

         In October 1999, the Company  issued options to purchase  60,000 shares
of Common  Stock at an exercise  price of $8.25 per share to Howard  Nichol,  an
investor relations consultant for services, including assisting the Company with
communications with and presentations to stock brokers, analysts and private and
institutional investors, providing access to financial media and introducing the
Company to potential acquisition or alliance opportunities.


ITEM  11.   DESCRIPTION OF REGISTRANT'S SECURITIES TO BE REGISTERED.

         The Company is presently  authorized to issue up to 100,000,000  shares
of Common Stock,  $.001 par value per share.  The  following  summary of certain
provisions  of the Common  Stock does not purport to be complete  and is subject
to,  and  qualified  in  its  entirety  by,  the  provisions  of  the  Company's
Certificate of  Incorporation,  as amended,  and the Amended and Restated Bylaws
that are included as exhibits to this  Registration  Statement and by provisions
of  applicable  law. As of October 31,  1999,  there were  18,905,943  shares of
Common Stock outstanding,  options to purchase an additional 2,075,000 shares of
Common Stock at an exercise  price of $1.00 per share  outstanding , options and
warrants  to  purchase  an  additional  2,225,500  shares of Common  Stock at an
exercise  price of $7.00 per share,  options to  purchase an  additional  60,000
shares of Common Stock at any exercise  price of $8.25 per share and warrants to
purchase an  additional  12,500  shares of Common Stock at an exercise  price of
$8.75 per share.  The holders of Common  Stock are entitled to one vote for each
share held of record on each matter submitted to a vote of  stockholders.  There
is no cumulative  voting for election of directors.  Subject to the prior rights
of any series of  Preferred  Stock  which may from time to time be  outstanding,
holders of Common Stock are entitled to receive ratably such dividends as may be
declared by the Board of Directors out of funds legally available therefor, and,
upon the liquidation,  dissolution or winding up of the Company, are entitled to
share ratably in all assets  remaining  after payment of liabilities and payment
of accrued dividends and liquidation  preference on the Preferred Stock, if any.
Holders of Common Stock have no preemptive  rights and have no rights to convert
their Common Stock into any other securities.


                                      -54-
<PAGE>
                          Transfer Agent and Registrar

         The  transfer  agent and  registrar  for the Common  Stock is Corporate
Stock Transfer in Denver, Colorado.

ITEM  12.  INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS.

         Neither the Company's Certificate of Incorporation, as amended, nor its
Amended and Restated Bylaws provide for the  indemnification of its officers and
directors. Under Nevada's General Corporation Law, the Company may indemnify any
person  who  was or is a  party  or is  threatened  to be  made a  party  to any
threatened,  pending or completed  action,  suit or  proceeding,  whether civil,
criminal,  administrative or investigative,  except an action by or in the right
of the Company (such as a shareholder  derivative  suit),  by reason of the fact
that  such  person  is or was a  director,  officer,  employee  or  agent of the
Company,  or is or was  serving  at the  request of the  Company as a  director,
officer, employee or agent of another corporation,  partnership,  joint venture,
trust  or  other  enterprise.  Such  indemnification  may  extend  to  expenses,
including  attorneys'  fees,  judgments,  fines and  amount  paid in  settlement
actually and reasonable  incurred by such person in connection  with the action,
suit or proceeding if he acted in good faith and in a manner which he reasonable
believed to be in or not opposed to the best interests of the Company, and, with
respect to any criminal action or proceeding, had no reasonable cause to believe
his conduct was unlawful.  Indemnification  may not be made for any claim, issue
or matter as to which such a person has been adjudged by a court to be liable to
the Company or for amounts paid in settlement  to the Company,  unless the court
in which  the  action  or suit  was  brought,  or  another  court  of  competent
jurisdiction,  determines that in view of all the  circumstances,  the person is
fairly and reasonably entitled to be indemnified for such expenses.

         There is no pending  litigation  or  proceeding  involving  a director,
officer,  employee or other agent of the Company as to which  indemnification is
being  sought,  and the  Company  is not  aware  of any  pending  or  threatened
litigation  that may  result  in  claims  for  indemnification  by any  officer,
director, employee or other agent.

         The  Company is in the process of  purchasing  Directors  and  Officers
liability  insurance  to defend and  indemnify  directors  and  officers who are
subject to claims made against them for their actions and omissions as directors
and officers of the Company.


ITEM  13.  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA.

         The  required  financial  statements  are  included  under the  section
"Financial Statements" in this Registration Statement.



                                      -55-

<PAGE>
ITEM  14.   CHANGES IN AND  DISAGREEMENTS  WITH  ACCOUNTANTS  ON ACCOUNTING  AND
            FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE.

         Ernst & Young LLP were  appointed  auditors of InfoCast  Corporation on
February  8, 1999 and have  audited the  consolidated  financial  statements  of
Virtual  Performance  Systems  since its inception on July 29, 1997 to March 31,
1999.  Prior to January 29,  1999,  Jackson & Rhodes P.C.  were the auditors for
InfoCast  Corporation , formerly  Grant Reserve  Corporation  ("InfoCast" or the
"Company").  Pursuant to a share purchase  agreement dated January 29, 1999, the
shareholders of Virtual  Performance Systems sold their 100% interest in Virtual
Performance  Systems to InfoCast in  consideration  for  1,500,000  exchangeable
shares of InfoCast Canada, a wholly-owned  subsidiary of InfoCast.  The InfoCast
Canada  shares are  exchangeable  into shares of Common Stock of InfoCast for no
additional  consideration.  In addition, the shareholders of Virtual Performance
Systems also purchased a further  9,000,000 shares of Common Stock InfoCast from
InfoCast's former controlling  shareholder,  Sheridan Reserve  Incorporated,  in
consideration  for a nominal cash amount. As a result of these two transactions,
the shareholders of Virtual Performance Systems effectively  acquired 10,500,000
shares of Common Stock of InfoCast,  which represents a controlling  interest of
approximately 70% (60% excluding the exchangeable  shares). This transaction was
considered an acquisition of InfoCast (the accounting  subsidiary/legal  parent)
by Virtual Performance Systems (the accounting parent/legal  subsidiary) and was
accounted for as a purchase of the net assets of InfoCast by Virtual Performance
Systems because  InfoCast had no business  operations or operating assets at the
time of acquisition.  The consolidated  financial  statements of the Company are
issued  under the name of  InfoCast,  but are a  continuation  of the  financial
statements of the accounting  acquirer,  Virtual  Performance  Systems.  Ernst &
Young LLP, therefore, continue as auditors for the Company.

         The  Company  believes,  and has been  advised by Jackson & Rhodes P.C.
that it concurs in such belief,  that,  during the year ended  December 31, 1997
and  subsequent  thereto,  InfoCast  and Jackson & Rhodes P.C.  did not have any
disagreement  on any matter of accounting  principles  or  practices,  financial
statement disclosure or auditing scope or procedure, which disagreement,  if not
resolved to the  satisfaction of Jackson & Rhodes P.C.,  would have caused it to
make reference in connection with its report on InfoCast's  financial statements
to the subject matter of the disagreement.

         No report of Jackson & Rhodes P.C. on InfoCast's  financial  statements
for  either  of the past two  fiscal  years  contained  an  adverse  opinion,  a
disclaimer  or opinion or a  qualification  or was  modified as to  uncertainty,
audit scope or accounting principles.  During such fiscal periods, there were no
"reportable  events"  within the meaning of Item  304(a)(1)  of  Regulation  S-K
promulgated under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.



                                      -56-

<PAGE>
ITEM  15.   FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND EXHIBITS.

         (a)      Financial Statements

                  InfoCast Corporation  Consolidated  Financial Statements as of
                           and for the three  months  ended  March 31,  1999 and
                           1998, the year ended December 31, 1998 and the period
                           from July 29, 1997 (inception) to December 31, 1997.

                  InfoCast Corporation  Consolidated  Financial Statements as of
                           and for the six months ended  September  30, 1999 and
                           for  the  six  months   ended   September   30,  1998
                           (unaudited).

                  HomeBase Work  Solutions Ltd.  Financial  Statements as of and
                           for the three  months  ended  March 31,  1999 and the
                           101-day period ended December 31, 1998.

                  InfoCast Corporation    Pro-Forma    Consolidated    Financial
                           Statements  as  of  and  for  the  six  months  ended
                           September 30, 1999 , the three months ended March 31,
                           1999 and for the year ended December 31, 1998.

         (b)      Exhibits

         *3.1     Articles of Incorporation, as amended, of the Company.

         *3.2     Amended and Restated By-laws of the Company.

         *4.1     Specimen Certificate of the Company's Common Stock.

         *4.2     Form of 1998 Stock Option Plan ("1998 Plan").

         *4.3     Form of Option Grant Letter under 1998 Plan.

         *4.4     Form of 1999 Stock Option Plan ("1999 Plan").

         *4.5     Form of Option Grant Letter under 1999 Plan.

         *4.6     Option  Agreement  dated  June 1,  1999,  by and  between  the
                  Company and James William Leech.

         *4.7     Warrant to Purchase  50,000  shares of Common Stock dated June
                  24, 1999, issued to Thomson Kernaghan and Co. Ltd.

         *4.8     Warrant to Purchase  20,000  shares of Common Stock dated June
                  24, 1999, issued to Thomson Kernaghan and Co. Ltd.



                                      -57-
<PAGE>

         *4.9     Warrant to Purchase  25,000  shares of Common  Stock dated May
                  31, 1999 issued to the Poretz Group.

         *4.10    Provisions  Attaching  to  Common  Shares of  InfoCast  Canada
                  Corporation.

         *4.11    Exchange  Agreement  dated as of May 13, 1999 by and among the
                  Company, InfoCast Canada Corporation,  HomeBase Work Solutions
                  Ltd. and the Shareholders.

         *4.12    Support  Agreement  dated as of May 13,  1999 by and among the
                  Company, InfoCast Canada Corporation,  HomeBase Work Solutions
                  Ltd., and the Shareholders.

         *4.13    Warrant  to  Purchase  12,500  shares  of Common  Stock  dated
                  October 6, 1999 issued to the Poretz Group.

         *10.1    Letter  Agreement  dated March 17,  1999,  from the Company to
                  Sandy Walsh.

         *10.2    Employment  to Agreement  dated August 5, 1999, by and between
                  the Company and James William Leech.

         *10.3    Consulting  Agreement  dated  December 1, 1998, by and between
                  the Company and Three Hundred & Sixty Degrees, Inc.

         *10.4    Consulting  Agreement dated March 22, 1999, by and between the
                  Company and Thomson Kernaghan & Co. Ltd.

         *10.5    Consulting  Agreement dated April 15, 1999, by and between the
                  Company and Michael Baybak and Company, Inc.

         *10.6    Letter  Agreement  dated June 15,  1999,  by and  between  the
                  Company and Lasso Communications Inc.

         *10.7    Advertising  Services  Agreement  dated July 1,  1999,  by and
                  between the Company and Lasso Communications Inc.

         *10.8    Release dated July 14, 1999,  by and among the Company,  Lasso
                  Communications Inc., James Hines and Michael Gruber.

         *10.9    Memorandum of Understanding dated June 7, 1999, by and between
                  the Company and Willow CSN.


                                      -58-
<PAGE>

         *10.10   Summary of Terms and  Conditions  dated April 21, 1999, by and
                  between the Company and CosmoCom, Inc.

         *10.11   Agreement  of Purchase and Sale dated as of November 17, 1998,
                  by and between Advanced Systems Computer Consultants, Inc. and
                  Cheltenham Technologies (Bermuda) Corporation.

         *10.12   Asset Sale  Agreement  dated as of November 23,  1998,  by and
                  between Grant Reserve Corporation and Cherokee Mining Company.

         *10.13   Pledge Agreement dated as of November 25, 1998, by and between
                  Grant Reserve Corporation and Cherokee Mining Company.

         *10.14   Agreement dated as of May 18, 1999, by and between the Company
                  and Call Center Learning Solutions, Inc.

         *10.15   Distribution  Agreement  dated as of March  12,  1999,  by and
                  between the Company and ITC Learning Corporation.

         *10.16   License  Agreement  dated June 29,  1999,  by and  between the
                  Company and ITC Learning Corporation.

         *10.17   Letter  Agreement  dated  March 24,  1999,  by and between the
                  Company and Applied Courseware Technology, Inc.

         *10.18   General  Security  Agreement  dated  March  25,  1999,  by and
                  between  InfoCast Canada  Corporation  and Applied  Courseware
                  Technology, Inc.

         *10.19   Memorandum  of  Understanding  dated August 28,  1998,  by and
                  between Home Base Work Solutions Ltd. and Shaw Fiberlink Ltd.

         *10.20   Licensing and  Distribution  Agreement dated March 7, 1999, by
                  and between  HomeBase Work  Solutions  Ltd. and Facet Decision
                  Systems, Inc.

         *10.21   Licensing and Distribution  Agreement dated March 30, 1999, by
                  and between  HomeBase Work Solutions Ltd. and Facet  Petroleum
                  Solutions, Inc.

         *10.22   Share  Purchase  Agreement  dated as of May 13,  1999,  by and
                  among the Company, InfoCast Canada Corporation,  HomeBase Work
                  Solutions Ltd. and the Shareholders named therein.

         *10.23   General  Security  Agreement  dated  March  25,  1999,  by and
                  between   InfoCast   Canada   Corporation  and  HomeBase  Work
                  Solutions,  Ltd.


                                      -59-
<PAGE>

         *10.24   Letter  Agreement  dated May 1999 (date  unspecified),  by and
                  among the  Company  and Darcy  Galvon,  Ken  MacLean  and Sean
                  Fleming.

         *10.25   Master Lease  Agreement  dated June 25,  1998,  by and between
                  HomeBase   Work   Solutions,   Ltd.   and  Sun   MicroSystems.

         *10.26   Memorandum  of Agreement  dated July 31, 1997,  by and between
                  Virtual Performance Systems Inc.

         *10.27   Letter  Agreement  dated November 27, 1998, by and among Grant
                  Reserve Corporation,  Sheridan Reserve Corporation and Virtual
                  Performance Systems Inc.

         *10.28   Share Purchase  Agreement dated as of January 29, 1999, by and
                  among InfoCast Canada  Limited,  Virtual  Performance  Systems
                  Inc. and the Selling Shareholders named therein.

         *10.29   Letter  Agreement  dated  May 18,  1999,  by and  between  the
                  Company and Satish Kumeta.

         *10.30   Letter of Engagement  dated October 21, 1999, by and among the
                  Company,  N.M.  Rothschild  & Sons  Canada  Limited  and  N.M.
                  Rothschild & Sons (Washington) LLC.

         *10.31   Letter of  Understanding  by and  between the Company and AT&T
                  Canada Long Distance Services Company.

         *10.32   Memorandum  of  Engagement  dated  December  10,  1998  by and
                  between the Company and College Boreal D'Arts  Appliques et de
                  Technologie.

         *10.33   Assignment  of Contract  and  Assumption  of  Liability  dated
                  October   19,  1999  by  and  between  the  Company  and  High
                  Performance Group, Inc.

         *16.1    Letter  from  Jackson &  Rhodes,  P.C.  relating  to change of
                  accountants, dated September 3, 1999.

         *21.1    List of Subsidiaries.

           23.1   Consents of Ernst & Young LLP, independent public accountants.

         *27.1.1  Financial Data Schedule.


           27.1   Financial Data Schedule.


                                      -60-
<PAGE>


          *27.2   Financial Data Schedule.

          *27.3   Financial Data Schedule.

          *27.4   Financial Data Schedule.

- ------------
*      Previously filed.


                                      -61-

<PAGE>
                                    Glossary


         Application  Service Provider (ASP): An application service provider is
         a company that offers  individuals or enterprises  electronic access to
         application  programs and related services that would otherwise have to
         be located in their own personal or enterprise computers.

         Architecture:  In the  context  of  computers,  servers  and  networks,
         architecture  is a term  applied to both the process and the outcome of
         thinking out and specifying the overall structure,  logical components,
         and the  logical  interrelationships  of a  computer,  a server,  their
         operating systems, and a network.

         Automated Call Distribution:  Automated Call Distribution  involves the
         use of a telephone  facility  that manages  incoming  calls and handles
         them based on the number called and an associated  database of handling
         instructions.  Companies  offering  sales and service  support use this
         function to validate callers, make outgoing responses or calls, forward
         calls to the right  party,  allow  callers to record  messages,  gather
         usage  statistics,  balance the use of phone lines,  and provide  other
         services.

         Browser:  A program that allows a person to read  hypertext.  A browser
         gives some means of viewing  the  contents  of nodes (or  "pages")  and
         navigating from one node to another.  Netscape  Navigator is an example
         of a browser for the World Wide Web.

         Call Center:  A call center is a central place where customer and other
         telephone  calls are  handled  by an  organization,  usually  with some
         amount of computer automation. Typically, a call center has the ability
         to handle a  considerable  volume of calls at the same time,  to screen
         calls and forward them to someone  qualified to handle them, and to log
         calls. Call centers tend to be used by large organizations that use the
         telephone to sell or service products and services.

         CD-ROM:  CD-ROM  technology  is a  format  and  system  for  recording,
         storing, and retrieving  electronic  information on a compact disk that
         is read using a laser optical drive.

         Distance Learning: A type of education where students work on their own
         at home  or at the  office  and  communicate  with  faculty  and  other
         students via e-mail,  electronic  forums,  videoconferencing  and other
         forms of computer-based communication.

         Firewall:  A  firewall  is a set of  related  programs,  located on the
         server functioning as an entry point into a network,  that protects the
         resources of that network from users from other networks.



                                      -62
<PAGE>

         Information Technology (IT): Information Technology is an umbrella term
         used to  describe  all  forms  of  technology  used to  create,  store,
         exchange,  and use information in its various forms

         Interactive  Voice Response:  Interactive  voice response "gives data a
         voice."  By using the touch  tones on a  telephone  keypad,  or in some
         cases, the spoken voice, a caller can request,  manipulate, and in some
         cases modify data that resides on a "host" database somewhere.  Typical
         applications  include:  banking by phone, checking airline reservations
         by phone,  checking  credit card balance by phone and  registering  for
         college courses by phone. The technology is  "interactive"  because the
         user is prompted  for  information  by the system.  For  example,  in a
         banking by phone application, the system will ask a caller to enter its
         account number from the telephone  keypad.  After the caller enters its
         number,  the system  interacts  with the  caller  further by giving the
         caller additional options.

         Interface:  A  boundary  across  which  two  systems  communicate.   An
         interface  might be a hardware  connector used to link to other devices
         or it might be a  convention  used to allow  communication  between two
         software systems.  Often there is some  intermediate  component between
         the two systems that connects their interfaces together.

         Java: Java is a programming  language expressly designed for use on the
         Internet. Java can be used to create complete applications that may run
         on a single  computer or be distributed  among servers and clients in a
         network.  It can also be used to build small  application  modules,  or
         applets,  for use as part of a web page. Applets make it possible for a
         web page user to interact with the page.

         Netra T-1 Server: A computer server developed by Sun Microsystems  Inc.
         which is designed for and aimed  specifically  at the needs of Internet
         and application service providers.

         Network:  Any system  designed to provide one or more access  paths for
         communications   between  users  at  different  geographic   locations.
         Communications   networks  may  be  designed  for  voice,  text,  data,
         facsimile image and/or video.  They may feature limited access (private
         networks) or open access  (public  networks)  and will employ  whatever
         switching and transmission technologies are appropriate.

         Operating  System (OS): An operating  system is the program that, after
         being  initially  loaded  onto  the  computer,  manages  all the  other
         programs in a computer.  Examples of operating  systems include DOS and
         Windows.

         Server: A server is a computer program that provides  services to other
         computer  programs in the same or other computers.  The computer that a
         server program runs in is frequently referred to as a server (though it
         may contain a number of server and client programs).

                                      -63-
<PAGE>

         Sun Solaris: Sun Solaris is Sun Microsystems Inc.'s version of the UNIX
         operating system,  including networking software, a windows environment
         and a graphical user interface.

         Telework: Telework is the use of telecommunications  technology to work
         outside the traditional  office or workplace,  usually at home or while
         traveling.

         Unified Messaging: The communication  application that combines e-mail,
         voicemail and facsimile.

         Virtual:  The term  virtual  means the quality of  effecting  something
         without actually being that something.

         Virtual  Private  Network (VPN): A virtual private network is a private
         data   network   that  makes  use  of  the   public   telecommunication
         infrastructure, maintaining privacy through the use of various security
         procedures such as data encryption.

         Voice Over-IP (VoIP): Voice Over Internet Protocol is a term used for a
         set of  facilities  and  programs  that  manage the  delivery  of voice
         information, such as telephone calls, over the Internet.



                                      -64-

<PAGE>
                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                          INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                      Page

INFOCAST  CORPORATION,  formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc., a development
stage company


<S>                                                                                   <C>
Report of Independent Certified Public Accountants....................................F-4

Consolidated Balance Sheets as of March 31, 1999, December 31, 1998 and 1997..........F-5

Consolidated  Statements  of  Operations  and  Comprehensive  Loss for the three
     months ended March 31, 1999 and 1998, the year ended December 31, 1998, the
     period from July 29, 1997 (inception) to December 31, 1997 and the period
     from July 29, 1997 (inception) to March 31, 1999.................................F-6

Consolidated  Statements of Cash Flows for the three months ended March 31, 1999
     and 1998,  the year ended  December 31, 1998, the period from July 29, 1997
     (inception)  to  December  31,  1997 and the  period  from  July  29,  1997
     (inception)
     to March 31, 1999................................................................F-7

Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders' Equity as of December 31,
     1997 and 1998 and March 31, 1999.................................................F-8

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements............................................F-9
</TABLE>


                                       F-1

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


<S>                                                                                   <C>
Consolidated Balance Sheet as of  September 30, 1999 (unaudited)......................F-24

Consolidated Statements of Operations and Comprehensive Loss for
     the six months ended  September  30,  1999 and 1998 and for
     the  period  from  July 27, 1997(inception) to September 30, 1999 (unaudited)....F-25

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flow for the six months ended September 30, 1999
     and 1998 and for the period from July 27, 1997 (inception) to
 September 30,1999 (unaudited)........................................................F-26

Consolidated Statements of Changes in Stockholders' Equity as of March 31,  1999
     and  September 30, 1999 (unaudited)..............................................F-27


Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements............................................F-28


HOMEBASE WORK SOLUTIONS LTD.

Report of Independent Certified Accountants...........................................F-37

Balance Sheets as at March 31, 1999 and December 31, 1998.............................F-38

Statements of Loss and  Accumulated  Development  Stage  Deficits  for the three
     months ended March 31, 1999, the 101 day period ended December 31, 1998
     and the period from September 22, 1998 (inception) to March 31, 1999.............F-39

Statements of Cash Flows for the three months ended March 31, 1999,  the 101 day
     period ended December 31, 1998 and the period from September 22,
     1998 (inception) to March 31,1999................................................F-40

Notes to Financial Statements.........................................................F-41
</TABLE>



                                       F-2

<PAGE>

INFOCAST CORPORATION PRO-FORMA CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

<S>                                                                                   <C>
Basis of Presentation.................................................................F-49


Pro-Forma Consolidated Statement of Operations for the six-month period
     ended September 30, 1999 , the three-month period ended March 31, 1999
     and  the year ended December 31, 1998............................................F-50


Pro-Forma Adjustments.................................................................F-53
</TABLE>



                                       F-3

<PAGE>

                                AUDITORS' REPORT





To the Directors of
InfoCast Corporation

We  have  audited  the  consolidated  balance  sheets  of  InfoCast  Corporation
[formerly Virtual  Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company] as of
March  31,  1999,  December  31,  1998 and  December  31,  1997 and the  related
consolidated  statements of operations and  comprehensive  loss,  cash flows and
changes in stockholders' equity for the three month period ended March 31, 1999,
the year ended December 31, 1998, the 156 day period ended December 31, 1997 and
the period from July 29, 1997 to March 31, 1999. These financial  statements are
the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to express
an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted
in the United States. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit
to obtain reasonable  assurance about whether the financial  statements are free
of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence
supporting  the amounts and  disclosures in the financial  statements.  An audit
also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates
made by  management,  as well as  evaluating  the  overall  financial  statement
presentation.  We believe  that our audits  provide a  reasonable  basis for our
opinion.

In our  opinion,  based on our audits,  the  consolidated  financial  statements
referred to above present fairly,  in all material  respects,  the  consolidated
financial  position of InfoCast  Corporation as of March 31, 1999,  December 31,
1998 and December 31, 1997 and the  consolidated  results of its  operations and
its cash  flows  for the  periods  then  ended  in  conformity  with  accounting
principles generally accepted in the United States.



Toronto, Canada,
April 21, 1999 [except for Note 9[b] which is as of      /s/ Ernst & Young LLP
May 13, 1999 and Note 9[d] which is as of                Chartered Accountants
October 27, 1999].


                                      F-4
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
                            [U.S. dollars, U.S. GAAP]

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                                                                         As of                  As of                    As of
                                                                       March 31,            December 31,             December 31,
                                                                         1999                   1998                     1997
                                                                           $                      $                        $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ASSETS
Current
<S>                                                                    <C>                           <C>                        <C>
Cash and cash equivalents                                              3,092,445                     25,595                     301
Accounts receivable                                                       19,416                      9,693                  16,286
Due from InfoCast Corporation [the acquired
   entity] [note 5]                                                           --                     25,020                      --
Due from Applied Courseware Technology
   (A.C.T.) Inc. [note 9[d]]                                             139,299                         --                      --
Due from Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
   [note 9[b]]                                                            99,529                         --                      --
Prepaid expenses and refundable deposits                                  21,404                     15,225                      38
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current assets                                                   3,372,093                     75,533                  16,625
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital assets, net [note 4]                                             107,392                     18,908                  11,954
Distribution rights deposit [note 9[c]]                                  500,000                         --                      --
Intellectual property, net [note 3]                                       45,591                     49,026                      25
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                       4,025,076                    143,467                  28,604
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIENCY)
Current
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                                 354,694                    117,109                  13,518
Note payable to InfoCast Corporation [the acquired
   entity] [note 5]                                                           --                    250,000                      --
Due to directors, officers and stockholders [note 6]                     177,270                    273,025                 109,545
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current liabilities                                                531,964                    640,134                 123,063
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commitments and contingencies [notes 9 and 11]

Stockholders' equity (deficiency)
Common stock [100,000,000 authorized and
18,172,333 issued and outstanding] [note 7]                               16,672                         --                      --
Additional paid-in-capital [note 7]                                   16,925,017                      2,443                      70
Deferred compensation [note 7]                                        (9,858,932)                        --                      --
Accumulated other comprehensive loss                                      14,309                     20,923                   1,632
Accumulated development stage deficit                                 (3,603,954)                  (520,033)                (96,161)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total stockholders' equity (deficiency)                                3,493,112                   (496,667)                (94,459)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                       4,025,076                    143,467                  28,604
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

                             See accompanying notes




                                      F-5
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

          CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS AND COMPREHENSIVE LOSS
                            [U.S. dollars, U.S. GAAP]

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                        Period from    Cumulative
                                                Three months       Three months                        July 29, 1997     from
                                                    ended              ended       Year ended         [inception] to   inception to
                                                  March 31,          March 31,     December 31,         December 31,    March 31,
                                                    1999               1998           1998                1997           1999
                                                      $                  $              $                   $              $
                                                                    [unaudited]

REVENUE
<S>                                               <C>                        <C>       <C>                   <C>       <C>
Consulting income [note 8]                                --             43,446         43,446            3,508           46,954
Interest income                                        4,478                 --             --               --            4,478
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       4,478             43,446         43,446            3,508           51,432
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EXPENSES
General, administrative and selling                  635,334             42,494        375,302           47,954        1,058,590
Stock option compensation [note 7]                 2,256,938                 --             --               --        2,256,938
Research and development                             162,914             19,703         88,180           51,257          302,351
Interest and loan fees                                23,562                 --             --               --           23,562
Amortization                                           4,144                 --             --               --            4,144
Depreciation                                           5,507                870          3,836              458            9,801
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   3,088,399             63,067        467,318           99,669        3,655,386
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net loss for the period                           (3,083,921)           (19,621)      (423,872)         (96,161)      (3,603,954)

Translation adjustment                                (6,614)            (1,227)        19,291            1,632           14,309
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comprehensive loss for the period                 (3,090,535)           (20,848)      (404,581)         (94,529)      (3,589,645)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Weighted average number of shares outstanding     11,583,995                 41        768,301               41        2,198,607
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Basic and diluted loss per share                     $ (0.27)          $(478.56)        $(0.55)      $(2,345.40)          $(1.64)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

See accompanying notes



                                      F-6
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                            [U.S. dollars, U.S. GAAP]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                         Period from
                                                              Three months   Three months                 July 29,       Cumulative
                                                                 ended          ended      Year ended   [inception] to  inception to
                                                                March 31,      March 31,   December 31,  December 31,     March 31,
                                                                  1999          1998          1998          1997           1999
                                                                    $             $             $             $              $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                              [unaudited]
OPERATING ACTIVITIES
<S>                                                           <C>               <C>          <C>         <C>            <C>
Net loss for the period                                       (3,083,921)      (19,621)     (423,872)    (96,161)       (3,603,954)
Add items not affecting cash
   Stock option compensation                                   2,256,938            --            --          --         2,256,938
   Common stock issued for services                               10,180            --            --          --            10,180
   Amortization                                                    4,144            --            --          --             4,144
   Depreciation                                                    5,507           870         3,836         458             9,801
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                (807,152)      (18,751)     (420,036)    (95,703)       (1,322,891)
Changes in non-cash working capital balances
   Accounts receivable                                            (9,723)      (19,501)        6,593     (16,286)          (19,416)
   Prepaid expenses and refundable deposits                       (6,179)          (61)      (15,187)        (38)          (21,404)
   Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                      173,306        10,999       103,591      13,518           290,415
   Bank overdraft                                                     --         9,263            --          --                --
   Due from InfoCast Corporation [the acquired
   entity] prior to acquisition                                       --            --       (25,020)         --           (25,020)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash used in operating activities                               (649,748)      (18,051)     (350,059)    (98,509)       (1,098,316)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Purchase of capital assets                                       (93,659)         (325)      (11,644)    (12,412)         (117,715)
Distribution rights deposit                                     (500,000)           --            --          --          (500,000)
Due from Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.                            (99,529)           --            --          --           (99,529)
Due from Applied Courseware Technology (A.C.T.) Inc.            (139,299)           --            --          --          (139,299)
Acquisition of InfoCast Corporation                                   87            --            --          --                87
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash used in investing activities                               (832,400)         (325)      (11,644)    (12,412)         (856,456)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Increase in note payable to InfoCast Corporation
[the acquired entity]                                                 --            --       250,000          --           250,000
Increase (decrease) in due to directors, officers
and stockholders                                                 (95,755)       19,346       114,476     109,545           128,266
Receipt of short-term unsecured loan                             400,000            --        70,000          --           470,000
Payment of short-term unsecured loan                            (400,000)           --       (70,000)         --          (470,000)
Cash advance from InfoCast Corporation
[the acquired entity] prior to acquisition                       146,900            --            --          --           146,900
Cash proceeds from issuance of share capital, net              4,505,508            --         2,373          45         4,507,926
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash provided by financing activities                          4,556,653        19,346       366,849     109,590         5,033,092
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net increase (decrease) in cash during the period              3,074,505           970         5,146      (1,331)        3,078,320
Effect of foreign exchange rate changes on cash balances          (7,655)       (1,271)       20,148       1,632            14,125
Cash and cash equivalents,  beginning of period                   25,595           301           301          --                --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period                       3,092,445            --        25,595         301         3,092,445
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Supplemental cash flow  information
Interest and lending fees paid during the period                  23,562            --            --          --            23,562
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

See accompanying notes



                                      F-7
<PAGE>
InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                     CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                                                      [U.S. dollars, U.S. GAAP]


                                                                                                      Accumulated
                                                                               Accumulated                other         Additional
                                                                   Common      development            comprehensive       paid-in
                                                                   shares      stage deficit               loss            capital
                                                                      #            $                       $                $
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                             <C>            <C>                      <C>             <C>
Deemed common shares issued for intellectual properties
[note 1[b]]                                                             14             --                   --                  25
Deemed common shares issued for cash [note 1[b]]                        27             --                   --                  45
Net loss for the period                                                 --        (96,161)                  --                  --
Translation adjustment                                                  --             --                1,632                  --
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deemed outstanding as of December 31, 1997                              41        (96,161)               1,632                  70
Deemed common shares issued for cash [note 1[b]]                 1,499,959             --                   --               2,373
Net loss for the period                                                 --       (423,872)                  --                  --
Translation adjustment                                                  --             --               19,291                  --
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deemed outstanding as of December 31, 1998                       1,500,000       (520,033)              20,923               2,443
Acquisition of InfoCast by VPS [note 1[b]]                      13,580,000             --                   --             294,108
Common shares issued for cash                                    3,032,333             --                   --           4,545,468
Share issuance costs                                                    --             --                   --             (42,992)
Common shares issued for consulting services                        60,000             --                   --             337,740
Granting of stock options                                               --             --                   --          11,788,250
Amortization of deferred compensation                                   --             --                   --                  --
Net loss for the period                                                 --     (3,083,921)                  --                  --
Translation adjustment                                                  --             --               (6,614)                 --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as of March 31, 1999                                18,172,333     (3,603,954)              14,309          16,925,017
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                        Common stock             Total
                                                                   Deferred              issued and          stockholders'
                                                                 compensation            outstanding            equity
                                                                       $                      $                    $
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                                <C>                    <C>              <C>
Deemed common shares issued for intellectual properties
[note 1[b]]                                                                --                 --                  25
Deemed common shares issued for cash [note 1[b]]                           --                 --                  45
Net loss for the period                                                    --                 --             (96,161)
Translation adjustment                                                     --                 --               1,632
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deemed outstanding as of December 31, 1997                                 --                 --             (94,459)
Deemed common shares issued for cash [note 1[b]]                           --                 --               2,373
Net loss for the period                                                    --                 --            (423,872)
Translation adjustment                                                     --                 --              19,291
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deemed outstanding as of December 31, 1998                                 --                 --            (496,667)
Acquisition of InfoCast by VPS [note 1[b]]                                 --             13,580             307,688
Common shares issued for cash                                              --              3,032           4,548,500
Share issuance costs                                                       --                 --             (42,992)
Common shares issued for consulting services                         (337,800)                60                  --
Granting of stock options                                         (11,788,250)                --                  --
Amortization of deferred compensation                               2,267,118                 --           2,267,118
Net loss for the period                                                    --                 --          (3,083,921)
Translation adjustment                                                     --                 --              (6,614)
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as of March 31, 1999                                   (9,858,932)            16,672           3,493,112
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

See accompanying notes

                                      F-8
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999

1. BASIS OF ACCOUNTING

[a] Nature of operations and continuing entity


These consolidated  financial statements are the continuing financial statements
of Virtual  Performance  Systems Inc. ["VPS"] [a development stage company],  an
Ontario  corporation  which was  incorporated  on July 29, 1997.  VPS has a 100%
interest in Cheltenham Technologies Corporation ["Cheltenham Technologies"],  an
Ontario  corporation,   and  Cheltenham  Interactive  Corporation   ["Cheltenham
Interactive"],  an inactive Ontario corporation.  Cheltenham  Technologies has a
100%  interest in Cheltenham  Technologies  (Bermuda)  Corporation  ["Cheltenham
Bermuda"], a Barbados corporation which owns certain intellectual properties. On
January 29, 1999, VPS acquired the net assets of InfoCast Corporation  [formerly
Grant Reserve Corporation]  ["InfoCast"],  a United States non-operating company
traded on the NASDAQ OTC  Bulletin  Board which had a 100%  interest in InfoCast
Canada Corporation  ["InfoCast Canada"].  After the acquisition,  the accounting
entity continued under the name of InfoCast Corporation [note 1[b]].


InfoCast, InfoCast Canada, VPS, Cheltenham Technologies,  Cheltenham Interactive
and  Cheltenham  Bermuda  are  collectively  referred to as the  "Company".  The
Company is a development  stage  technology  company engaged in the research and
development of information delivery technologies.

The functional currency of VPS, Cheltenham Technologies, Cheltenham Interactive,
Cheltenham  Bermuda and InfoCast  Canada is the Canadian  dollar.  However,  for
reporting  purposes,  the Company has  adopted the United  States  dollar as its
reporting  currency.  Accordingly,  the Canadian  dollar balance sheets of these
companies  have been  translated  into  United  States  dollars  at the rates of
exchange at the respective  period ends, while  transactions  during the periods
and share capital amounts have been translated at the weighted  average rates of
exchange for the  respective  periods and the  exchange  rate at the date of the
transaction,  respectively.  Gains and losses  arising  from  these  translation
adjustments are included in comprehensive loss.

[b] Reverse acquisition of InfoCast Corporation

Pursuant to a share purchase  agreement dated January 29, 1999, the shareholders
of VPS  sold  their  100%  interest  in VPS to  InfoCast  in  consideration  for
1,500,000  exchangeable shares of InfoCast Canada, a wholly-owned  subsidiary of
InfoCast.  The InfoCast Canada  exchangeable  shares are convertible into common
shares of InfoCast at no additional consideration. In addition, the shareholders
of VPS also  purchased  a further  9 million  common  shares  of  InfoCast  from
InfoCast's former controlling  shareholder,  Sheridan Reserve  Incorporated,  in
consideration  for a nominal cash amount. As a result of these two transactions,
the  shareholders  of VPS  effectively  acquired  10,500,000  common  shares  of
InfoCast  which  represents a  controlling  interest of  approximately



                                      F-9
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999

70% [60% excluding the exchangeable  shares].  This transaction is considered an
acquisition  of InfoCast [the  accounting  subsidiary/legal  parent] by VPS [the
accounting parent/legal  subsidiary] and has been accounted for as a purchase of
the net assets of InfoCast  by VPS in these  consolidated  financial  statements
because  InfoCast had no business  operations or operating assets at the time of
the acquisition.

These consolidated  financial  statements are issued under the name of InfoCast,
but are a continuation of the financial  statements of the accounting  acquirer,
VPS. VPS's assets and  liabilities  are included in the  consolidated  financial
statements at their historical  carrying  amounts.  Figures presented to January
29, 1999 are those of VPS.  For purposes of the  acquisition,  the fair value of
the net assets of InfoCast of $307,688 is ascribed to the 13,580,000  previously
outstanding  common shares of InfoCast deemed to be issued in the acquisition as
follows:

                                                                              $
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cash                                                                         87
Note receivable from VPS                                                396,900
Payable to VPS                                                          (25,020)
Accounts payable                                                        (64,279)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Purchase price                                                          307,688
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Prior to the  acquisition  on January 29, 1999, the deemed number of outstanding
shares of InfoCast  is equal to the  1,500,000  exchangeable  shares of InfoCast
Canada that were issued to the  shareholders  of VPS in the  acquisition.  These
shares have been allocated to the changes in the combined issued and outstanding
and  additional  paid-in-capital  common  stock of VPS to  January  29,  1999 as
follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                    Deemed
                                                InfoCast shares              VPS shares          Amount
                                                       #                          #                 $
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                 <C>                        <C>                   <C>
Issued for intellectual properties [note 3]                14                         35                25
Issued for cash                                            27                         65                45
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as of December 31, 1997                        41                        100                70
Issued for cash                                     1,499,959                  3,624,000             2,373
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as of December 31, 1998
   and January 29, 1999 prior to acquisition        1,500,000                  3,624,100             2,443
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>



                                      F-10
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999



The combined issued and outstanding and additional  paid-in-capital common stock
of the  continuing  consolidated  entity as of January  29,  1999 is computed as
follows:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                    $
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                                             <C>
Existing share capital of VPS as of January 29, 1999 prior to acquisition         2,443
Ascribed value of the acquired common shares of InfoCast                        307,688
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Share capital of InfoCast [formerly VPS] as of January 29, 1999                 310,131
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

The number of  outstanding  shares of InfoCast  [formerly VPS] as of January 29,
1999 is computed as follows:

                                                                   Number
                                                                  of shares
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Deemed share capital of InfoCast [formerly VPS] as of
   January 29, 1999 prior to acquisition                            1,500,000
Shares of InfoCast deemed issued by VPS                            13,580,000
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shares of InfoCast [formerly VPS] as of January 29, 1999           15,080,000
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The Company's significant accounting policies are summarized as follows:

Principles of consolidation

These consolidated financial statements include the accounts of InfoCast and its
subsidiaries,   all  of  which  are  wholly-owned.   Intercompany  accounts  and
transactions have been eliminated upon consolidation.

Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash  equivalents  represent  cash and  short-term  investments  with a
maturity date of less than three months when acquired.

Change in year end

The Company changed its year end to March 31 from December 31.



                                      F-11
<PAGE>


InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999

Capital assets


Capital  assets are  recorded at cost less  accumulated  depreciation.  If it is
determined  that a capital asset is not  recoverable  over its estimated  useful
life, the capital asset will be written down to its fair value.  Maintenance and
repairs are charged to expenses as incurred. Gains and losses on the disposition
of capital  assets  are  included  in  income.  Depreciation  is  provided  on a
declining balance basis using the following annual rates:


Computer equipment                                          30%
Office equipment                                            20%
Leasehold improvements                                      20%

Intellectual property


Acquired  intellectual  property is recorded at cost and represents  proprietary
rights to certain information  delivery  technologies.  The capitalized costs of
the  intellectual  property  is  amortized  on a  straight-line  basis  over its
estimated  useful life of 3 years.  If it is  determined  that an  investment in
intellectual  property is not  recoverable  over its estimated  useful life, the
intellectual property will be written down to its fair value.

Distribution rights

Acquired  distribution  rights are recorded at cost and represent  rights to the
distribution of certain distance learning products. The capitalized costs of the
distribution   rights  will  be   amortized   each   period,   commencing   when
electronically  converted products are available for license,  at the greater of
i) the amount  calculated based on the  straight-line  method over the estimated
useful  life of 5 years  or ii) the  amount  calculated  based  on the  ratio of
current  gross  revenues  received  from  the  licensing  of the  electronically
converted  products  over  the sum of the  current  and  future  gross  revenues
anticipated to be received by licensing the electronically  converted  products.
[note 9[c]]. If it is determined  that investment in distribution  rights is not
recoverable from estimated  sales, the distribution  rights will be written down
to its fair value.


Revenue recognition

Revenue from consulting and programming  services is recognized at the time such
services are rendered.

Research and development

Software  development costs incurred prior to the establishment of technological
feasibility are expensed as incurred. Research costs are expensed as incurred.




                                      F-12
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999



Foreign currency measurement


In  preparing  the  Company's  Canadian  dollar  functional  currency  financial
statements,  United States dollar monetary assets and liabilities are remeasured
in the Company's  Canadian dollar functional  currency at the period end rate of
exchange.  The statements are then translated  into the Company's  United States
dollar  reporting  currency.  Transactions in foreign currency are remeasured at
the dollar actual rates of exchange.  Foreign currency remeasurement differences
are included in general and administrative expenses.


Stock options

As permitted by FASB Statement No. 123 ["FASB 123"], "Accounting for Stock-Based
Compensation,"  the Company has adopted the  intrinsic  value  method of APB 25,
"Accounting  for Stock Issued to Employees" in respect of stock options  granted
to its employees and directors and FASB 123 in respect of stock options  granted
to its consultants.  The measurement date of options granted to consultants will
be the date the services are completed.  For purposes of recognition of the cost
of the options prior to the measurement  date such options are measured at their
then current fair value at each interim financial reporting date.

Income taxes

The Company  follows  the  liability  method of  providing  for income  taxes in
accordance with FASB Statement No. 109, "Accounting for Income Taxes."

Basic and diluted loss per common share

Per share amounts have been  computed  based on the weighted  average  number of
common shares  outstanding  each period.  The weighted  average number of common
shares outstanding prior to the acquisition on January 29, 1999 are based on the
number of VPS common shares outstanding during that period.

InfoCast Canada's  1,500,000  exchangeable  shares  outstanding are deemed to be
outstanding  common  shares of InfoCast  for the  purposes of the loss per share
calculations and share continuity  disclosures  because the exchangeable  shares
are the economic equivalent of common shares of the Company.




                                      F-13
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999


Use of estimates

Management  uses estimates and assumptions in preparing  consolidated  financial
statements in accordance with generally accepted  accounting  principles.  Those
estimates and assumptions affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities,
the disclosure of contingent  assets and liabilities and the reported amounts of
revenue and expenses.  Actual  results  could vary from the  estimates  that are
used.

3. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY


The Company executed a Memorandum of Agreement dated July 31, 1997,  whereby the
Company  acquired  certain  intellectual  property  owned by an  officer  of the
Company,  in consideration  for 35 VPS common shares issued at Cdn.$1 per share.
The fair value of the  intellectual  property  is $23 based on the fair value of
the 35 VPS shares issued in consideration  thereof.  The fair value per share in
respect of the 35 VPS common  shares  issued for the  intellectual  property  is
consistent with the cash proceeds  received per share in respect of the other 65
VPS common  shares  issued  during 1997.  The  intellectual  property  purchased
pursuant to this agreement is completed  technology and is related to electronic
information delivery algorithms.

On November 17,  1998,  the Company  entered into a Purchase and Sale  Agreement
with Advanced Systems Computer  Consultants Inc., a company owned by the officer
of the Company  noted  above,  pursuant to which the  Company  acquired  certain
additional  intellectual  property rights.  The intellectual  property purchased
pursuant to this agreement is completed technology and relates to remote banking
software.   The  Company   purchased  the   intellectual   property  rights  for
consideration as follows:

[i]   $49,735  [Cdn.$75,000] if the Company becomes a public corporation and has
      completed a minimum financing of $2,000,000; and

[ii]  $215,000 [Cdn.$325,000] if the purchased remote banking software generates
      revenue.

The Company has accrued the first  $49,735  installment  in its accounts as the
Company  assessed the  conditions  requiring its payment to be probable when the
agreement was executed.




                                      F-14
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999


Acquired intellectual property consists of the following:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 March 31, 1999              December 31, 1998
                                                Net                                 Net
                                  Accumulated   book            Accumulated        book
                          Cost    amortization  value   Cost    amortization      value
                            $           $         $      $           $              $

<S>                     <C>         <C>       <C>     <C>           <C>         <C>
Electronic information
  delivery algorithms       23          -         23      23         -              23
Remote banking software 49,712      4,144     45,568  49,003         -          49,003
                        49,735      4,144     45,591  49,026         -          49,026

</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             December 31, 1997
                                                                                    Net
                                                                Accumulated        book
                                                        Cost    amortization      value
                                                         $           $              $

<S>                                                     <C>        <C>              <C>
Electronic information
  delivery algorithms                                   25           -              25
                                                        25           -              25
</TABLE>


4. CAPITAL ASSETS

Capital assets consist of the following:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                        March 31, 1999                                   December 31, 1998
                                            ----------------------------------------        ----------------------------------------
                                                                               Net                                              Net
                                                          Accumulated         book                        Accumulated          book
                                             Cost        depreciation         value          Cost        depreciation          value
                                               $               $                $              $               $                 $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                          <C>               <C>            <C>            <C>               <C>            <C>
Computer equipment                           64,899            7,684          57,215         15,865            4,077          11,788
Office equipment                             49,220            1,887          47,333          7,180               60           7,120
Leasehold improvements                        2,979              135           2,844             --               --              --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            117,098            9,706         107,392         23,045            4,137          18,908
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Computer equipment                                                                           12,405              451          11,954
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                             12,405              451          11,954
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

5.   NOTE  PAYABLE  TO  INFOCAST   CORPORATION  AND  AMOUNT  DUE  FROM  INFOCAST
     CORPORATION

InfoCast  advanced  $250,000 to VPS in  December  1998 in  contemplation  of the
acquisition  [note 1[b]]. The advance was evidenced by a promissory note that is
payable on demand and bears interest at 7%.  Subsequent to December 31, 1998 and
prior to the  completion  of the  acquisition  on  January  29,  1999,  InfoCast
advanced an additional $146,900 to VPS on the same terms.

During  December 1998,  VPS incurred  expenses of $25,020 on behalf of InfoCast.
The amount was outstanding as of December 31, 1998, was non-interest bearing and
was payable on demand.

These amounts were eliminated upon the acquisition of InfoCast by VPS on January
29, 1999 [note 1[b]].



                                      F-15
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999




6. DUE TO DIRECTORS, OFFICERS AND STOCKHOLDERS

The  amounts  due  to  directors,  officers  and  shareholders  consist  of  the
following:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                         March 31,           December 31,             December 31,
                                                                            1999                 1998                    1997
                                                                              $                    $                       $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                                            <C>                   <C>                     <C>
View Media                                                                         383               109,269                 105,965
Advanced Systems Computer Consultants Inc.                                      65,420                64,125                   3,580
Griffis International Limited                                                   28,348                26,714                      --
Past officer of the Company                                                     44,001                43,280                      --
Current officers and directors of the Company                                   39,118                29,637                      --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                               177,270               273,025                 109,545
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

The amounts are non-interest  bearing and payable on demand.  All of the amounts
due to View Media and  Cdn.$25,000  of the  amount due to Griffis  International
Limited as of March 31,  1999 and  December  31,  1998  relate to cash  advances
provided  to the  Company,  while  $49,710  [Cdn.$75,000]  of the  amount due to
Advanced Systems Computer Consultants Inc. as of March 31, 1999 and December 31,
1998  relates to the  intellectual  property  described  in note 3. The  balance
relates  to  expenditures  incurred  and  services  performed  on  behalf of the
Company.

During the three months ended March 31, 1999, the Company  incurred  expenses of
nil [March 31, 1998 - $16,178;  December 31, 1998 - $59,319; December 31, 1997 -
$42,119] for managerial and consulting  services from Advanced  Systems Computer
Consultants Inc., nil [March 31, 1998 - nil; December 31, 1998 - $30,526; 1997 -
nil] for consulting  services provided by View Media and $26,981 [March 31, 1998
- - nil; December 31, 1998 - $16,178; 1997 - nil] for consulting services provided
by Griffis International Limited.

View Media is a company  controlled by a stockholder  and former director of the
Company.  Griffis  International Limited is a company owned by a stockholder and
the Chairman of the Company.

7. SHARE CAPITAL

Authorized

The Company has 100,000,000 preferred shares authorized at a par value of $0.001
per share and has 100,000,000  common shares authorized at a par value of $0.001
per share.

                                      F-16
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999


Issued and outstanding common shares

The  issued  share  capital  subsequent  to January  29,  1999  consists  of the
following:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                      Common stock issued and
                                                                                                          outstanding and
                                                                                                    additional paid-in-capital
                                                                                                ------------------------------------
                                                                                                  Shares                      Amount
                                                                                                   #                            $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                                                           <C>                           <C>
Outstanding as of January 29, 1999 [note 1[b]]                                                15,080,000                    310,131
Private placement at $1.50 per share                                                           3,032,333                  4,548,500
Issuance of shares in consideration for consulting services                                       60,000                    337,800
Share issuance costs                                                                                  --                    (42,992)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as of March 31, 1999                                                              18,172,333                  5,153,439
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

Private placement

During March 1999,  InfoCast  completed the placement of 3,032,333 common shares
at $1.50 per share. The gross proceeds of the issue were $4,548,500.

Issuance of shares in consideration for consulting services

Pursuant to an agreement  dated March 22, 1999, the Company issued 60,000 common
shares to a financial investment consulting firm in consideration for assistance
in securing  additional  financing over the following year. The measurement date
for these common shares will be March 22, 2000.  For purposes of  recognition of
the cost of the common shares prior to the  measurement  date such common shares
are  measured  at  their  then  current  fair  value at each  interim  financial
reporting  date. As of March 31, 1999, the common shares have been valued at the
$5.63 per share closing price on the agreement date of which $10,180 was charged
to general and administrative expenses during the three month period ended March
31, 1999.

Stock options

As a condition  of the  acquisition  [note 1],  InfoCast  adopted the 1998 Stock
Option  Plan as amended on January 29, 1999  pursuant to which  2,250,000  stock
options  were set aside to be  granted to various  individuals  involved  in the
management of VPS, including 375,000 options granted to consultants. The options
were granted on February 8, 1999, are exercisable at a price of $1.00 per share,
expire three years from the date of grant and are subject to a vesting period of
at least six months.

                                      F-17
<PAGE>
InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999


As of April 19, 1999, 175,000 of the stock options had been cancelled due to the
termination of certain  individuals and the  renegotiation of employment  terms.
The closing market price of the Company's common shares on the date of grant was
$6.625 per share. Of the 2,075,000 remaining stock options, 775,000 will vest on
August 8, 1999 and 1,300,000  will vest on February 8, 2000.  These  outstanding
stock  options  have been valued at  $11,788,250  of which  $2,256,938  has been
recognized as a stock option compensation  expense,  and of which the balance of
$9,531,312 has been recorded as deferred  compensation in stockholders'  equity.
The deferred  compensation  attributable to the 375,000 stock options granted to
consultants was determined based on the fair value of the options at the date of
grant,  $5.87 per option, and will be adjusted to the then current value at each
interim  financial  reporting  date and will be  amortized  to  income  over the
vesting  periods of the stock options.  The deferred  compensation in respect of
the 1,700,000 stock options granted to employees and directors will be amortized
to income over the remaining  vesting  periods of the options in accordance with
the intrinsic value method.


A summary of the Company's share option activity is as follows:


                                                    Three Months Ended
                                                      March 31, 1999
                                               Number of     Weighted Average
                                                Options       Exercise Price
                                                       #                 $

Outstanding as of January 1, 1999                        -             -
Granted                                          2,250,000          1.00
Exercised                                                -             -
Forfeited                                                -             -
Cancelled                                         (175,000)         1.00
Outstanding as of March 31, 1999                 2,075,000          1.00
Exercisable as of March 31, 1999                         -             -


If the Company had been following  FASB 123 in respect of stock options  granted
to its employees and  directors,  the Company would have recorded a higher stock
option  compensation  expense for the three month period ended March 31, 1999 of
$69,556 and a higher  deferred  compensation  as of March 31, 1999 of  $322,434.
This higher stock option  compensation  expense  would result in a pro-forma net
loss of $3,153,487 and a pro-forma  basic and diluted loss per share of $0.27 in
respect of the three month period  ended March 31,  1999.  The fair value of the
stock options granted was $5.87 per option  utilizing a Black-Scholes  valuation
model. The Company assumed an expected  dividend rate of 0%, a three year option
life, a risk free  interest rate of 5.08% and an expected  volatility  factor of
0.838 in respect of the valuation of the stock  options in accordance  with FASB
123.

The  directors of the Company have approved a 1999 stock option plan under which
an additional 2,000,000 stock options will be eligible for grant. The 1999 stock
option plan is subject to stockholder approval.

8. DISCONTINUED REVENUE SOURCES

The Company recorded revenue of $43,446 during the year ended December 31, 1998
[March 31, 1998 - $43,446; December 31, 1997 - $3,508] mainly resulting from the
provision of computer programming  services to one customer.  These services are
no longer being provided by the Company to this customer.

As of March 31, 1999, nil [March 31, 1998 - nil; December 31, 1997 - $3,448] was
recorded as accounts receivable from this customer.

                                      F-18
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999

9. COMMITMENTS

[a] Lease commitments

The Company leased premises under non-cancellable operating leases which require
future annual minimum lease payments as follows:

                                                                $
- -------------------------------------------------------------------

1999                                                         60,428
2000                                                         52,238
2001                                                         35,072
2002                                                          5,874
2003                                                             --
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                            153,612
- -------------------------------------------------------------------

The rental payments for the premises are exclusive of taxes and operating costs.

During the three month period ended March 31, 1999,  the Company  incurred  rent
expense  of $38,682  [March  31,  1998 - $4,044;  December  31,  1998 - $16,701;
December 31, 1997 - $5,711].

[b] Acquisition of Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.

Pursuant to a Letter of Intent dated December 14, 1998,  between the Company and
Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.  ["Homebase"],  the Company  intended to purchase a
100% interest in Homebase in  consideration  for 2,100,000  common shares of the
Company. The agreement was conditional upon regulatory approval and satisfactory
due  diligence.  Homebase  is a  telework  solution  provider  headquartered  in
Calgary, Alberta.

Pursuant to a share  purchase  agreement  dated May 13, 1999,  all of Homebase's
outstanding  common  shares,  first  preferred  series A  shares,  common  share
purchase  warrants and penalty common share  purchase  warrants were acquired by
the  Company in  consideration  for  3,400,000  exchangeable  shares of InfoCast
Canada.  The InfoCast Canada  exchangeable  shares are convertible into InfoCast
common  shares  on a  one-for-one  basis  at no  additional  consideration.  The
acquisition will be accounted for by the purchase method.  The allocation of the
purchase price has not yet been finalized.


As a condition of the closing of the share purchase agreement,  the Company will
pay $139,000 [Cdn.  $210,000] to officers of Homebase and must pay an additional
$139,000 [Cdn.  $210,000] to the officers of Homebase if the Company completes a
private placement financing for gross proceeds of at least




                                      F-19
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999


$1,000,000 or completes a letter of credit financing of at least $500,000. These
amounts will be expensed after the closing.

On  March  25,  1999,  the  Company  advanced  Cdn.   $150,000  to  Homebase  in
consideration  for a  promissory  note  bearing  interest  at prime plus 1%. The
promissory note is payable on demand and is collateralized by a general security
agreement. As of March 31, 1999, $99,529 has been recorded as an amount due from
Homebase, including interest receivable of $105.

[c] Purchase of distribution rights


Pursuant  to an  agreement  dated  December  15,  1998,  as  amended by a letter
agreement  dated  February  16,  1999,  and an  agreement  dated March 12, 1999,
between the Company and ITC Learning  Corporation  ["ITC"],  the Company has the
option to purchase from ITC perpetual  distribution  rights for certain distance
learning  products  in  consideration  for  $1,000,000  in  respect of the first
150,000 user licenses and based on a shared revenue formula for user licenses in
excess of 150,000.  The first $500,000 of the initial $1,000,000  purchase price
was paid during March 1999 and has been recorded as distribution  rights deposit
in the  accounts  of the  Company.  The  Company  must make the final  payent of
$500,000 by May 31, 1999 if the Company decides to continue with the agreement.


[d] Purchase of Applied Courseware Technology (A.C.T.) Inc.


Pursuant to a Letter of Intent  dated  February 10, 1999 between the Company and
Applied  Courseware  Technology  (A.C.T.) Inc.  ["ACT"],  the Company intends to
purchase  a 100%  interest  in ACT  in  consideration  for  [i]  $185,600  [Cdn.
$280,000] cash, [ii] 750,000 common shares of the Company,  [iii] the assumption
of long-term debt of ACT of  approximately  $464,000 [Cdn.  $700,000]  which the
Company  intends  to  renegotiate  and [iv] the  settlement  by the  Company  of
approximately  $232,000 [Cdn.  $350,000] of additional ACT debt. The transaction
was subject to satisfactory due diligence.

Pursuant to subsequent negotiations, the $185,600 [Cdn. $280,000] cash component
of the  purchase  price was  revised to nil.  The amount and terms of ACT's debt
that was to be  assumed by the  Company  upon its  acquisition  has not yet been
determined.

In September  1999, the Company  decided not to proceed with the  acquisition of
ACT.

During February and March 1999, the Company paid $92,794 [Cdn.  $140,000] of the
ACT debt in  consideration  for a note secured by a general  security  agreement
subject to prior charges and made cash advances to ACT totalling $46,398 to fund
certain development  expenditures incurred on behalf of the Company. As of March
31,  1999,  $139,299  has been  recorded  as an amount  due from ACT,  including
interest  receivable of $107. The  realization of these loans are uncertain as a
result of ACT's poor  financial  condition  and the  Company's  decision  to not
proceed with the purchase of ACT.

ACT has indicated to the Company that ACT believes the Company's decision to not
proceed with the  acquisition is unlawful and that the Company has access to and
possesses  intellectual  property belonging to ACT that the Company has no right
to use or derive  any  benefit  from.  ACT has  indicated  that  they  expect to
commence an action against the Company for damages.


                                      F-20
<PAGE>


InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999

[e] Marketing agreement

Pursuant to a consulting  agreement and a news letter publicity  agreement dated
April 15,  1999,  the  Company  will pay  $6,000 per month  plus  expenses  to a
marketing  consultant in consideration  for national media  consulting  services
over the one year term of the  agreement  and will pay $250,000 for the costs of
the production and distribution of an investor newsletter featuring the Company.

[f]    CosmoCom, Inc.

Pursuant to a summary of terms and conditions for a definitive agreement between
the Company and CosmoCom, Inc. dated April 1999, the Company intends to purchase
licenses for  CosmoCom,  Inc.'s  CosmoCall  software.  Under this  summary,  the
Company  placed an initial  order for 300  licences for total  consideration  of
$754,500, payable in four installments during 1999.

10. INCOME TAXES


As of March  31,  1999,  the  Company  has  accumulated  non-capital  losses  of
approximately  Cdn.$1,000,000  [approximately  $663,000] for Canadian income tax
purposes which are available to reduce future years' taxable income.  The future
income tax benefits  associated with these non-capital  losses have not yet been
recognized in the accounts. These non-capital losses will expire as follows:

                                                                        $
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------

2003                                                                83,000
2004                                                               414,000
2005                                                               166,000
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   663,000
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------


The Company has recorded no United States current  federal income tax expense or
benefit. As of March 31, 1999, the Company has accumulated non-capital losses of
approximately $600,000 for United States income tax purposes which are available
to  reduce  future  years'  taxable  income.  The  future  income  tax  benefits
associated  with these  non-capital  losses have not yet been  recognized in the
accounts. These non-capital losses will expire as follows:

                                                                     $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------

2018                                                             200,000
2019                                                             400,000
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 600,000
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Company has a United  States  capital  loss  carryforward  of  approximately
$65,000. This capital loss carryforward will expire, if not utilized, in 2003. A
capital loss carryforward may only be used to reduce capital gains and cannot be
applied against taxable ordinary income that might be earned by the Company.

A deferred tax asset has been established  relating to the operating and capital
loss  carryforwards  and the timing  differences  between the  Company's tax and
financial  reporting basis. A valuation

                                      F-21
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999


allowance  equal  to the  entire  amount  of the  deferred  tax  asset  has been
established  due to the  uncertainty of the future  utilization of the operating
and capital loss  carryforwards.  Following are the  components of the Company's
deferred tax asset balances:

                            March 31,          December 31,     December 31,
                              1999                 1998          1997
                                $                    $             $
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Deferred tax asset             559,887           231,189         40,517
Valuation allowance           (559,887)         (231,189)       (40,517)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                    --                --             --
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

11. CONTINGENCIES

Fair value of financial instruments

The following disclosure of the estimated fair value of financial instruments is
made in accordance  with the  requirements of SFAS No. 107,  "Disclosures  about
Fair Value of Financial Instruments." The estimated fair value amounts have been
determined by the Company using  available  market  information  and appropriate
valuation methodologies.

The fair  values  of  financial  instruments  classified  as  current  assets or
liabilities including cash and cash equivalents,  accounts receivable,  due from
InfoCast  [the  acquired  entity],  due from ACT,  due from  Homebase,  accounts
payable and accrued  liabilities,  notes payable and due to directors,  officers
and  stockholders  as of March 31, 1999,  March 31, 1998,  December 31, 1998 and
December 31, 1997 approximate the carrying values due to the short-term maturity
of the instruments.

Concentration of credit risk

The  Company  invests  its  cash  and cash  equivalents  primarily  with a major
Canadian  chartered bank.  Certain  deposits,  at times, are in excess of limits
insured by the Canadian government.




                                      F-22
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                              NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED
                      FINANCIAL STATEMENTS [Information for
                     the three month period ended March 31,
                               1998 is unaudited]
             [U.S. dollars except where otherwise noted, U.S. GAAP]

March 31, 1999




Note receivable from Cherokee Mining Company Inc.

Pursuant to an agreement  dated November 23, 1998 as amended April 20, 1999, and
effective  December 18, 1998,  InfoCast  [the  acquired  entity] sold its equity
interest in its two subsidiaries,  Gold King Mines Corporation ["Gold King"] and
Madison Mining  Corporation  ["Madison  Mining"] to Cherokee Mining Company Inc.
["Cherokee"],  a company controlled by a former director of InfoCast,  for [i] a
non-interest  bearing  note of  $600,000  due  November  25,  1999  and [ii] the
entitlement to 80% of the net proceeds  received by Madison Mining and Gold King
in excess of $681,175 from the sale of their mining properties and assets.


InfoCast did not record a value on the $600,000 note  receivable  because of the
uncertainty of whether the management of Cherokee,  Gold King and Madison Mining
will be able to sell the  capital  assets of Gold King and  Madison  Mining  for
sufficient  proceeds to enable the note to be repaid to  InfoCast.  As a result,
VPS did not reflect the note in the purchase  equation upon the  acquisition  of
InfoCast [note 1[b]]. In the event that the note is repaid,  the amount received
will be credited to income.




                                      F-23
<PAGE>
InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.]  [a development stage company]

                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                            [U.S.dollars, U.S. GAAP ]
                                                                     Unaudited

                                                                         As of
                                                            September 30, 1999
ASSETS
Current
Cash and cash equivalents                                            5,300,965
Accounts receivable                                                    142,093
Prepaid expenses and refundable deposits                               325,042
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current assets                                                 5,768,100
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Capital assets, net                                                  2,181,598
Goodwill, net                                                        5,397,009
Distribution  and licensing rights, net [note 3(b)]                  2,975,000
Intellectual property, net                                          16,753,736
Software license [note 3 (f)]                                          125,650
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    33,201,093
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIENCY )
Current
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                             1,067,741
Current portion of obligations under capital leases                    380,782
Due to directors, officers and stockholders                             33,279
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current liabilities                                            1,481,802
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Obligation  under capital lease                                        882,017
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deferred income taxes                                                6,351,895
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total  liabilities                                                   8,715,714
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Stocholders' equity (deficiency)
Common stock (100,000,000 authorized
     and 23,712,333 issued and outstanding)                             22,212
Additional paid-in capital                                          48,921,081
Deferred compensation                                               (5,151,232)
Warrants                                                               848,550
Accumulated other comprehensive loss                                    62,562
Accumulated development stage deficit                              (20,217,794)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total stockholders' equity (deficiency)                             24,485,379
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    33,201,093
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------


                                      F-24
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.]  [a development stage company]
           CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATION AND COMPREHENSIVE LOSS
                            [U.S.dollars, U.S. GAAP ]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                               Unaudited

                                                   Six months          Six months        Cumulative from
                                                      ended               ended           inception to
                                               September 30, 1999  September 30, 1998  September 30, 1999
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REVENUE
<S>                                                 <C>                    <C>              <C>
Consulting income                                           -                  99              46,954
Interest income                                        58,464                   -              62,942
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       58,464                  99             109,896
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EXPENSES
General, administrative and selling                 4,023,321              35,310           5,081,911
Stock option compensation                           9,506,548                   -          11,763,486
Research and development                            1,783,346              52,498           2,085,697
Interest and loan fees                                      -                   -              23,562
Amortization                                        1,863,286                   -           1,867,430
Depreciation                                           29,908               1,895              39,709
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   17,206,409              89,703          20,861,795
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net loss before income taxes                      (17,147,945)            (89,604)        (20,751,899)
Deferred income taxes                                (534,105)                  -            (534,105)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net loss for the period                           (16,613,840)            (89,604)        (20,217,794)

Translation adjustment                                 48,253              12,204              62,562
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comprehensive loss for the period                 (16,565,587)            (77,400)        (20,155,232)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Weighted average number of shares outstanding      21,305,895             788,848           6,711,775
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Basic and diluted loss per share                      $ (0.78)            $ (0.11)            $ (3.01)
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

                                      F-25
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.]  [a development stage company]
                                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOW
                                      [U.S.dollars, U.S. GAAP ]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                                    Unaudited

                                                                          Six months         Six months       Cumulative from
                                                                            ended               ended          inception to
                                                                      September 30, 1999  September 30, 1998  September 30, 1999

OPERATING ACTIVITIES
<S>                                                                          <C>                    <C>             <C>
Net loss for the period                                                      (16,613,840)           (89,604)        (20,217,794)
Add (deduct) items not affecting cash
     Stock option compensation                                                 9,506,548                  -          11,763,486
     Common stock issued for services                                            254,149                  -             264,329
     Warrant issued for services                                                 595,083                  -             595,083
     Write-off in-process research & development                                  19,000                  -              19,000
     Write-off  ACT Loan                                                          98,685                  -              98,685
     Deferred income taxes                                                      (534,105)                 -            (534,105)
     Amortization                                                              1,863,286                  -           1,867,430
     Depreciation                                                                 29,908              1,833              39,709
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                              (4,781,286)           (87,771)         (6,104,177)

Changes in non-cash working capital balances
     Accounts receivable                                                         (64,181)            34,904             (83,597)
     Prepaid expenses and refundable deposits                                   (302,171)              (231)           (323,575)
     Bank overdraft                                                                    -             (9,263)                  -
     Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                                    630,861             23,312             921,276
     Due from InfoCast [the acquired entity] prior to acquisition                      -                  -             (25,020)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash used in operating activities                                             (4,516,777)           (39,049)         (5,615,093)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

INVESTING ACTIVITIES                                                                                                          -
     Purchase of capital assets                                                 (820,850)            (2,184)           (938,565)
     Purchase of intellectual property                                                 -            (48,979)                  -
     Distribution rights                                                      (2,475,000)                 -          (2,975,000)
     Purchase of software license                                               (125,650)                 -            (125,650)
     Due from Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.                                             -                  -             (99,529)
     Acquisition of Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.                                  50,667                  -              50,667
     Due from Applied Courseware Technology (A.C.T.) Inc.                              -                  -            (139,299)
     Acquisition of InfoCast Corporation                                               -                  -                  87
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash used in investing activities                                             (3,370,833)           (51,163)         (4,227,289)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FINANCING ACTIVITIES
     Increase in note payable to InfoCast [the acquired entiry]                        -                  -             250,000
     Increase (decrease)  in due to directors, officers and shareholders        (143,991)            76,830             (15,725)
     Receipt of short-term unsecured loan                                              -                  -             470,000
     Payment of short-term unsecured loan                                              -                  -            (470,000)
     Cash advance from InfoCast [the acquired entity] prior to acquisition             -                  -             146,900
     Cash Proceed from issuance of share capital , net                        10,202,084              2,363          14,710,010
                                                                                                                              -
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash provided by financing activities                                         10,058,093             79,193          15,091,185
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net increase (decrease)  in cash during the period                             2,170,483            (11,019)          5,248,803
Effects of foreign exchange rates change on cash balances                         38,037             11,104              52,162
Cash & cash equivalents, beginning of period                                   3,092,445                  -                   -
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash & cash equivalents, end  of period                                        5,300,965                 85           5,300,965
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

                                      F-26
<PAGE>

InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.]  [a development stage company]

           CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                            [U.S. dollars, U.S. GAAP]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                                          Unaudited

                                                                                Common Stock        Additional
                                                               Common            Issued and           Paid-in            Deferred
                                                               Shares           outstanding           Capital          Compensation
                                                                  #                  $                   $                   $
                                                            -----------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                           <C>                <C>             <C>                 <C>
Outstanding as of March 31, 1999                              18,172,333         16,672          16,925,017          (9,858,932)
Deemed common shares issued for acquisition                    3,400,000          3,400          16,996,600                   -
   of Homebase Work Solutions
Common shares issued for cash                                  2,140,000          2,140          11,557,860                   -
Share issuance costs- cash                                             -              -          (1,357,926)                  -
Share issuance costs- warrants                                         -              -            (226,800)                  -
Warrants issued for consulting services                                -              -                   -             (76,002)
Adjustments resulting from revaluation of stock options                -              -           1,386,250             678,079
    granted to consultants in previous periods
Adjustments resulting from revaluation of common shares                -              -             164,700              (6,777)
    granted to consultants in previous periods
Adjustments resulting from revaluation of warrants                     -              -                   -             (95,750)
    granted to consultants in previous periods
Granting of stock options                                              -              -           3,475,380          (3,475,380)
Amortization of deferred compensation                                  -              -                   -           7,683,530
Net loss for the period                                                -              -                   -                   -
Translation adjustment                                                 -              -                   -                   -
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as of September 30, 1999                          23,712,333         22,212          48,921,081          (5,151,232)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                               Accumulated
                                                                                   other          Accumulated            Total
                                                                               Comprehensive      development        Stockholders'
                                                              Warrants              loss         stage deficit          Equity
                                                                  $                  $                $                   $
                                                             ----------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                            <C>              <C>            <C>                  <C>
Outstanding as of March 31, 1999                                     -          14,309          (3,603,954)          3,493,112
Deemed common shares issued for acquisition                          -               -                   -          17,000,000
   of Homebase Work Solutions                                        -               -                   -                   -
Common shares issued for cash                                        -               -                   -          11,560,000
Share issuance costs- cash                                           -               -                   -          (1,357,926)
Share issuance costs- warrants                                 226,800               -                   -                   -
Warrants issued for consulting services                        526,000               -                   -             449,998
Adjustments resulting from revaluation of stock options              -               -                   -           2,064,329
    granted to consultants in previous periods                       -               -                   -                   -
Adjustments resulting from revaluation of common shares              -               -                   -             157,923
    granted to consultants in previous periods                       -               -                   -                   -
Adjustments resulting from revaluation of warrants              95,750               -                   -                   -
    granted to consultants in previous periods                       -               -                   -                   -
Granting of stock options                                            -               -                   -                   -
Amortization of deferred compensation                                -               -                   -           7,683,530
Net loss for the period                                              -               -         (16,613,840)        (16,613,840)
Translation adjustment                                               -          48,253                   -              48,253
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as of September 30, 1999                           848,550          62,562         (20,217,794)         24,485,379
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

                                      F-27

<PAGE>

1. BASIS OF ACCOUNTING

Nature of operations and continuing entity

These consolidated  financial statements are the continuing financial statements
of Virtual  Performance  Systems Inc. ["VPS"] [a development stage company],  an
Ontario  corporation  which was  incorporated  on July 29, 1997.  VPS had a 100%
interest  in,  and  subsequently   amalgamated  with,  Cheltenham   Technologies
Corporation,  an Ontario  corporation.  VPS has a 100%  interest  in  Cheltenham
Interactive  Corporation   ["Cheltenham   Interactive"],   an  inactive  Ontario
corporation,  and Cheltenham  Technologies  (Bermuda)  Corporation  ["Cheltenham
Bermuda"], a Barbados corporation which owns certain intellectual properties. On
January 29, 1999, VPS acquired the net assets of InfoCast Corporation  [formerly
Grant Reserve Corporation]  ["InfoCast"],  a United States non-operating company
traded on the NASDAQ OTC  Bulletin  Board which had a 100%  interest in InfoCast
Canada Corporation  ["InfoCast Canada"].  After the acquisition,  the accounting
entity continued under the name of InfoCast Corporation.

InfoCast,  InfoCast Canada, VPS,  Cheltenham  Interactive and Cheltenham Bermuda
are  collectively  referred to as the  "Company".  The Company is a  development
stage technology  company engaged in the research and development of information
delivery technologies.

The functional currency of VPS, Cheltenham  Interactive,  Cheltenham Bermuda and
InfoCast Canada is the Canadian dollar.  However,  for reporting  purposes,  the
Company  has  adopted  the  United  States  dollar  as its  reporting  currency.
Accordingly,  the Canadian  dollar balance  sheets of these  companies have been
translated into United States dollars at the rates of exchange at the respective
period ends,  while  transactions  during the periods and share capital  amounts
have  been  translated  at the  weighted  average  rates  of  exchange  for  the
respective  periods  and  the  exchange  rate at the  date  of the  transaction,
respectively.  Gains and losses arising from these  translation  adjustments are
included in comprehensive loss.

Acquisition of Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.

Pursuant  to a share  purchase  agreement  dated  May 13,  1999,  Homebase  Work
Solutions Ltd.  ["Homebase"]  was acquired by the Company in  consideration  for
3,400,000   exchangeable   shares  of  InfoCast  Canada.   The  InfoCast  Canada
exchangeable shares are convertible into InfoCast common shares on a one-for-one
basis at no additional consideration.

As a condition of the closing of the share purchase agreement,  the Company paid
$141,561  [Cdn.$210,000]  to officers of Homebase in May 1999 and an  additional
$142,023 [Cdn.$210,000] in August 1999 to the officers of Homebase.

                                      F-28
<PAGE>

The acquisition has been accounted for using the purchase  method.  The value of
the acquisition was  $17,077,000,  which included  $77,000 of expenses  directly
attributable to the acquisition. For accounting purposes the exchangeable shares
of  InfoCast  Canada  have been  valued at $5.00 which is equal to the price per
share  received  from the June 1999 private  placement of the  Company's  common
shares. The total purchase price of $17,077,000 has been allocated as follows:

                                                                       $
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cash                                                             127,667
Other current assets                                              13,565
Capital assets                                                    20,465
Completed technology                                          17,015,000
In-process research and development                               19,000
Trademarks                                                       853,000
Workforce-in-place                                               253,000
Goodwill                                                       5,846,293
Deferred income taxes                                         (6,886,000)
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                         (82,145)
Due to the Company                                              (102,845)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Purchase price                                                17,077,000
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------

The completed  technology,  trademarks,  workforce in-place and goodwill will be
amortized over their respective  useful lives of 5 years, 5 years, 3 years and 5
years. The in-process research and development was charged to income immediately
subsequent  to  the  acquisition.  The  completed  technology,   trademarks  and
workforce-in-place   have  been  classified  as  intellectual  property  on  the
consolidated  balance  sheet.  The deferred  income tax liability was created in
respect of the difference  between the accounting and tax basis of the completed
technology,  trademarks and workforce-in-place.  The identification and the fair
values  of  the  completed  technology,  in-process  research  and  development,
trademarks  and  workforce-in-place  were  determined  by  management  with  the
assistance of an independent valuator.

The completed  technology is comprised of Homebase's  information hub,  telework
and  web  enabling  technologies,  together  with  the  benefits  of  Homebase's
association with the National Environmental Policy Institute ("NEPI"). NEPI is a
United  States  based  non-profit  environmental  lobbyist  group that  promotes
telework policies in the United States.

The results of operations of Homebase during the post-acquisition 141-day period
ended September 30, 1999 have been consolidated with those of the Company.

CHANGE IN YEAR END

The Company changed its year end from December 31 to March 31.

                                      F-29
<PAGE>
Basis of presentation

These unaudited interim consolidated  financial statements have been prepared in
accordance with accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the United States
for  interim  financial  information.   Accordingly,   these  unaudited  interim
consolidated  financial statements do not include all the financial  information
required by accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the United States for
complete  financial  statements.  In the opinion of management,  all adjustments
[consisting  of  normal  recurring  accruals]   considered  necessary  for  fair
presentation have been included.  The operating results for the six-month period
ended  September 30, 1999 may not be  indicative  of the operating  results that
will occur for the year ended March 31, 2000.

For further information,  please refer to the consolidated  financial statements
and footnotes thereto of the Company as of and for the three-month  period ended
March 31, 1999, as of and for the year ended December 31, 1998 and as of and for
the 156-day period ended December 31, 1997, included elsewhere in this document.

2. SHARE CAPITAL

Authorized

The Company has 100,000,000 preferred shares authorized at a par value of $0.001
per share and has 100,000,000  common shares authorized at a par value of $0.001
per share.

ISSUED AND OUTSTANDING COMMON SHARES

                                                        Common stock issued and
                                                            outstanding and
                                                      additional paid-in-capital
                                                    Shares               Amount
                                                     #                     $
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Outstanding as of March 31, 1999                18,172,333            5,153,739
Acquisition of Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.      3,400,000           17,000,000
Private placement at $5.00 per share               420,000            2,100,000
Private placement at $5.50 per share             1,720,000            9,460,000
Share issuance costs                                    --           (1,584,725)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as of September 30, 1999            23,712,333           32,129,014
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Exchangeable shares

The number of common  shares  outstanding  as of  September  30,  1999  includes
4,900,000  exchangeable  shares of  InfoCast  Canada  which have been  deemed as
common shares of the Company for accounting  purposes  because the  exchangeable
shares are the economic equivalent of common shares of the Company.

                                      F-30
<PAGE>
Securities Purchase Agreement

Pursuant to a Securities  Purchase  Agreement  dated June 24, 1999,  the Company
issued,  by way of a private  placement,  420,000  common shares to the agent at
$5.00  per share  for  gross  proceeds  of  $2,100,000,  net of  commissions  of
$210,000.

Also pursuant to the Securities  Purchase  Agreement,  the Company issued 70,000
warrants on June 24, 1999 to the agent.  Each  warrant has an exercise  price of
$7.00,  expires June 23, 2001 and has been valued at $3.24 in the accounts based
on an expected volatility factor of 0.715 and a risk free interest rate of 5.1%.
As a result,  $226,800 was charged to share  issuance costs during the six-month
period ended September 30, 1999.

Private Placement Memorandum

During  July,  August  and  September  1999,  pursuant  to a  Private  Placement
Memorandum  dated July 1, 1999, the Company  completed the private  placement of
1,720,000 common shares at $5.50 per share for gross proceeds of $9,460,000 less
an agent's fee of $945,879.

Stock options

As of September 30, 1999, 2,075,000 common shares were reserved for the exercise
of stock options  granted to various  individuals  involved in the management of
VPS, including 375,000 options granted to consultants, pursuant to the Company's
1998 Stock Option Plan as amended on January 29, 1999.  The options were granted
on February 8, 1999, are exercisable at a price of $1.00 per share, expire three
years from the date of grant and are subject to a vesting period of at least six
months.  The closing market price of the Company's  common shares on the date of
grant was $6.625 per share.  Of the 2,075,000 stock options that were originally
valued at  $11,788,250,  the deferred  compensation  attributable to the 375,000
stock options that were granted to consultants was originally  determined  based
on the fair market value of the options on the date of grant,  $5.87 per option,
and was  revalued as of August 8, 1999 to the then  current  fair value of $9.06
per stock option [based on a revised  volatility of 1.019 and the August 8, 1999
common share closing market price of $ 10.00].  This  revaluation  resulted in a
charge to stock option  compensation  expense of $2,876,640 during the six-month
period ended September 30, 1999.  Stock  compensation  expense of $5,201,935 was
charged to income  during the  six-month  period  ended  September  30,  1999 in
respect of the  remaining  1,700,000  stock  options  granted to  employees  and
directors that are accounted for utilizing the intrinsic value method.

The directors  and  stockholders  of the Company  approved the 1999 Stock Option
plan under which an additional  2,000,000  stock options are eligible for grant.
As of  September  30,  1999  1,180,500  stock  option  were  granted  to various
employees,  officers, consultants and advisors pursuant to the 1999 Stock Option
Plan.  The options were granted on June 1, 1999,  are  exercisable at a price of
$7.00 per share, expire five years from the date of grant and are subject to the
following  vesting:  905,500  vested  on June 1, 1999 and  275,000  will vest on
December 1, 1999. The closing market price of the Company's common shares on the
date of grant was $7.00 per  share,  while the fair  value of the stock  options
granted was $2.16 per option  utilizing a Black-Scholes  valuation model. Of the
1,180,500  stock  options,  700,000 were  granted to employees  and 480,500 were
granted to  consultants  and  advisors.  The 480,500  outstanding  stock options
granted to  consultants  and advisors have been valued at  $1,252,380,  of which
$1,072,880 has been recognized as a stock option compensation expense during the
six-month  period ended September 30, 1999, and of which the balance of $179,500
has been recorded as deferred  compensation  in the  stockholders'  equity.  The
deferred compensation will be adjusted for the then current fair market value at
each interim  financial  reporting  date for the 480,500 stock option granted to
consultants  and  advisors,  and will be  amortized  to income  over the vesting
periods  of the stock  options.  The  deferred  compensation  in  respect of the
700,000  stock  options  granted to employees  and directors was nil because the
exercise price of the options was equal to the market price of the common shares
on the date of grant.

                                      F-31
<PAGE>
On June 1, 1999,  the  directors  of the Company  approved  the grant of 750,000
stock options  outside of the 1999 Stock Option Plan to an individual who became
an  officer  of the  Company  on  September  4,  1999.  The  stock  options  are
exercisable at a price of $7.00 per share, expire 5 years from the date of grant
and vest as follows:  250,000 on  September 4, 1999 upon the  acceptance  by the
individual of formal  employment with the Company,  250,000 on September 4, 2000
and 250,000 on September 4, 2001. These outstanding  options have been valued at
$2,437,500 of which $355,093 has been recognized as a stock option  compensation
expense during the six-month  period ended  September 30, 1999, and of which the
balance  of   $2,082,407   has  been  recorded  as  deferred   compensation   in
stockholders' equity. The measurement date in respect of these stock options was
September 4, 1999

A summary of the Company's stock option activity is as follows:

                                                  Six Months Ended
                                                 September 30, 1999
                                           Number of          Weighted Average
                                           Options            Exercise Price
                                             #                       $
Outstanding at March 31, 1999              2,075,000                1.00
Granted                                    1,930,500                7.00
Exercised                                          -                  -
Forfeited                                          -                  -
Cancelled                                          -                  -
Outstanding at September 30, 1999          4,005,500                3.89

Exercisable as of  September 30, 1999      1,930,500                4.59


If the Company had been following FASB Statement No. 123 ["FASB 123"] in respect
of stock option  granted to its employee and  directors,  the Company would have
recorded a higher  stock  option  compensation  expense for the six month period
ended September 30, 1999 of $1,623,948  which results in a pro-forma net loss of
$18,237,788 and a pro-forma basic and diluted loss per share of $0.86 in respect
of the  six-month  period  ended  September  30,  1999.  The Company  assumed an
expected  dividend rate of 0%, an expected life of 0.75 years,  a risk-free rate
of 5.08% and an expected  volatility factor of 0.838 in respect of the valuation
of stock options  granted  under the 1998 Stock Option Plan in  accordance  with
FASB 123. The Company assumed an expected  dividend rate of 0%, an expected life
of one year, a risk-free rate of 5.1% and an expected volatility factor of 0.744
in respect of the valuation of stock options granted under the 1999 Stock Option
Plan and  stock  options  granted  outside  of the  1999  Stock  Option  Plan in
accordance with FASB 123.


Issuance of shares in consideration for consulting services

Pursuant to an agreement  dated March 22, 1999, the Company issued 60,000 common
shares  to  a  financial   investment-consulting  firm  on  March  22,  1999  in
consideration for assistance in securing additional financing over the following
year. The  measurement  date for these common shares will be March 22, 2000, For
purposes  of  recognition  of  the  cost  of  the  common  shares  prior  to the
measurement  date such common  shares are  measured at their then  current  fair
value at each  interim  financial  reporting  date.  These  common  shares  were
revalued as of September  30, 1999 to $8.375 each which  resulted in a charge to
general and administrative expense of $254,149 during the six-month period ended
September 30, 1999.

                                      F-32
<PAGE>
Other warrants

Pursuant to a letter  agreement  dated May 20,  1999 with an investor  relations
company and  subsequent  negotiations  in October  1999,  the Company will pay a
total of $75,000 and issue  75,000  warrants  in  consideration  for  consulting
services over the period from June 1, 1999 to May 31, 2000. The payments will be
made and  warrants  issued for  services,  in advance,  as follows:  $25,000 and
25,000 warrants on June 1, 1999,  $12,500 and 12,500 warrants on each of October
6 and December 1, 1999 and $25,000 and 25,000  warrants on March 1, 2000.  Based
on a  volatility  factor of 0.963 and a risk-free  interest  rate of 5.10% , the
Company valued the 25,000  warrants  issued on June 1, 1999 at $149,750 which is
the fair market  value as of the August 31, 1999  measurement  date.  The 12,500
warrants issued on October 6, 1999 are in consideration for consulting  services
for the period  September 1, 1999 to November  30,  1999.  Based on a volatility
factor of 0.905 and a  risk-free  interest  rate of 5.10% , the  Company  valued
these 12,500 warrants at $40,000 which will be adjusted on the November 30, 1999
measurement  date to their then fair  market  value.  Each of the  existing  and
future warrants issued under this agreement will have an exercise price equal to
the market price on the date granted,  is  exercisable  on or after June 1, 2000
and  expires  May  31,  2001.  The  Company  charged  $163,083  to  general  and
administrative expenses in respect of these warrants during the six-month period
ended September 30, 1999.

On June 1, 1999, the Company issued 200,000 warrant to parties in  consideration
for past  consulting  services to the Company.  These  warrants  have a purchase
price of $7.00,  are  exercisable  on or after  June 1, 2000 and  expire May 31,
2001.  These  warrants  have been valued at $432,000 in the accounts  based on a
volatility factor of 0.744 and a risk-free  interest rate of 5.10% and have been
charged to general and administrative expenses.

3. COMMITMENTS

[a]   Marketing agreement

      Pursuant to an  advertising  services  agreement  dated July 14, 1999, the
      Company will pay $14,173  [Cdn.$20,833] per month to an advertising agency
      in  consideration  for the creation,  production  and placement of various
      marketing and advertising  initiatives.  This agreement  commences July 1,
      1999 and continues for a fixed term until May 1, 2000.


[b]   Acquired distribution and licensing rights


      Pursuant to a license  agreement dated June 29, 1999,  between the Company
      and ITC Learning  Corporation  ["ITC"],  the Company  will become,  for an
      unlimited term, ITC's exclusive  distance learning  technology partner for
      the hosting and  delivery of  educational  material  utilizing  the A-STAR
      component   within   ITC's   Workforce   Initiative   Program   for  total
      consideration of $2,000,000. The consideration of $2,000,000 is payable in
      three  installments,  the first two of which were paid prior to  September
      30, 1999 for a total of $1,500,000 while the final installment of $500,000
      is due on October 10, 1999. The final installment has been provided for in
      the accounts.

      The Company also entered into a separate  distribution  agreement with ITC
      in March 1999. This distribution  agreement  provided the Company with the
      perpetual  non-exclusive right to market, sell and electronically  convert
      all existing and future ITC products in  consideration  for  $1,000,000 in
      respect  of  electronic   distribution  to  the  first  150,000   licensed
      purchasers. In the event that the Company effects distribution to more the
      150,000  licensed  purchasers,  the Company and ITC will share the revenue
      generated  therefrom  based  on  a  revenue  sharing  formula.  The  total
      consideration  was  subsequently  reduced to $975,000  and was paid by the
      Company in two installments in March and May 1999.

                                      F-33
<PAGE>

      Acquired  distribution  and  licensing  rights are  recorded at cost.  The
      capitalized  costs  of the  distribution  and  licensing  rights  will  be
      amortized  each  period,  commencing  when  the  electronically  converted
      products and  educational  material are  available  for  distribution  and
      license,  at the  greater  of  (i)  the  amount  calculated  based  on the
      straight-line method over the estimated useful life of 5 years or (ii) the
      amount  calculated  based on the ratio of current gross revenues  received
      from  the  licensing  of the  electronically  converted  products  and the
      hosting and delivery of  educational  material over the sum of the current
      and future gross  revenues  anticipated  to be received by  licensing  the
      electronically   converted   products  and  hosting  and   delivering  the
      educational  material. If it is determined that investment in distribution
      and  licensing  rights  is  not  recoverable  from  estimated  sales,  the
      distribution  and  licensing  rights  will be  written  down to their fair
      value.


[c]   Call Center Learning Solutions On-Line Inc. joint venture

      Pursuant to an agreement dated May 18, 1999,  between the Company and Call
      Center Learning  Solutions Inc.  ["CCLS"],  the two parties have agreed to
      form a new corporation, Call Center Learning Solutions On-Line Inc. ["CCLS
      On-Line"] to be owned equally by the Company and CCLS. The new corporation
      will develop,  own and exploit  courseware in an electronic format capable
      of  electronic  distribution.  The Company will  contribute  the resources
      necessary to convert the first five courses into the electronic format and
      will fund the incorporation and organization of the new corporation. Under
      the  agreement,  the Company  agreed to fund all  marketing  and technical
      support efforts of the new corporation for the initial  six-month  period.
      Pursuant to  subsequent  renegotiations,  the Company has agreed to extend
      the funding of all marketing and technical  support  efforts on a month to
      month  basis  beyond  the  original  six-month  period.  These  sales  and
      marketing costs,  the  incorporation  and  organization  costs for the new
      corporation  and  the  costs  to  convert  the  first  five  courses  into
      electronic  format  will be  recorded  and  expensed by the Company in the
      period  in which  they  occur.  Once the  first  five  courses  have  been
      converted into an electronic  format  capable of electronic  distribution,
      the two  parties  will  share all  revenues  and bear all costs on a 50/50
      basis.  When the courses are contributed to the joint venture they will be
      accounted for at the transferor's  basis of zero. As of September 30, 1999
      the Company had funded approximately  $103,000 of marketing expenses which
      the Company charged to income.

[d]   Lease agreement

      Homebase  entered into a lease agreement with Sun Microsystems on June 25,
      1999 for the lease of a Sun Microsystems  Enterprise  10000 computer.  The
      Company paid a deposit of $476,210  [Cdn.$700,000] at the time of signing.
      The  equipment  was delivered on September 20, 1999 and under the terms of
      the lease,  36 monthly  lease  payments  of $40,272  [Cdn.$59,197]  are to
      commence on the 16th day following  delivery of the  equipment.  The lease
      has been accounted for as a capital lease.

[e]   Innatrex Inc.

      The Company  entered into a letter of intent with  Innatrex Inc. in August
      1999 whereby the two parties will be evaluating  the  feasibility  of call
      center  technology  owned  by  Innatrex  Inc.  for  readiness  within  the
      application service provider market. The Company agreed to pay to Innatrex
      a total of $204,090 [Cdn.$300,000] as follows:  $34,015 [Cdn.$50,000] upon
      signing  of the  letter of intent  and  $42,519  [Cdn.$62,500]  on each of
      August 31,  September 30,  October 31 and November 30, 1999. To date,  the
      Company  has paid a total of  $161,572  and  expects to pay the  remaining
      $42,519 on November 30, 1999. The Company  expects to receive the payments
      back through future revenue generated by the Company through the licensing
      of this call center  technology  to third  parties or this prepaid  amount
      will be converted to equity in Innatrex Inc.

[f]   CosmoCom, Inc.

      Pursuant to a summary of terms and conditions  for a definitive  agreement
      between the  Company  and  CosmoCom,  Inc.  dated April 1999,  the Company
      intends to purchase licenses for CosmoCom Inc.'s CosmoCall software. Under
      this  summary,  the Company  placed an initial  order for 300 licenses for
      total consideration of $754,500, payable in four installments. The Company
      has taken  delivery of 50 licenses and is currently  testing the software.
      The  Company  paid  license  fees of $62,875 in April 1999 and  $62,875 in
      September  1999 related to the first 50 licenses.  The Company  expects to
      pay the third installment of $314,375,  in consideration for the remaining
      250  licenses,  once the testing is  completed  and the software is to the
      Company's  satisfaction,  with the final  installment of $314,375  payable
      upon delivery of the remaining 250 licenses.



                                      F-34
<PAGE>

[g]   Investment banking and financial advisory services agreement

      In  October  1999 the  Company  entered  into a  non-exclusive  investment
      banking and financial advisory services  agreement with N.M.  Rothschild &
      Sons Canada Ltd and N.M. Rothschild & Sons (Washington)  L.L.C.  (together
      "Rothschild")  pursuant  to  which  Rothschild's  will  provide  financial
      advisory  services to the  Company.  In  consideration  for its  services,
      Rothschild is entitled to a monthly work fee of $50,000 payable monthly in
      arrears by the Company.  Either party may terminate  this agreement at any
      time,  with or without  cause,  by giving the other party 15 days  written
      notice.


4. CONTINGENCIES

Fair value of financial instruments

The following disclosure of the estimated fair value of financial instruments is
made in accordance  with the  requirements of SFAS No. 107,  "Disclosures  about
Fair Value of Financial Instruments." The estimated fair value amounts have been
determined by the Company using  available  market  information  and appropriate
valuation methodologies.

The fair  values  of  financial  instruments  classified  as  current  assets or
liabilities including cash and cash equivalents,  accounts receivable,  due from
ACT and  accounts  payable  and accrued  liabilities  as of  September  30, 1999
approximate  the  carrying  values  due  to  the  short-term   maturity  of  the
instruments.

Concentration of credit risk

The  Company  invests  its  cash  and cash  equivalents  primarily  with a major
Canadian  chartered bank.  Certain  deposits,  at times, are in excess of limits
insured by the Canadian government.

Note receivable from Cherokee Mining Company Inc.

Pursuant to an agreement dated November 23, 1998, as amended April 20, 1999, and
effective  December 18, 1998,  InfoCast  [the  acquired  entity] sold its equity
interest in its two subsidiaries,  Gold King Mines Corporation ["Gold King"] and
Madison Mining  Corporation  ["Madison  Mining"] to Cherokee Mining Company Inc.
["Cherokee"],  a company controlled by a former director of InfoCast,  for [i] a
non-interest  bearing  note of  $600,000  due  November  25,  1999  and [ii] the
entitlement to 80% of the net proceeds  received by Madison Mining and Gold King
in excess of $681,175 from the sale of their mining properties and assets.

InfoCast did not record a value on the $600,000 note  receivable  because of the
uncertainty of whether the management of Cherokee,  Gold King and Madison Mining
will be able to sell the  capital  assets of Gold King and  Madison  Mining  for
sufficient  proceeds to enable the note to be repaid to  InfoCast.  As a result,
VPS did not reflect the note in the purchase  equation upon the  acquisition  of
InfoCast  in January  1999.  In the event  that the note is  repaid,  the amount
received will be credited to income.

                                      F-35
<PAGE>

Purchase of Applied Courseware Technology (A.C.T.) Inc.

Pursuant to a Letter of Intent  dated  February 10, 1999 between the Company and
Applied  Courseware  Technology  (A.C.T.) Inc. ["ACT"],  the Company intended to
purchase a 100% interest in ACT in consideration for [i] Cdn.$280,000 cash, [ii]
750,000  common  shares  of the  Company  and  [iii]  the  assumption  of  ACT's
liabilities.   Pursuant  to  subsequent  negotiations,   the  Cdn.$280,000  cash
component of the purchase price was revised to nil. The  transaction was subject
to satisfactory  due diligence.  The amount and terms of ACT's debt that will be
assumed by the Company upon its acquisition has not been determined.

During the  six-month  period ended  September  30, 1999,  the Company made cash
advances to ACT totaling  $542,014  [Cdn $ 801,797] to fund certain  development
expenditures  incurred on behalf of the Company.  These  advances in addition to
$47,320  [Cdn.$70,000]  that was  outstanding  as of March  31,  1999  have been
charged to research and development  expenses during the six-month  period ended
September 30, 1999.

In  September  1999  the  Company  made the  decision  not to  proceed  with the
acquisition of ACT.

As of September 30, 1999, $95,242 [1998 - nil], including interest receivable of
$3,443,  was  recorded as an amount due from ACT in respect of  Cdn.$140,000  of
ACT's  debt that the  Company  paid in March  1999 in  consideration  for a note
secured  by  a  general  security  agreement  subject  to  prior  charges.   The
realization  of this  loan is  uncertain  as a result  of ACT's  poor  financial
condition and the Company's decision not to proceed with the purchase of ACT.
This loan amount was written down to $nil in September 1999.

ACT has indicated to the Company that ACT believes the Company's decision to not
proceed with the  acquisition is unlawful and that the Company has access to and
possesses  intellectual  property belonging to ACT that the Company has no right
to use or derive benefit from. ACT has indicated that they expect to commence an
action  against the  Company for  damages.


5. SUBSEQUENT EVENT

Private placement

From  October 1, 1999 to November 22, 1999,  the Company  completed  the private
placement  of 159,000  common  shares at $5.50 per share for gross  proceeds  of
$874,500, less an agent's fee of $87,450.


                                      F-36
<PAGE>
                                AUDITORS' REPORT





To the Directors of
Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.

We  have  audited  the  balance  sheets  of  Homebase  Work  Solutions  Ltd.  [a
development  stage  company] as at March 31, 1999 and  December 31, 1998 and the
statements of loss and accumulated  development stage deficit and cash flows for
the  three-month  period ended March 31, 1999, the 101-day period ended December
31, 1998 and the cumulative period from inception,  September 22, 1998, to March
31, 1999.  These financial  statements are the  responsibility  of the Company's
management.  Our  responsibility  is to express  an  opinion on these  financial
statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted
in Canada.  Those standards  require that we plan and perform an audit to obtain
reasonable  assurance  whether  the  financial  statements  are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.

In our opinion,  these  financial  statements  present  fairly,  in all material
respects,  the  financial  position  of the  Company  as at March  31,  1999 and
December 31, 1998 and the results of its  operations  and its cash flows for the
three-month  period ended March 31, 1999,  the 101-day period ended December 31,
1998 and the cumulative period from inception,  September 22, 1998, to March 31,
1999 in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in Canada.




Toronto, Canada,                                       /s/ Ernst & Young LLP
June 11, 1999.                                         Chartered Accountants



                                      F-37
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                                 BALANCE SHEETS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                      As at                   As at
                                                                                     March 31,             December 31,
                                                                                      1999                    1998
                                                                                        $                       $
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ASSETS
Current
<S>                                                                                 <C>                       <C>
Cash                                                                                332,198                   66,716
Prepaid expenses                                                                      2,140                    2,140
Accounts receivable                                                                   9,719                   41,455
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current assets                                                                344,057                  110,311
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fixed assets, net [note 3]                                                            9,643                    1,900
Software distribution rights, net [note 4]                                          389,244                       --
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                    742,944                  112,211
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIENCY)
Current
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities                                            134,378                    6,920
Promissory note payable to InfoCast Corporation [note 6]                            150,000                       --
Due to shareholders [note 7]                                                            283                    1,117
First preferred series A shares [note 5]                                            258,639                  236,683
Dividends payable on first preferred series A shares [note 5]                        28,125                       --
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total current liabilities                                                           571,425                  244,720
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Shareholders' equity (deficiency)
Common shares [note 5]                                                              727,275                    8,212
Accumulated development stage deficit                                              (555,756)                (140,721)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total shareholders' equity (deficiency)                                             171,519                 (132,509)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                    742,944                  112,211
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

See accompanying notes


                                      F-38
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                       STATEMENTS OF LOSS AND ACCUMULATED
                            DEVELOPMENT STAGE DEFICIT
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                                  Cumulative period
                                                                                                                   from inception,
                                                                Three-month                101-day period           September 22,
                                                               period ended                     ended                   1998,
                                                                 March 31,                  December 31,            to March 31,
                                                                   1999                         1998                    1999
                                                                     $                            $                      $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

REVENUE
<S>                                                                  <C>                      <C>                          <C>
Interest                                                                  288                      719                        1,007
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EXPENSES
Professional fees                                                      46,460                   78,545                      125,005
Wages and benefits                                                     81,733                   29,511                      111,244
National Environmental Policy
   Institute funding [note 9]                                         143,884                       --                      143,884
Bank charges and interest                                                 234                      193                          427
First preferred series A share interest
   accretion [note 5]                                                  21,956                   11,683                       33,639
First preferred series A share dividend
   expense [note 5]                                                    28,125                       --                       28,125
Other                                                                  62,605                   21,508                       84,113
Depreciation and amortization                                          30,326                       --                       30,326
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      415,323                  141,440                      556,763
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net loss for the period                                              (415,035)                (140,721)                    (555,756)

Accumulated development stage deficit,
   beginning of period                                               (140,721)                      --                           --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accumulated development stage deficit,
   end of period                                                     (555,756)                (140,721)                    (555,756)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

See accompanying notes


                                      F-39
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                            STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                                  Cumulative period
                                                                                                                   from inception,
                                                                Three-month                101-day period           September 22,
                                                               period ended                     ended                   1998,
                                                                 March 31,                  December 31,            to March 31,
                                                                   1999                         1998                    1999
                                                                     $                            $                       $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

OPERATING ACTIVITIES
<S>                                                               <C>                           <C>                  <C>
Net loss for the period                                          (415,035)                    (140,721)             (555,756)
Add items not affecting cash
   Depreciation and amortization                                   30,326                           --                30,326
   First preferred series A share interest
      accretion [note 5]                                           21,956                       11,683                33,639
   First preferred series A share dividend
      expense [note 5]                                             28,125                           --                28,125
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 (334,628)                    (129,038)             (463,666)
Net change in non-cash working capital
   balances related to operations                                 158,360                      (35,558)              122,802
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash used in operating activities                                (176,268)                    (164,596)             (340,864)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

INVESTING ACTIVITIES
Purchase of fixed assets                                           (8,250)                      (1,900)              (10,150)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash used in investing activities                                  (8,250)                      (1,900)              (10,150)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

FINANCING ACTIVITIES
Proceeds from issuance of preferred shares                             --                      225,000               225,000
Proceeds from issuance of common shares                           300,000                        8,212               308,212
Promissory note payable to
   InfoCast Corporation                                           150,000                           --               150,000
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash provided by financing activities                             450,000                      233,212               683,212
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Net increase in cash during the period                            265,482                       66,716               332,198
Cash, beginning of period                                          66,716                           --                    --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash, end of period                                               332,198                       66,716               332,198
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOW INFORMATION
   Income taxes paid during the period                                 --                           --                    --
</TABLE>


See accompanying notes


                                      F-40
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]


March 31, 1999



1. NATURE OF OPERATIONS

Incorporation

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd. [the  "Company"] was  incorporated on September 22,
1998 under the Alberta Corporations Act. The Company is in the development stage
and is engaged in the development of information delivery technologies.

Economic dependence

In May 1999, the Company was acquired by InfoCast  Corporation  ["InfoCast"],  a
company  also in the  development  stage [note 8]. As a result of the  Company's
limited  financial  resources,   the  Company  is  economically  dependent  upon
InfoCast.

2. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

These  financial  statements  have been prepared in accordance  with  accounting
principles  generally  accepted in Canada which conform in all material respects
with accounting  principles generally accepted in the United States ["US GAAP"],
except as  outlined  in note 12. The  preparation  of  financial  statements  in
accordance  with such  principles  requires  management  to make  estimates  and
assumptions  that  affect the  reported  amounts of assets and  liabilities  and
disclosure of  contingent  assets and  liabilities  at the date of the financial
statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting
periods. Actual results could vary from the estimates that were used.

The Company's significant accounting policies are summarized as follows:

Fiscal periods presented

The Company has not yet chosen a year end.  The  financial  periods  reported in
these  financial  statements  conform  with  those  of the  Company's  acquirer,
InfoCast [note 8].


                                      F-41
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]


March 31, 1999



Fixed assets

Fixed  assets  are  recorded  at cost less  accumulated  depreciation.  If it is
determined that a fixed asset is not recoverable over its estimated useful life,
the fixed asset will be written down to its net recoverable  value.  Maintenance
and repairs are charged to expenses as incurred. Gains and losses on disposition
of fixed  assets are  included in income.  Depreciation  is provided  for at the
following annual rate and method:

Office furniture and equipment                            30% declining balance

Software distribution rights

Software distribution rights are recorded at cost less accumulated amortization.
If it is determined that a software  distribution  right is not recoverable over
its estimated useful life, the software  distribution right will be written down
to its net recoverable value.
Amortization is provided on a straight-line basis over two years.

Research and development

Software  development  costs are expensed as incurred unless they meet generally
accepted accounting criteria for deferral and amortization. Software development
costs incurred prior to the  establishment of  technological  feasibility do not
meet these criteria and are expensed as incurred. Research costs are expensed as
incurred.

Income taxes

The Company follows the tax liability method of income tax allocation.



                                      F-42
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]


March 31, 1999


3. FIXED ASSETS

Fixed assets consist of the following:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                     March 31, 1999
                                                                                    ------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                      Accumulated         Net book
                                                                                     Cost            depreciation           value
                                                                                       $                   $                  $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                                                  <C>                                       <C>
Office furniture and equipment                                                      10,150                  507                9,643
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                                    December 31, 1998
                                                                                    ------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                      Accumulated         Net book
                                                                                     Cost            depreciation           value
                                                                                       $                   $                  $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Office furniture and equipment                                                       1,900                   --                1,900
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

4. SOFTWARE DISTRIBUTION RIGHTS

Software distribution rights consist of the following:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                     March 31, 1999
                                                                                  --------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                      Accumulated         Net book
                                                                                  Cost               amortization           value
                                                                                    $                      $                  $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

<S>                                                                                <C>                   <C>                 <C>
Facet Decisions software distribution rights                                       218,385               28,719              189,666
Facet Petroleum software distribution rights                                       200,678                1,100              199,578
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                   419,063               29,819              389,244
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

Pursuant to a licensing and  distribution  agreement dated March 7, 1999 between
the Company and Facet  Decisions Inc.  ["Facet  Decisions"],  a private  British
Columbia  company,  the Company  acquired  the  exclusive  right in the telework
market to  distribute  Facet  Decisions'  computer  software for a period of two
years in  consideration  for  6,910  common  shares  of the  Company  valued  at
$218,385.  The software subject to the agreement includes  Cause&Effect  Complex
Decision Support Software and optional  modules,  HeadsUp Business  Intelligence
Software and optional modules,  FastTracks  Methodology and Decision  Frameworks
Industry Applications




                                      F-43
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]


March 31, 1999


["Facet  Decisions'  Software"].  In  addition,  all  sales of Facet  Decisions'
Software  to the  Company  will  be  discounted  by 30%  from  Facet  Decisions'
published prices.

Pursuant to a licensing and distribution  agreement dated March 30, 1999 between
the Company and Facet Petroleum  Solutions Inc. ["Facet  Petroleum"],  a private
British  Columbia  company,  the Company  acquired  the  exclusive  right in the
telework market to distribute Facet Petroleum's  Telework Operational Data Store
["TODS"]  software for a period of two years in  consideration  for 6,910 common
shares of the Company  valued at $200,678.  In  addition,  all sales of the TODS
software  to the  Company  will be  discounted  by 50%  from  Facet  Petroleum's
published prices.

The ascribed value of the shares issued to Facet  Decisions and Facet  Petroleum
is based on the 50,000 total  InfoCast  shares  received by Facet  Decisions and
Facet Petroleum upon the acquisition of the Company by InfoCast [note 8] and the
market price of the InfoCast  shares on the  effective  dates of the  respective
licensing and distribution agreements with Facet Decisions and Facet Petroleum.

A principal  shareholder,  director  and officer of the Company is a director of
Facet Decisions and Facet Petroleum.

5. CAPITAL STOCK

Authorized

The Company is authorized  to issue an unlimited  number of common shares and an
unlimited number of first and second preferred shares.

First and second  preferred  shares may be issued in series and the directors of
the Company may fix, before issuance, the rights,  privileges,  restrictions and
conditions attached thereto.


                                      F-44
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]


March 31, 1999



Issued and outstanding

<TABLE>

<CAPTION>

                                                                                                         Shares            Amount
                                                                                                            #                 $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Common shares
<S>                                                                                                       <C>                <C>
On incorporation, issued for cash                                                                           1,000                  1
Issued pursuant to a private placement                                                                    820,180              8,211
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as at December 31, 1998                                                                       821,180              8,212
Issued pursuant to a private placement                                                                    120,000            300,000
Issued for acquisition of software distribution rights [note 4]                                            13,820            419,063
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as at March 31, 1999                                                                          955,000            727,275
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                                                         Shares            Amount
                                                                                                            #                 $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

First preferred series A shares
<S>                                                                                                        <C>               <C>
Issued for cash, pursuant to a private placement
   dated November 10, 1998                                                                                 45,000            225,000
Interest accretion to redemption price                                                                         --             11,683
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as at December 31, 1998                                                                        45,000            236,683
Interest accretion to redemption price                                                                          --            21,956
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outstanding as at March 31, 1999                                                                           45,000            258,639
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

First preferred series A units

Series A of the first preferred shares were issued in units. Each unit consisted
of 2,000 redeemable first preferred series A shares, 3,000 common share purchase
warrants, and 1,500 penalty common share purchase warrants. Each first preferred
series A share was  required to be redeemed by the Company by December  31, 1999
at $7.50 per share and commanded 50% cumulative  dividends commencing January 1,
1999. The Company has recorded first preferred series A share interest  expenses
of $21,956 for the  three-month  period ended March 31, 1999 and $11,683 for the
101-day  period  ended  December  31, 1998 based on the  accretion  of the first
preferred series A shares from the $5.00 issuance price to the December 31, 1999
$7.50  redemption  price using the  effective  yield  method.  In addition,  the
Company has recorded first preferred Series A share dividend expenses of $28,125
in respect of the  three-month  period ended March 31, 1999. The first preferred
series A shares were acquired by InfoCast [note 8].

                                      F-45
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]


March 31, 1999


Each common share purchase  warrant  entitled the holder thereof to purchase one
common  share of the  Company at $5.00 per  share.  The  common  share  purchase
warrants  would have expired 30 days  subsequent to the  redemption of the first
preferred series A shares in proportion to such redemption.  Each penalty common
share purchase  warrant  entitled the holder to purchase one common share of the
Company at $5.00 per share.  The penalty  common share  purchase  warrants would
have vested three years after the issuance of the first preferred series A units
in proportion to the number of first preferred series A shares that had not been
redeemed  at that  time,  and  would  have  expired  30 days  subsequent  to the
redemption  of the  first  preferred  series  A  shares  in  proportion  to such
redemption.  The  outstanding  67,500 common share purchase  warrants and 33,750
penalty common share purchase  warrants of the Company were acquired by InfoCast
[note 8].

6. PROMISSORY NOTE PAYABLE TO INFOCAST CORPORATION

The  promissory  note payable to InfoCast  [note 8] bears interest at prime plus
1%, is  secured  by a general  security  agreement  covering  all  assets of the
Company and is due on demand.  No  interest  was paid by the Company on the note
during the  three-month  period ended March 31, 1999. The note was repaid during
May 1999.

7. DUE TO SHAREHOLDERS

Amounts due to shareholders are payable on demand and are non-interest bearing.

8. ACQUISITION BY INFOCAST CORPORATION

Pursuant to a share purchase  agreement dated May 13, 1999, all of the Company's
outstanding  common  shares,  first  preferred  series A  shares,  common  share
purchase  warrants and penalty common share  purchase  warrants were acquired by
InfoCast in consideration for 3.4 million exchangeable shares of InfoCast Canada
Corporation  ["InfoCast  Canada"],  a 100% owned  subsidiary  of  InfoCast.  The
InfoCast Canada  exchangeable shares are convertible into InfoCast common shares
on a one-for-one basis at no additional consideration. InfoCast is a development


                                      F-46
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]


March 31, 1999


stage technology  company traded on the NASDAQ OTC Bulletin Board and is engaged
in the research and development of information delivery technologies.

As a condition of the closing of the share purchase agreement, InfoCast will pay
$210,000 to officers of the Company and must pay an  additional  $210,000 to the
officers of the Company if InfoCast completes a private placement  financing for
gross  proceeds  of at  least  US$1,000,000  or  completes  a letter  of  credit
financing of at least US$500,000.

9. NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY INSTITUTE FUNDING

During the  three-month  period ended March 31, 1999, the Company paid US$25,000
to the National  Environmental  Policy Institute ["NEPI"], a United States based
non-profit  environmental  lobbyist group, to assist NEPI's efforts in promoting
telework policies in the United States.  In addition,  as at March 31, 1999, the
Company has committed an additional  US$70,000 in funding to NEPI which has been
provided for in the accounts.

10. INCOME TAX LOSS CARRYFORWARDS

As at March 31,  1999,  the  Company  has  accumulated  non-capital  losses  for
Canadian  income tax purposes of  approximately  $319,000 which are available to
reduce future years' taxable income.  The future income tax benefits  associated
with these non-capital losses have not yet been recognized in the accounts.

The loss carryforwards will expire as follows:

                                                       $
- ----------------------------------------------------------

2005                                               126,000
2006                                               193,000
- ----------------------------------------------------------
                                                   319,000
- ----------------------------------------------------------



                                      F-47
<PAGE>

Homebase Work Solutions Ltd.
[a development stage company]

                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                         [expressed in Canadian dollars]


March 31, 1999


11. UNCERTAINTY DUE TO THE YEAR 2000 ISSUE

The Year 2000 Issue  arises  because  many  computerized  systems use two digits
rather than four to identify a year.  Date-sensitive  systems may  recognize the
year 2000 as 1900 or some other date, resulting in errors when information using
year 2000 dates is processed.  In addition,  similar  problems may arise in some
systems  which use certain  dates in 1999 to  represent  something  other than a
date. The effects of the Year 2000 Issue may be experienced before, on, or after
January 1, 2000,  and, if not addressed,  the impact on operations and financial
reporting may range from minor errors to significant systems failure which could
affect an entity's  ability to conduct  normal  business  operations.  It is not
possible  to be certain  that all aspects of the Year 2000 Issue  affecting  the
Company,  including  those  related to the efforts of customers,  suppliers,  or
other third parties, will be fully resolved.

12. RECONCILIATION  TO ACCOUNTING  PRINCIPLES  GENERALLY  ACCEPTED IN THE UNITED
    STATES

These  financial  statements  have been prepared in accordance  with  accounting
principles  generally  accepted in Canada which conform in all material respects
with US GAAP except as follows:

Interest accretion and dividends on first preferred shares

Under US GAAP,  first preferred share interest  accretion and dividends  payable
are charged directly to shareholders'  equity.  Accordingly,  the net loss would
have decreased by $50,081 in respect of the  three-month  period ended March 31,
1999 [101-day period ended December 31, 1998 - $11,683].


                                      F-48
<PAGE>
InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                   PRO-FORMA CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
          [Expressed in United States dollars unless otherwise stated]
                        Prepared without audit or review

September 30, 1999


BASIS OF PRESENTATION

The  unaudited  pro-forma   consolidated   financial   information  of  InfoCast
Corporation  [formerly  Virtual  Performance  Systems Inc.] [a development stage
company]  [the  "Company"]  set forth below gives effect to the  acquisition  of
Homebase  Work  Solutions  Ltd.  ["Homebase"]  as if the  Company  had  acquired
Homebase  as of  January  1, 1998 for  purposes  of the  pro-forma  consolidated
statements of operations for the six-month  period ended September 30, 1999, for
the three-month  period ended March 31, 1999 [the transition period] and for the
year ended  December 31,  1998.  Homebase was acquired by the Company on May 13,
1999.

The pro-forma  consolidated  financial statements are not necessarily indicative
of the results  that  actually  would have  occurred  had the  Company  acquired
Homebase on the date indicated or which would be obtained in the future.

The unaudited pro-forma  consolidated  information should be read in conjunction
with the audited and unaudited  consolidated financial statements of the Company
and the audited  financial  statements of Homebase  appearing  elsewhere in this
registration statement.

The unaudited  pro-forma statement of operations for the year ended December 31,
1998, the three-month period ended March 31, 1999 and the six-month period ended
September   30,  1999  have  been   prepared  from  the  audited  and  unaudited
consolidated  statements  of  operations  of the  Company  and the  audited  and
unaudited pre-acquisition statements of operations of Homebase after translation
of its statements of operations from Canadian  dollars to United States dollars.
The  audited and  unaudited  statements  of  operations  of  Homebase  have been
prepared in accordance with Canadian GAAP.

The pro-forma adjustments do not reflect any operating efficiencies or potential
synergies that may be achievable with respect to the combined companies.

The pro-forma  adjustments  reflecting  the  acquisition  of Homebase  under the
purchase  method of accounting is based on available  financial  information and
certain estimates and assumptions.

                                      F-49

<PAGE>
InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                   PRO-FORMA CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
          [Expressed in United States dollars unless otherwise stated]
                        Prepared without audit or review

SEPTEMBER 30, 1999

PRO-FORMA CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS

For the six-month period ended September 30, 1999
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                         Homebase Work
                                                        Solutions Ltd.
                                                        [43-day period
                                         InfoCast              ended                                      Pro-forma      Pro-forma
                                        Corporation         May 13, 1999]                                 adjustment   consolidated
                                             $                    $                                            $             $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

REVENUE
<S>                                    <C>                   <C>                                            <C>          <C>
Interest income                             58,464                473                                                         58,937
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            58,464                473                                                         58,937
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EXPENSES
General, administrative
   and selling                           4,023,321             68,130                                                      4,091,451
Stock option
    compensation                         9,506,548                 --                                                      9,506,548
Research and development                 1,783,346                 --                                                      1,783,346
Amortization and
     depreciation                        1,893,194             16,872                          [c]           546,351       2,456,417
First preferred Series A
   share interest accretion                     --              7,518                          [b]            (7,518)             --
First preferred Series A
   share dividend expense                       --              8,813                          [b]            (8,813)             --
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        17,206,409            101,333                                        530,020      17,837,762
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Loss before
      income taxes                     (17,147,945)          (100,860)                                      (530,020)   (17,778,825)
Deferred income taxes                     (534,105)                --                          [c]          (159,945)      (694,050)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net loss
   for the period                      (16,613,840)          (100,860)                                      (370,075)   (17,084,775)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Weighted average
    number  of shares
    outstanding                         21,305,895          3,400,000                                                    24,705,895
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Basic and diluted
   loss per share                          (0.78)              (0.03)                                                         (0.69)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

                                      F-50
<PAGE>
InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                   PRO-FORMA CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
          [Expressed in United States dollars unless otherwise stated]
                        Prepared without audit or review
SEPTEMBER 30, 1999

PRO-FORMA CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS

For the three-month period ended March 31, 1999

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                           Homebase
                                      InfoCast               Work                                       Pro-forma        Pro-forma
                                     Corporation        Solutions Ltd.                                 adjustment      consolidated
                                          $                    $                                            $                $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

REVENUE
<S>                                 <C>                  <C>                                          <C>             <C>
Interest income                         4,478                191                          [a]              (105)          4,564
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        4,478                191                                           (105)          4,564
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EXPENSES
General, administrative
   and selling                        635,334            221,453                                                        856,787
Stock option compensation           2,256,938                 --                                                      2,256,938
Research and development              162,914                 --                                                        162,914
Interest and loan fees                 23,562                155                                                         23,717
First preferred Series A
   share interest accretion                --             14,528                          [b]           (14,528)             --
First preferred Series A
   share dividend expense                  --             18,610                          [b]           (18,610)             --
Amortization and depreciation           9,651             20,066                          [c]         1,187,067       1,216,784
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                    3,088,399            274,812                                      1,153,929       4,517,140
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Loss before income taxes           (3,083,921)          (274,621)                                    (1,154,034)     (4,512,576)
Deferred income taxes                      --                 --                          [c]          (347,500)       (347,500)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net loss for the period            (3,083,921)          (274,621)                                      (806,534)     (4,165,076)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Weighted average
   number of shares
   outstanding                     11,583,995          3,400,000                                                     14,983,995
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Basic and diluted
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   loss per share                     (0.27)              (0.08)                                                         (0.28)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

                                      F-51
<PAGE>
InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                   PRO-FORMA CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
          [Expressed in United States dollars unless otherwise stated]
                        Prepared without audit or review

SEPTEMBER 30, 1999

PRO-FORMA CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS

For the year ended December 31, 1998

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                           Homebase
                                                             Work
                                                        Solutions Ltd.
                                                           [101-day
                                                            period
                                                        from inception
                                      InfoCast          to December 31,                           Pro-forma        Pro-forma
                                     Corporation             1998]                               adjustment      consolidated
                                          $                    $                                      $                $
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

REVENUE
<S>                                       <C>                 <C>                                   <C>             <C>
Other revenue                               43,446                 --                                                   43,446
Interest income                                 --                485                                                      485
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            43,446                485                                       --          43,931
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

EXPENSES
General, administrative
   and selling                             375,302             87,337                                                  462,639
Research and
   development                              88,180                 --                                                   88,180
Interest and loan fees                          --                130                                                      130
First preferred Series A
   share interest accretion                     --              7,875                    [b]            (7,875)             --
Amortization and
   depreciation                              3,836                 --                    [c]         4,827,192       4,831,028
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           467,318             95,342                                4,819,317       5,381,977
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Loss before income taxes                  (423,872)           (94,857)                              (4,819,317)     (5,338,046)
Deferred income taxes                           --                 --                    [c]        (1,390,000)     (1,390,000)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net loss for the period                   (423,872)           (94,857)                              (3,429,317)     (3,948,046)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Weighted average
   number of shares
   outstanding                             768,301          3,400,000                                                4,168,301

Basic and diluted
   loss per share                          (0.55)              (0.03)                                                 (0.95)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

                                      F-52
<PAGE>
InfoCast Corporation
[formerly Virtual Performance Systems Inc.] [a development stage company]

                   PRO-FORMA CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
          [Expressed in United States dollars unless otherwise stated]
                        Prepared without audit or review

SEPTEMBER 30, 1999

PRO-FORMA ADJUSTMENTS

The unaudited  pro-forma  consolidated  financial  statements give effect to the
following pro-forma adjustments:

[a]   The  elimination  of nil and  $105 of  interest  revenue  recorded  in the
      accounts of the Company for the 43-day  period  ended May 13, 1999 and the
      three-month period ended March 31, 1999,  respectively,  in respect of the
      note payable from Homebase to the Company.

[b]   Homebase's  first preferred  series A shares were purchased by the Company
      on May 13, 1999.  Accordingly,  Homebase's  first preferred Series A share
      interest accretion of $7,518,  $14,528 and $7,875 in respect of the 43-day
      period ended May 13, 1999, the three-month period ended March 31, 1999 and
      the 101-day  period  ended  December  31,  1998,  respectively,  have been
      eliminated.  In  addition,  Homebase's  first  preferred  Series  A  share
      dividend  expenses  of  $8,813,  $18,610  and nil in respect of the 43-day
      period ended May 13, 1999, the three-month period ended March 31, 1999 and
      the 101-day  period  ended  December  31,  1998,  respectively,  have been
      eliminated.

[c]   The amortization of the $17,015,000 of completed  technology,  $853,000 of
      trademarks,  $253,000 of  workforce-in-place  and  $5,846,293 of goodwill
      created  by  the   purchase  of   Homebase   by  the   Company   over  the
      pre-acquisition  43-day period ended May 13, 1999, the three-month  period
      ended  March  31,  1999  and  the  year  ended  December  31,  1998  on  a
      straight-line  basis  utilizing  amortization  periods  of five  years  in
      respect of the  completed  technology,  trademarks  and goodwill and three
      years in respect of the workforce-in-place.  In addition, the amortization
      of the $6,886,000  deferred income tax liability  [created by the purchase
      of Homebase by the  Company in respect of the  difference  between the tax
      and  accounting  basis  of  the  completed   technology,   trademarks  and
      workforce-in-place] over the periods of the underlying assets.


                                      F-53
<PAGE>

                                   SIGNATURES


     In accordance  with Section 12 of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, the
registrant has duly caused this Amendment No. 2 to this  Registration  Statement
to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

December  6, 1999


                                        INFOCAST CORPORATION

                                        By:  /s/ A. Thomas Griffis
                                             ---------------------
                                             A. Thomas Griffis
                                             Co-Chairman of the Board

                                        By:  /s/  Darcy Galvon
                                             -----------------
                                             Darcy Galvon
                                             Co-Chairman of the Board



                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS



We consent to the  inclusion  in this  Registration  Statement  on Form 10 dated
December  7,  1999 of our  report,  dated  April 21, 1999  (except for Note 9[b]
which is as of May 13,  1999 and Note 9[d]  which is as of  October  27,  1999),
relating to the consolidated  financial statements of InfoCast Corporation as of
March 31, 1999,  December 31, 1998 and December 31, 1997 and for the three-month
period ended March 31,  1999,  the year ended  December  31,  1998,  the 156-day
period  ended  December  31, 1997 and the period from July 29, 1997 to March 31,
1999.

/s/ Ernst & Young LLP
Ernst & Young LLP
Toronto, Canada
December 7, 1999


<PAGE>


                       CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS



We consent to the  inclusion  in this  Registration  Statement  on Form 10 dated
December 7, 1999 of  our report,  dated June 11, 1999, relating to the financial
statements of Homebase Work Solutions Ltd. as at March 31, 1999 and December 31,
1998 and for the three-month  period ended March 31, 1999 and the 101-day period
ended December 31, 1998.


/s/ Ernst & Young LLP
Ernst & Young LLP
Toronto, Canada
December 7, 1999


<TABLE> <S> <C>

<ARTICLE>     5
<LEGEND>
THIS SCHEDULE  CONTAINS SUMMARY  FINANCIAL  INFORMATION  EXTRACTED FROM INFOCAST
CORPORATION'S  CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AS OF SEPTEMBER 30, 1999 AND IS
QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY REFERENCE TO SUCH CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
</LEGEND>
<MULTIPLIER>                              1,000

<S>                                       <C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                              3-MOS
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>                                                MAR-31-2000
<PERIOD-START>                                                   APR-01-1999
<PERIOD-END>                                                     SEP-30-1999
<CASH>                                                             5,300,965
<SECURITIES>                                                               0
<RECEIVABLES>                                                        142,093
<ALLOWANCES>                                                               0
<INVENTORY>                                                                0
<CURRENT-ASSETS>                                                     325,042
<PP&E>                                                             2,222,507
<DEPRECIATION>                                                       (40,909)
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                                                    33,201,093
<CURRENT-LIABILITIES>                                              1,481,802
<BONDS>                                                                    0
<COMMON>                                                              22,212
                                                      0
                                                                0
<OTHER-SE>                                                        24,463,167
<TOTAL-LIABILITY-AND-EQUITY>                                      33,201,093
<SALES>                                                                    0
<TOTAL-REVENUES>                                                      58,464
<CGS>                                                                      0
<TOTAL-COSTS>                                                              0
<OTHER-EXPENSES>                                                  17,206,409
<LOSS-PROVISION>                                                           0
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>                                                         0
<INCOME-PRETAX>                                                  (17,147,945)
<INCOME-TAX>                                                        (534,105)
<INCOME-CONTINUING>                                              (16,613,840)
<DISCONTINUED>                                                             0
<EXTRAORDINARY>                                                            0
<CHANGES>                                                                  0
<NET-INCOME>                                                     (16,613,840)
<EPS-BASIC>                                                          (0.78)
<EPS-DILUTED>                                                          (0.78)


</TABLE>


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