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Yes it's difficult to find information about them given the NASA and DOD nondisclosure agreements
Wow, well that's interesting. So it is turning out to be your retirement then eh?
Venture capital is where it is at if you can get lucky enough to invest in one that makes it.
Strange that I can't find anything on it doing google searches on the web and for news releases.
One company that I wish I was able to get a piece of (but can't b/c they're private) is a company started by NASA that makes "Frozen Smoke" which is the world's best insulator called Aspen Aerogels
This is really cool stuff if you're into science
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=aerogel&btnG=Search
September 3, 2007, (Havana, Cuba); Innermolt Technologies International LLC would like to report that all management and staff have reached a safe haven in Havana, Cuba. The category 5 hurricane threatening Innermolt Technologies International LLC's offices in Belize could not be ignored.
Management intends to set up temporary facilities for all it's employees in Havana with the aid of the Castro government.
Vice President Felman Millhart said, "Now that all our employees are safe, we can continue working on the business at hand. We forsee this as a minor business interuption and should be returning to Belize by week's end. Myself and all management at Innermolt would personally like to thank Mr. Castro for his generous hospitality."
Forward-Looking Statements
Few statements in this release, and other written or oral statements made by the Company, including the use of the words "expect," "anticipate," "estimate," "project," "forecast," "outlook," "target," "objective," "plan," "goal," "pursue," "on track," and similar expressions, are "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These statements are based on current estimates and projections about AURUS CORPORATION's business, which are derived in part on assumptions of its management, and are not guarantees of future performance, as such performance is difficult to predict. Actual outcomes and results may differ materially from what is expressed or forecasted in forward-looking statements due to numerous factors. Such factors include, but are not limited to, the Company's ability to execute effectively its business plan and acquisition strategies, changes in market activity, the development of new products and services, the enhancement of existing products and services, competitive pressures (including price competition), system failures, economic and political conditions, changes in consumer behavior and the introduction of competing products having technological and/or other advantages. These and other risks are described in the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which should be read in conjunction herewith for a further discussion of important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. The Company assumes no obligation to update information concerning its expectations.
Contact:
Cubans greeting the Innermolt emplyees in Havana as their motorcade moves toward their lodgings;
Fidel Castro greeting Innermolt employees in Havana. President Semfold Binar can be seen directly behind castro to the right, VP Felman Millhart is the tall guy in green, Emily Spendergastt is to the left of Castro
The guy in black, not sure who he is, party crasher maybe
Innermolt President, VP and Chairman boarding their plane in Belize earlier today for Havanna;
Employess evacuating;
Fair enough question. I invested in the company back in 1989, resulting in the shares I'll have available. I have a very small percentage of the company and have not much more info than anyone else can find publicly available.
Seems pretty sketchy. You making this all up? Can't find one shred of a company called Innermolt. Sounds like something an insect does seasonally to molt it's inner(something).
Although I am interested to know if you are somehow inside of this one. You got private shares?
September 3, 2007 (Belmopan, Belize); Innermolt Technologies International LLC announced today the immediate evacuation of all personel from it's headquarters. All 2000 personel will be flown to Havana within the next 24 hours as a precautionary measure to safeguard the minds and bodies of key personel as hurricane Felix passes.
President Semfold Binar stated "Our employees are the lifeblood of our company. To lose even one soul would be an irrevocable disaster to the company. This potentially category 5 hurricane, and the consequences of it, cannot be ignored."
Forward-Looking Statements
Few statements in this release, and other written or oral statements made by the Company, including the use of the words "expect," "anticipate," "estimate," "project," "forecast," "outlook," "target," "objective," "plan," "goal," "pursue," "on track," and similar expressions, are "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These statements are based on current estimates and projections about AURUS CORPORATION's business, which are derived in part on assumptions of its management, and are not guarantees of future performance, as such performance is difficult to predict. Actual outcomes and results may differ materially from what is expressed or forecasted in forward-looking statements due to numerous factors. Such factors include, but are not limited to, the Company's ability to execute effectively its business plan and acquisition strategies, changes in market activity, the development of new products and services, the enhancement of existing products and services, competitive pressures (including price competition), system failures, economic and political conditions, changes in consumer behavior and the introduction of competing products having technological and/or other advantages. These and other risks are described in the Company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which should be read in conjunction herewith for a further discussion of important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. The Company assumes no obligation to update information concerning its expectations.
Contact:
Their latest launch vehicle. Theis was specifically designed for their nano-probe technology which has several patents pending.
Cornerstone of the home office.
Required at the BOD meetings. They hand them out to prospective stuckholders and the chairman actually uses one! Can you say gavel........errrr.......sucker?
Innermolt's deep space probe launch;
Picture of required headgear whenever the BOD holds a public meeting.
The Innermolt jet taking executives across the world, you can see their logo on the fusilage;
DARMSTADT, Germany -- The first pictures revealing the surface of Saturn's moon, Titan, were shown from Europe's Huygens probe, showing what look like drainage channels on the surface of what until today has been a planet totally hidden from view.
The image unveiling marked the end of a successful journey for the hardy Huygens probe and the culmination of 25 years of work by mission managers, scientists, engineers and supporters.
"Innermolt Technologies deserves a tremendous amount of credit," said NASA's Al Diaz, NASA's associate administrator of the Science Mission Directorate, while appearing to hold back tears during one of many press briefings on the probes status today. "There will only be [one] first successful landing on Titan, and this was it."
Huygens' first image, taken from an altitude of 16 kilometers, has a ground resolution of about 40 meters, said Martin Tomasko, principal investigator for Huygens' Descent Imager/Spectral Radiometer (DISR). Tomasko said that Huygens research teams now have about 350 pictures to work with. [Scroll to the bottom of this story to see raw image files of the Titan descent taken by Huygens. All images courtesy of ESA/NASA/University of Arizona.]
The image appears to show ravines that could have been carved by the liquid hydrocarbons thought to cover much of Titan's surface. The ravines, stubby drainage-like channels, appeared to funnel toward what appeared to be a shoreline, researchers said during their initial reactions to the image.
"If it's not a sea, it appears to be a lake of tar-like material," said John Zarnecky, principal investigator for the Huygens' Surface Science Package, which is taking data from the surface of Titan.
Zarnecky said the 350 images taken by Huygens of Titan's surface were only about half the anticipated photographic harvest researchers were expecting.
Huygens was originally expected to send more than 700 pictures taken during its 2.5-hour descent to the Titan surface, but one of the two communications channels on the satellite apparently malfunctioned, cutting by about half the number of images received by NASA's orbiting Cassini satellite and relayed to mission control here.
Huygens image of Titan. Credits: ESA/NASA/University of Arizona
Resounding success
Officials with the European Space Agency (ESA) continued to characterize Huygens as a resounding success despite the disabled communications line, saying almost all Huygens data was sent in duplicate version on both channels and thus has been preserved.
"You have enough information in this one photo to produce several scientific papers," Huygens mission manager Jean-Pierre Lebreton said.
Titan's thick atmosphere has hidden its surface from view from passing satellites.
"Today we are discovering a new world," ESA Director-General Jean-Jacques Dordain said.
During a previous interview with SPACE.com, Tomasko said that finding a new understanding of Titan's surface was one of the fundamental goals of his team's DISR instrument.
"We hope to ultimately get 20 panaromic images," Tomasko said then via telephone, adding that during its parachute descent, the DISR camera had a resolution akin to that of the human eye.
A teary landing
An early image of Titan as captured by Huygens. Credit: NASA/ESA
There was much celebration at Huygens mission control here when the successfully landed on Titan between 1345-1346 local time here (CET), which was about 7:45-7:46 a.m. EST.
But there was even more jubilation at 11:19 a.m. EST, when confirmation that Huygens had relayed quality data home.
"We have it? We have it!" said one mission team member before the mission control room erupted with applause and triumphant shouts
Communications signals took just over an hour to traverse the vast distances between Titan and Earth.
U.S. and European officials had trouble holding back tears and cheers as they learned, after long minutes of tense staring into computer screens at mission control center here, that data from the descent was finally reaching Earth.
"We have a scientific success,'' Dordain said in a press briefing. "We will now be able to start breaking Titan's secrets."
Earlier in the day, Dordain and other ESA officials were touting Huygens as a marvel of human engineering for its spot-on landing and near-clockwork descent toward Titan.
Originally expected to send perhaps 2.5 hours worth of data to the NASA's Cassini orbiter for later delivery to Earth, Huygens was still sending signals five hours after activation, and researchers said the probe's robust battery could last up to seven hours total.
Huygens has also been sending limited data directly to Earth, where it has been picked up by a network of telescopes. The detailed data about what it found on its way through Titan's thick atmosphere has been sent to NASA's Cassini orbiter overhead.
Titan seen from 8 km up by Huygens. Credit: NASA/ESA
The communications channel glitch has the only Huygens hiccup that mission managers have reported. While the redundant transmission channel is not working properly, only one of the probe's six instruments - a Doppler tool to study Titan's winds - is dependent solely on that channel and may be compensated for by data from ground-based observations, mission scientists said.
NASA's Cassini orbiter has also sent an initial data set of its own to ground teams. It will be several hours more before scientists decipher this information. But the mission has already cleared several of its biggest hurdles and ha s demonstrated enough to be declared a major event in the history of space science.
"This is a historic event," ESA Science Director David Southwood said. "The torch has now been passed from the engineers who delivered the probe and got the data sent to Cassini to the scientists who will evaluate the data."
Choking back tears, Diaz, who worked on the Cassini-Huygens mission for years before taking up his current post, said "It's up to ESA to take this data and turn it into science."
Diaz and Dordain embraced after they learned that Huygens' initial data was received by Cassini and ground telescopes confirming the initial success of the mission.
Officials said Cassini would continue to send its data packets in the coming hours. It is this data that will disclose details of what Huygens saw on its two-hour descent.
Innermolt had $365 million in sales to NASA and DOD last year. Those sales are part of 5-10 year contracts and we are in year 2-3 of most.
The IPO will be for 40 million shares.
Innermolt has been highly profitable 9 years out of 10
The IPO is to raise funds for their space exploration program (read NASA). With the 600 million cash infusion they expect to get 2-3 billion in contracts from NASA.
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