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Excellent analysis... However what actually will validate all at the end is a juicy contract or partnership let's say of a fifth of what cytori got..l say 100mm will validate and send this north the way we all want.
Foxnews.com
Tyson Foods recall: 34,000 pounds of chicken may have been contaminated
Published January 12, 2014
Associated Press
LITTLE ROCK, ARK. – Tyson Foods is recalling nearly 34,000 pounds of mechanically separated chicken products that may be contaminated with a strain of salmonella.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture said Friday in a news release the product was not sold in retail stores. It was produced on Oct. 11 and shipped nationwide for institutional use.
The chicken has been linked to illnesses in a Tennessee correctional facility, where seven people got sick and two were hospitalized.
Food containing Salmonella can cause salmonellosis, one of the most common bacterial foodborne illnesses. The most common symptoms are diarrhea, abdominal cramps and fever within 12 to 72 hours after eating the contaminated product.
The illness usually lasts 4 to 7 days. Most people recover without treatment.
The only thing we need to be grateful for on this investment is that it withheld 0.06 even with tax selling season...this is a tedious waiting...is what i call "suffering with patience"....for me the best case scenario is to be acquired at .40 to .50 within 18-24 months. And let me be clear..those above targets are bcoz of the management we have coz our tech is worth much more but is worthless with a mediocre team. The worse case is for management to sell this of at .10-.15 if there is no advance in 2014...
Whatisvalue
I believe we are years away from all this....EPA as u say q1-q2 2014...agreed there. All the rest I believe end 2015 to half 16...
I meant truly
We truck hope so...tks.
Lee
When should we expect the approval of the Korean patent.
So what's your point?.. That this is going to where?what price?
Popular science article
http://www.popularmechanics.com/_mobile/science/health/breakthroughs/what-comes-after-antibiotic-5-alternatives-to-stop-superbugs?%3Fsrc=rss#slide-1
CARSTECHHOW-TOMORE
Science / What Comes After Antibiotics? 5 Alternatives To Stop Superbugs
What Comes After Antibiotics? 5 Alternatives to Stop Superbugs
"Superbug" bacterial infections that are resistant to common antibiotics are increasing at an alarming rate. But traditional antibiotics aren't the only way to battle dangerous germs. Biomedical scientists are investigating new additions to their arsenal.
BY ADAM HADHAZY
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TEK IMAGE/Getty Images
In the realm of human health, few developments are scarier than the growing uselessness of antibiotics. These miracle drugs have kept killer diseases in check for decades, saving millions of lives. Fortunately, antibiotics still work—most of the time. And though we are winning battles against germs, scientists fear that we are starting to lose the war.
According to a 2013 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than two million people in the United States now come down with antibiotic-resistant superbug infections every year. At least 23,000 victims die annually. And harmful bacteria and fungi are evolving resistance to deployed antibiotics at a quicker pace than we can come up with new drugs. From 1980 to 2000, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved more than 50 new antibiotics. Since then, the number approved is less than 10—and, since 2010, zero.
"We have to do something, because the old antibiotic approach is failing," says Ry Young, director of the Center for Phage Technology at Texas A&M University. "The problem is becoming worse, and becoming worse faster."
In the arms race with pathogens, here are some of our most promising new weapons.
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Nothing would happen. Will be the same as today... This stock will move only with revenues.. Nothing else will move it.. We only need 1 contract of several machines to demonstrate market acceptance so Wall Street can start buying the story. Plain and simple.
Cheers
Lee
How could u possibly know this? I hope is true bro.
Volume precedes price on the direction of the trend... To change that u most have a breakout to the opposite direction with at least 2x volume. For me to see the upside yesterday with 31mm volume and today lost yesterday gain with 95% of yesterday volume is not encouraging at all. On the contrary.. Is a trend continuation... This will not change until we see what I said above or a runaway gap with huge 50mm+ volume... Just my input
cheers
Chris is no longer in Alliance FWI
This co is doomed for the time being... Tnx for posting srch
Bearish wedge
Wedge broke down.. Lower prices ahead... Long term prospect of the science is good.. But short term u will be able to accumulate at lower levels. FWIW.
Happy holidays.
Go
I believe that It will go and test again 0.002 as its still building a rising wedge, which is a bearish pattern, not as others say here that is an ascending triangle...
Wired article
When We Lose Antibiotics, Here’s Everything Else We’ll Lose Too
BY MARYN MCKENNA
This week, health authorities in New Zealand announced that the tightly quarantined island nation — the only place I’ve ever been where you get x-rayed on the way into the country as well as leaving it — has experienced its first case, and first death, from a strain of totally drug-resistant bacteria. From the New Zealand Herald:
In January, while he was teaching English in Vietnam, (Brian) Pool suffered a brain hemorrhage and was operated on in a Vietnamese hospital.
He was flown to Wellington Hospital where tests found he was carrying the strain of bacterium known as KPC-Oxa 48 – an organism that rejects every kind of antibiotic.
Wellington Hospital clinical microbiologist Mark Jones (said): “Nothing would touch it. Absolutely nothing. It’s the first one that we’ve ever seen that is resistant to every single antibiotic known.”
Pool’s death is an appalling tragedy. But it is also a lesson, twice over: It illustrates that antibiotic resistance can spread anywhere, no matter the defenses we put up — and it demonstrates that we are on the verge of entering a new era in history. Jones, the doctor who treated Pool, says in the story linked above: “This man was in the post-antibiotic era.”
Also on WIRED: When We Lose Antibiotics, Here’s Everything Else We’ll Lose Too
“Post-antibiotic era” is a phrase that gets tossed around a lot these days, most of the time without people stopping to consider what it might really mean. A year ago, I started wondering what life would be like, if we really didn’t have antibiotics any more. I was commissioned and edited by got research support from (editing to make clear that they didn’t give me a grant; they don’t do that) the fantastic Food and Environment Reporting Network, and today Medium publishes our 4,000-word report, “Imagining a Post-Antibiotics Future” — a view from the far side of the antibiotic miracle.
If we really lost antibiotics to advancing drug resistance — and trust me, we’re not far off — here’s what we would lose. Not just the ability to treat infectious disease; that’s obvious.
But also: The ability to treat cancer, and to transplant organs, because doing those successfully relies on suppressing the immune system and willingly making ourselves vulnerable to infection. Any treatment that relies on a permanent port into the bloodstream — for instance, kidney dialysis. Any major open-cavity surgery, on the heart, the lungs, the abdomen. Any surgery on a part of the body that already harbors a population of bacteria: the guts, the bladder, the genitals. Implantable devices: new hips, new knees, new heart valves. Cosmetic plastic surgery. Liposuction. Tattoos.
We’d lose the ability to treat people after traumatic accidents, as major as crashing your car and as minor as your kid falling out of a tree. We’d lose the safety of modern childbirth: Before the antibiotic era, 5 women died out of every 1,000 who gave birth. One out of every nine skin infections killed. Three out of every 10 people who got pneumonia died from it.
And we’d lose, as well, a good portion of our cheap modern food supply. Most of the meat we eat in the industrialized world is raised with the routine use of antibiotics, to fatten livestock and protect them from the conditions in which the animals are raised. Without the drugs that keep livestock healthy in concentrated agriculture, we’d lose the ability to raise them that way. Either animals would sicken, or farmers would have to change their raising practices, spending more money when their margins are thin. Either way, meat — and fish and seafood, also raised with abundant antibiotics in the fish farms of Asia — would become much more expensive.
And it wouldn’t be just meat. Antibiotics are used in plant agriculture as well, especially on fruit. Right now, a drug-resistant version of the bacterial disease fire blight is attacking American apple crops. There’s currently one drug left to fight it. And when major crops are lost, the local farm economy goes too.
If you’ve been reading here a while, you’ll know that I write about antibiotic resistance, in human medicine and in agriculture, all the time (and wrote a book about it). But something personal propelled me into this story. By random chance, I received a copy of the obit of my great-uncle, my grandfather’s younger brother Joe.
I’d heard about Joe as I was growing up, because everyone said my father resembled him. All I knew was that he was good-looking, and died young, and there was something about his death that was tragic. He was a New York City fireman, and I always assumed he’d died in a fire. I was wrong. He died of an infection, 5 years before penicillin came on the scene.
Joe’s death was protracted, and terrible, and it changed my family forever. Seventy-five years later, we would like to think that deaths like his are impossible. But they aren’t; as the story from New Zealand shows, they are happening again. We have a few chances left to turn back the tide of resistance — but only a few, and not much room for mistakes. I hope we take them.
It's not retail. It's that the float did increased to 1.4b (read the fillings) and all those shares are hitting the market. Big problem here is that the same volume that is taking this thing to go down like this will need to be doubled to get it up again to where it was.
No preach. Just making it clear.
Caz
I asked u a question? Can u respond?
Caz
What target u have in this stock? What price u see this going to?
Thank you
Tg
Where and when did u heard this?
Any link?
Tx
Lee13
Hope all well.
U say a lot of nice things, I would appreciate if u can post a target and a time frame....
Thank you.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/scientists-seek-to-map-bedbug-genome-2013-09-30?mod=latestnews&link=sfmw
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Sept. 30, 2013, 3:31 p.m. EDT
Scientists seek to map bedbug genome
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By Derek Kravitz
New research on common household pests is gravitating toward another household nuisance: bedbugs.
INSECTS
? Look for bedbugs, and don?t take them home
? Bedbugs are biting in more American homes
? Bedbugs invade hospitals
? Bedbug enounters on China trains
? U.S. cities with the most bedbugs
? Cockoaches and New York: Perfect fit? (WSJ.com)
Mark Siddall, curator of invertebrates at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, is working with a team of a dozen researchers, including Fordham University?s Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis, on a yearlong study to map the genomes of cockroaches and bedbugs. They hope to figure out the insects? evolutionary history.
HealthyAndroscoggin.org
?Bed bugs and cockroaches look pretty much the same as they did millions of year ago,? Siddall said. ?But they?ve grown up with us, almost like companion animals.?
? Need to Know: Gut checks before the open
Bedbugs invaded North American cities several decades ago and have wreaked havoc ever since. They hide under mattresses, biting the unsuspecting and requiring expensive extermination.
The concern, the researchers say, is that bedbugs will become as ubiquitous and common as the cockroach.
?We?re definitely headed in that direction,? said Coby Schal, a professor of entomology at North Carolina State University. ?Bedbugs are what cockroaches were several decades ago, and it is a concern.?
As part of his research, Kolokonikos is looking at a group of bedbugs found at Fort Dix in New Jersey in the early 1970s. They have been kept for four decades for research purposes. He hopes to find out where they originally came from in Europe by comparing them to ancient bedbugs. He has asked the Metropolitan Museum of Art about combing through its Egyptian collection for fossilized bedbugs.
An expanded version of this report appears at WSJ.com.
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Singapore medical tourism
http://mobile.bloomberg.com/slideshow/2013-06-25/top-travel-destinations-for-medical-tourism.html
4. Singapore
Singapore has one of the most sophisticated health care systems in the world, especially for cancer treatment. As many as 610,000 medical tourists visited the country in 2012, mostly from Indonesia, according to Patients Beyond Borders. That makes the country the fourth-most visited place for medical tourists. Singapore has 22 facilities certified by Joint Commission International, the U.S.-based quality and safety accrediting organization. That's 14 more than all of neighboring Malaysia
Agreed go...
Well said!!
Link?
What's the need to say that...? Just simple question. Enjoy the moment. Stop guessing.
Important to notice UP volume days vs. Negative vol days.
After the run It consolidated nicely down to the 200 ma and today it bounced today on very good volume AS WE HAD NO NEWS. DONT FORGET THAT.
wst
Tnx Benk.
MZEI is about to break ascending triangle on the 5,15,30,and hourly charts... tgt .18-.19.
The weekly chart has a bull flag. If actions continues like this expect higher prices on the .20-.22 and .20 being a hurdle. Needs Vol to propel that barrier.
I cant post charts.. I could do so if someone explains how to.
br
wst.
xenex machine cost over 80k. ours cost less and 2ble the kill rate efficacy. Problem is that xenex is today a well organized entity. Our story is different.
Hopefully this will change.
shoe,
and what is your math? how you come to the 10 number?
No institution is allowed to touch any stock below 5 dollar mark. Just FYI.
Benk and all,
How ya'll doing??
MM's don't care about future events, unless they DO ACTUALLY KNOW NEWS B4 HAND they will place themselfs on the side they need to be with regard to that specific news couple of days b4 the news comes out.
In my opinion, they dont play like that in this case. They live from rotating/turning over their share inventory. They add at the bid and sell at the spread above. If you see L2 many times you see the same MM sitting on both sides (bid & ask).
Other play they do, that if they have huge inventory they put a HUGE SELL ORDER on the ask to creat panic and thus in many cases if not all they DO drive the down while shorting on the bid nad then buy lower.
They know their thing inside out, and they screw with whomever they want whenever they want.
Until there are some considerable and tangible news and plans, and I mean TANGIBLE, THEY WILL NOT DRIVE THIS STOCK ANY HIGHER.
This is my opinion.
any comments?
wstinsider
lol.. depends how u define strong hands.... people are frustrated and not selling here at this point is another story....
In my case I dont mind to wait 2 or 3 more years after waiting 10+ for this to come to fruition...
the order of factors does not alter the product....at the end if this is a good product as they and we believe it is this alone should propel the price to where the market believe it should be.
Being a dreamer or a moaner at this point will not help on neither side of the coin.
just a little input of what i believe.
regards.
sky
pls send me the email to techtrader@me.com
tnx
benk can you email me... techtrader@me.com
tnx
Benk
I understand and I appreciate your reply. Sorry I was so bold to ask that.
Another question for u....if not a problem....
If you were Ed, what will you do differently today. And with that being said, what u think would be, a chronological time of events going forward.
Where you see the Co. after 1st order is made and where would you expect the share price to be lets say in a year from now? what value this has? how much are worth all this patents? now all we have is commitments..... to the 10mm australian guy who funded us and to all shareholders.
what will it take to see 10-15 per share here?
I am asking you this as i see how you think and believe... so i wonder if u can answer this questions for us....
If u feel more confortable writing it to my email pls do so to techtrader@me.com
Tnx and nice to meet you my friend.
take care.
Benk
out of curiosity, how many shares are you holding now? 200 300 400k? more?
sorry the question but you seem very related and involved in this Co.
TIA
WsT