Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Is there a problem with lightweight and bulletproof?
To answer your question...probably nothing. Just wondering why you’re so wound up over comments pertaining to somebody you’ve never met and probably never will....I mean what’s the endgame to the defense, do you win a cookie?
Do a little DD on the river and type of gold found there....using a few crappy portable river dredges should give you a clue on why even if this wasn't a scam play, they are not profitable....
A hilarious moment I recall were people expecting the company to get rich off the REEs found in the black sands......lmao
"in addition Sunergy, Inc. would incur substantial additional debt related to the auditing cost whichwould be incurred for bringing all past quarters and annual filings up-to-date."
A convenient excuse not to produce audited filings.......
Wonder if gains from this 2017 and 2018 production will be good for company in any way if loans getting paid back first what will there be for other production costs going forward for 2019 ?? Notta, zip, zero ?
I would consider most if not all of that filing as fiction
I don't know mojo......I for one have never seen fake websites claiming fake partnerships with real or fake companies
For that matter, I have never seen pinky companies with shell partners in another country
lol
Damn you! Now we will never have mass production in Vietnam
lol
Thanks...wasn't going to attempt a picture on mobile
Another product marketed for vegan, non GMO, gluten free, peanut allergy consumers......
GET IT WHILE YOU CAN!!!
(offer exempt to ihub members)
Animal leather is so 1st century
Introducing The Bolt Projects x Chester Wallace Mylo™ Driver Bag
Exclusive sneak peek: Tomorrow morning at 9:00 AM PDT we'll be launching a Kickstarter campaign just for people like you – followers of innovative products.
There, you can pre-order The Mylo special edition of the iconic Chester Wallace Driver Bag. This is the world’s first commercially available product featuring supple, animal-free Mylo – our sustainable material made from mycelium, the underground root structure of mushrooms.
Pre-order tomorrow
The multi-pocketed functional unisex tote represents the future of accessories, combining innovative and cultivated materials with high-quality design. Like leather, Mylo is supple and warm to the touch; Mylo, however, is animal-free.
Starting at $400 and available in very limited quantities, these totes won't last long. Be among the first to back the bag and score a personalized embossment with your initials and bag number.
I like it
I think this has been asked.....So,if the military wants oodles of DS for whatever purpose, can it be made overseas?
Got a VINE notification today......https://www.oregonlive.com/business/index.ssf/2015/06/alexander_hawatmeh_sentenced_to_5_years_in_prison_for_penny_stock_scams.html
OT, just something fyi
Thank you!
It can't be tomorrow gimme.......because I need to move some currency around for a buy!
Think it's about time for a large purchase myself.....
I am somewhat surprised "Dan" hasn't been triggered from monitoring the board and released stylish Bolt shoestrings
haha...wouldn't that be something?
As much as their potential involvement has been demonized here....lol
Madagascar
jk.....I would guess India
“In my opinion, this information is neither illogical nor irrelevant.”
It’s interesting to see the other companies progress with their products and their applications.....
As if whatever is posted here about their progress would have some kind of detrimental impact on KBLB, the hope that somehow indirectly it would put a fire under Kim’s ass seems like a positive to me
Chart readers....how is this looking? Plenty of things being revealed here that would amount to upbeat speculation imo
lol you’ve been more than helpful
Thank you....the reason for rejection would be interesting...I have my opinions
And again, it will be “interesting” to see what happens with the second
Thank you...that’s what I was looking for
By that I mean the title or subject seems rather broad
Would or will they be more successful with individual products like DS, Big Red, MS etc
Do you know if they filed more than this patent TRUTH?
That's the 50 million dollar question
I'm wondering if the fillings will show this soon or if they are funneling money thru the subsidary
I could go either way......newsletter or PR
Nice...wish we knew who these other peeps are
Not so sure about the protective aspect but I know silky underwear would feel WONDERFUL
Do you have anything to offer here other than the occasional insults?
I think you’re golden even if your numbers were off
Thought we were done with counting silkworms and impromptu calculations...guess not lol
How much is a “roll”?
That’s exactly what an insider would say
Agreed
Past history warrants the angst somewhat...we just aren't going to get news as fast as we want it.
Nonetheless, appears things are moving in the right direction
Since 2010 or earlier they've been getting them while they're cheap
Interesting, thank you.....this may be an industry that hits close to home, if you know what I mean
Hagfish is the real name for what are commonly called slime eels, and it could become a viable fishery with ready markets standing by.
Little is known about hagfish in Alaska, although they are commonly caught elsewhere in the U.S. and abroad. In Oregon, for example, a fleet of 15 to 20 boats catches up to 2 million pounds each year in customized 5 gallon buckets or large barrels and pay fishermen up to $1.25 a pound.
Now, two Alaska biologists are testing the waters for a fishery with longliners in Southeast who were given a special permit to catch 60,000 pounds of hagfish for their studies.
"It's commonly seen as a pest," said Andrew Olson, a biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game in Douglas. "In longline fisheries for sablefish, they often leave slime blobs on the hooks and strip bait, and they get into shrimp pots as well."
Olson is in the second year of a hagfish study with fellow researcher Aaron Baldwin. Their goal is to "keep the science ahead of any fishery to make sure it is sustainable" by learning more about the species.
"We are looking at basic biology such as length, weight and egg counts in females. We can't yet age the fish and they don't thrive well in captivity. We are really starting from scratch," said Olson.
Reproduction and spawning have never been witnessed or documented, and biologists don't know where or when hagfish do so.
"We've seen eggs, and juveniles, but nothing in between," said Baldwin. "No one has ever seen a baby hagfish."
A single foot-and-a-half inch, 9-ounce hagfish can fill a bucket with slime in seconds from 100 glands alongside its body.
"It's extruded and looks like a white latex liquid that comes out when it's dry and it expands when it hits seawater. The slime molecules will entrap water molecules and it is an amazing substance," he said.
The slime has several functions — it suffocates predators, helps hunt prey by forcing them out of burrows and it lubricates entry into fish through the anus.
"It has digestive enzymes so when you open up a sablefish, for example, it is literally bones, hagfish slime and a few hagfish inside the fish. They start with the internal organs and eat every bit of flesh that's in there," Baldwin explained.
Most slime, as with slugs, is just mucus, he said and doesn't have the capability of absorbing water molecules and expanding.
"Hagfish produce a very unique substance. It is definitely one of a kind," Baldwin added.
Studies by the U.S. Navy and other researchers has shown that the chemical makeup of hagfish slime is stronger than spider silk.
"Because of its qualities there are lots of efforts to make synthetic duplicates or bioengineer bacteria to produce the slime for industrial purposes," Baldwin said. "The U.S. Navy is using synthetic hagfish slime to produce a substance that is lighter and stronger than Kevlar. The slime also shows potential as an anti-foulant for ship hulls. And medical research has shown that hagfish slime heals burns quickly and may be used as microfibers for cell repair."
A well-established market for hagfish is Korea where the meat is a barbecue and stir fry favorite and the skin is sold as "eel skin leather" products.
"It's been a fun project to work on," Baldwin said. "We get to work with fishermen on developing a fishery and it's a species we haven't paid much attention to so everything we are learning is really new to us."
If Alaska fishermen encounter hagfish in waters outside of Southeast, Olson and Baldwin would like to know about it.
Learn more about hagfish at Alaska Fish and Wildlife News, where you also can see videos of commercial hagfish fishing aboard the Viking Sunrise and a biologist handling hagfish slime.