I'm gone. Like a steam locomotive rolling down the track, I'm gone, gone, and nothing's going to bring me back. I'm gone. 06/29/2023
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I did not say that. I do not know what Lebby plans for show and tell at the conference.
I DO think the company will fail to be commercially viable in a high volume wafer fabrication environment. That is what I said and that is what I meant.
I say again.
If it doesn’t work, it is not impressive.
If it doesn’t scale as a commercially viable process is a high volume wafer fab, it is not impressive.
This is a discussion on an investment board. I’ll leave the lab experiments to scientific journals.
Daily calls? Likely new defects and problems on a daily basis.
There are myriad causes for defects. Throwing an organic polymer into the mix is problematic, to put it mildly.
I doubt any of those “scientists from one of the leading universities in the world” have ever run a high volume semiconductor foundry. They hang out in the lab. Like Lebby.
Pat has a huge job turning around the damage inflicted by Krzanich. So far, I think he is doing a good job but it will take time.
Not only did Krzanich pull Intel out of a focus on mobile devices and allow them to fall behind technically but he obliterated the culture that Noyce, Moore and Grove spent their careers building. He preferred to stage drone shows. I worked with Krzanich (we were hired by Intel the same year). I never thought he was the brightest bulb in the candelabra. Though I didn’t work closely with Gelsinger (he was in Oregon, I was in Arizona) I witnessed the results of his work. He served as Andy Grove’s Technical Assistant and later as Chief Technical Officer. He learned from the best and has “the right stuff”.
Krzanich was an engineer. A horrible CEO but he was an engineer who started his career in manufacturing as a process engineer in Rio Rancho, NM in 1982.
Do not be misled by the company’s uplisting to NASDAQ’s lowest tier.
It is an OTC stock with NASDAQ lipstick, soon to be back on the OTC where it belongs.
That is because CPI and core CPI came in hotter than estimates. Right at 8:30 AM EDT.
There is a new dispensary being opened by them in Sierra Vista, Arizona soon. Don’t know if it will be branded Trulieve or Harvest. The only dispensary in that town closed years ago (moved the license to the Phoenix area).
The area should really embrace the dispensary if the product is good. Tucson (the closest decent dispensaries) is a 1 1/2 hour drive away.
https://www.myheraldreview.com/news/bisbee/cannabis-dispensary-coming-to-sierra-vista-officials-say/article_8f581faa-8846-11ec-8f62-3bd3c772d126.html
I do not think LWLG needs to provide me with anything.
But I would certainly think anyone wanting to risk hard earned money in the company would want to have these questions answered before investing.
POOF®!
There is already a board here for IMNP:
https://investorshub.advfn.com/Immune-Pharmaceuticals-Inc.-fka-IMNPQ-7838
IHub only allows one board per ticker.
What does the polymer do to wafer yield at sort? To final yield at assembly? What are defect rates (not hand waving, actual data)?
Where is the reliability data?
How does it perform at ever decreasing geometries? How does it perform using EUV lithography? That will be an absolute necessity at 3 nm. Has it been evaluated on an Extreme Ultraviolet stepper on a production line in a fab?
Running product in a fab isn't a science project. It must provide profitable and repeatable yield. I have not seen the company address any of this in quantifiable terms.
This outfit has been stringing investors along for 20 years with veiled hints that success is right around the corner.
A market cult has formed to expand the company's hints to hyperbolic levels.
Those young enough will still be waiting for the big pay day 20 years from now. Selling would have been wise when the hype peaked.
This is nothing more than a confidence game.
Will be back on the OTC soon.
This outfit has been stringing investors along for 20 years with veiled hints that success is right around the corner.
A market cult has formed to expand the company's hints to hyperbolic levels.
Those young enough will still be waiting for the big pay day 20 years from now. Selling would have been wise when the hype peaked.
This is nothing more than a confidence game.
I am not the topic of this board. The Lightwave Logic Science Project is the proper topic.
Thanks, Dave.
Well, I have noticed on a few boards I follow that viewed posts no longer change color to a reddish font on the board view and instead remain the bluish color font of an unviewed post. Seems like the harder iHub runs to the finish line, the more screwed up it becomes.
I know this is a big job but one on!
I got a page expired when I submitted a reply to a post just now.
Yes, something is definitely broken.
SANTA CLARA, Calif., Aug. 23, 2022 – Intel Corporation today announced a first-of-its-kind Semiconductor Co-Investment Program (SCIP) that introduces a new funding model to the capital-intensive semiconductor industry. As part of its program, Intel has signed a definitive agreement with the infrastructure affiliate of Brookfield Asset Management, one of the largest global alternative asset managers, which will provide Intel with a new, expanded pool of capital for manufacturing build-outs.
SCIP is a key element of Intel’s Smart Capital approach, which aims to provide innovative ways to fund growth while creating further financial flexibility to accelerate the company’s IDM 2.0 strategy. Intel’s agreement with Brookfield follows the two companies’ memorandum of understanding announced in February 2022. Under the terms of the agreement, the companies will jointly invest up to $30 billion in Intel’s previously announced manufacturing expansion at its Ocotillo campus in Chandler, Arizona, with Intel funding 51% and Brookfield funding 49% of the total project cost. Intel will retain majority ownership and operating control of the two new leading-edge chip factories in Chandler, which will support long-term demand for Intel’s products and provide capacity for Intel Foundry Services (IFS) customers. The transaction with Brookfield is expected to close by the end of 2022, subject to customary closing conditions.
More …..
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/newsroom/news/financial-news-aug-2022.html#gs.9g2feq
SANTA CLARA, Calif., Aug. 23, 2022 – Intel Corporation today announced a first-of-its-kind Semiconductor Co-Investment Program (SCIP) that introduces a new funding model to the capital-intensive semiconductor industry. As part of its program, Intel has signed a definitive agreement with the infrastructure affiliate of Brookfield Asset Management, one of the largest global alternative asset managers, which will provide Intel with a new, expanded pool of capital for manufacturing build-outs.
SCIP is a key element of Intel’s Smart Capital approach, which aims to provide innovative ways to fund growth while creating further financial flexibility to accelerate the company’s IDM 2.0 strategy. Intel’s agreement with Brookfield follows the two companies’ memorandum of understanding announced in February 2022. Under the terms of the agreement, the companies will jointly invest up to $30 billion in Intel’s previously announced manufacturing expansion at its Ocotillo campus in Chandler, Arizona, with Intel funding 51% and Brookfield funding 49% of the total project cost. Intel will retain majority ownership and operating control of the two new leading-edge chip factories in Chandler, which will support long-term demand for Intel’s products and provide capacity for Intel Foundry Services (IFS) customers. The transaction with Brookfield is expected to close by the end of 2022, subject to customary closing conditions.
More …..
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/newsroom/news/financial-news-aug-2022.html#gs.9g2feq
I have no idea why this mystery nameless Intel engineer would do that, if they do indeed exist at all. Perhaps to play the pump.
No, the shorts are just an excuse for a dropping share price that is headed back to where it belongs. It is not there yet but it is headed there.
A little man with an overactive imagination who does not pay the IRP user fee to iHub.