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Trotts - You forgot one.
Look up Chuck Olson and let us know what you find.
Bioscience....nice find Wise
I only know of three employees in the company with that background. Correct me if I'm wrong.
Dr Cocuzza
Dr Sundar
Mr Cordovano.
An excellent vehicle to network and press one's agenda, no Mr X?
Yet another CC question from us dumb investors.
Just doin' my New Year's resolution.
Did not see this on LWLG website. No data? Then speculation rules.
Thanks Wise but that find was from a friend.
@Pro_V - Turpin's probably out rock collecting.
http://www.timeanddate.com/countdown/generic?iso=20130328T16&p0=198&msg=LWLG+Conference+Call
UD professor brings access to previously untapped higher frequency bandwidth
“It’s like having a highway where you can drive 1,000 miles per hour, but there aren’t any cars that go that fast,” says Dennis Prather, College of Engineering Alumni Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
...
Prather says he and his team have created a “novel device that opens access to this new bandwidth."
...
The device uses a technique of sideband injection locking, which Prather has developed in his lab.
“Think of a piano where every eight keys the notes repeat, just at a higher pitch. The differing pitches are harmonics, or related frequencies, of the first tone,” he explains. “If we put a radio signal with an antenna into a custom-made modulator and then connect a laser beam to the device, it generates harmonics.”
Article by Karen B. Roberts
http://www.udel.edu/udaily/2013/feb/prather-bandwidth-021813.html
Thanks Prop. I hope they all read this board.
Other than Mr. Fasick, no one in LWLG management has put a dime into this company.
Keeping it real,
LOL. <----- Sort of.
Do we really have to wait this long
http://www.timeanddate.com/countdown/generic?iso=20130328T16&p0=198&msg=LWLG+Conference+Call
No pressure. nope.
UCB - Proposals
Principal Investigator: Mickelson, A
Sponsor: Lightwave Logic
Start Date: 06/01/2012
End Date: 12/31/2012
Title: "Understanding the Properties of Indigo"
Amount: $127,065
Line 1049
http://cusearch.colorado.edu/search?q=cache:vx0kNQ7nULYJ:www.colorado.edu/VCResearch/reports/12/FY12_OCG_Master.xls+%22Lightwave+Logic%22&site=default_collection&proxystylesheet=default_frontend&client=default_frontend&ie=UTF-8&access=p&oe=UTF-8
Let's hope we understand now.
Intel's chief chipman
By Rik Myslewski in San Francisco, 13th September 2012
IDF 2012 The low-voltage performance of Intel's 22-nanometer chip-baking process turned out better that the company had predicted, and the development of next year's 14-nanometer process technology is proceeding swimmingly, thankyouverymuch.
So said Chipzilla's head of process technology, Mark Bohr, speaking at a tech session during the company's Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco on Wednesday.
And he should know. Bohr is a senior fellow in Intel's Technology and Manufacturing Group, and the director of the company's process architecture and integration efforts. In simple terms, he creates the stuff that chips are made of.
...
Bohr also discussed the progress of Intel's next process shrink. "The 14-nanometer technology is in its full development phase," he said, "and it's on track for production readiness around the end of next year."
...
Cost is not the only challenge in moving down to 14nm, Bohr said. For one thing, there's the problem of creating the interconnects in a chip so dense with transistors. "Well, you've got skinnier wires," he said, "and can you get copper stuffed into that shallow trench with good reliability, good performance? We have that challenge."
But what about beyond 14nm? Well, Intel's research group is exploring a host of technologies to take Moore's Law down to 10, seven, and even five nanometers. On one of his presentation slides, Bohr listed some of the technologies under study, including III-V and 3D transistors, graphene, extreme ultraviolet lithography, dense memory, materials synthesis, thinner interconnects, photonics, and nanowires.
When asked why carbon nanotubes weren't included that laundry list, since they had been on a similar slide last year, Bohr said, "We like to put the latest fads on that slide, so graphene's on that slide – that's the latest fad."
He also made it clear that a list was all he was prepared to provide. "I always get questions of 'Which ones are the promising ones?', and you can't pay me enough money to answer that question." ®
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/09/13/mark_bohr_at_idf/
Thanks Six
... And there's some issue about "band gap"...
...regarding graphene that I don't understand.
Hey Six- when did Zelibor talk about Perk vs. Graphene again?
TIA
Buzz
Mickelson's website has been updated.
Guided Wave Optics Lab
The Guided Wave Optics Laboratory (GWOL) is dedicated to the study of materials, devices and systems that are used in guide wave communications. GWOL was established in 1984 by Professor Alan Mickelson as his primary research facility. Areas of study have included design fabrication and measurement of integrated optics in crystals and polymers, semiconductor laser studies, studies of microwave integrated circuits, hardware simulation of communication systems and studies of solar energy and solar energy devices.
"EMTNano project is a multi-disciplinary project with a goal of realizing silicon photonic technology as a communication backplane at the nano-scale. The project, unlike earlier work, is one step closer to studying silicon photonics for mass production through studying the different layers of design in communication. More specifically, this project studies fabrication, device, architecture, and system design layers for communicating using light.
For more details on the project, visit our EMTNano web-page:"
http://www.colorado.edu/engineering/gwol/research.html
Hmmmm... FinFET.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multigate_device#FinFETs
Have a nice President's Day weekend.
Just sayin' if things don't go our way...
...we'd better have contingencies in place the second after we find out.
I'd like to know how much we've spent so far on this opportunity. If there is no exclusivity agreement in place, there should be nothing stopping us from "playing the field" right now.
Sorry, I'm on a "we've got no CC call today" rant.
Inversor, that brings up another point
I hope we're not locked in to one potential customer with this 2 year long testing. If they're not in that big of a rush then we should be sending samples to everyone out there.
I thought we were trying to control our own destiny.
Agree Six. I can't help but think we are in some sort of bake-off at the LSS, competing against other modulation materials. Let's hope we get the Iron Chef award.
Thanks Snez. Agree pps did OK.
Good job LPC. LOL.
Hope you get a bunch more next week.
What kind of news are you expecting
...this week, halvo? Better go hit the books again.
Bob - Journal of Lightwave Technology
Why do you ask?
http://www.opticsinfobase.org/jlt/
Is that you Rambo??
Something to ponder
Hey, if I suddenly realized that I scheduled a CC the same week as the State of the Union address, I'd call it off too.
Safe Harbor: Sorry if I offended any Democrats in this transmission. I'll have another beer please.
FWIW the 10-K is due end of March also.
I wonder if our list of questions had any influence in the postponement?
Conference called postponed - thanks Smars
My knee-jerk reaction to your subject question, Trotts, was,
"They haven't sold anything".
Oh well, time will tell. How many femtoseconds are in 5 days?
Snez, if that were the case...
(replacing a senior chemist), then I would've liked/expected to see the job prerequisites to include something more than just a B.S. degree and 5 years experience, no?
New Hire
I'm hoping that...
1) They can't make the stuff fast enough so more hands are needed.
2) They're building upon the breakthrough of Indigo and continue to expand the portfolio, creating even better performing chromophores.
3) This is a net new resource and they're not replacing Messrs. Simmons, Cocuzza, or Taggi.
Nice find Steve - Here's another link...
Laboratory Technician Lightwave Logic, Inc., Newark, De
Job Description
Laboratory Technician
Lightwave Logic, Inc., Newark, DE develops organic materials for applications in electro-optics. We seek an experienced synthetic organic chemist to work with our team on synthesis of new chromophore dyes. Requirements include BS degree with at least 5 years experience at the bench with knowledge of HPLC and spectral characterization. Send resume to resume@ lightwavelogic.com or Fax to 302-356-2737
Source - Wilmington News Journal - Wilmington, DE
http://laboratory.jobs.net/j/laboratory-laboratory-technician-lightwave-logic-inc-newark-de-develops_J3G09R77X573X3LDW73.aspx
I just checked - according to LinkedIn, yes, Babu is still there.
There's your news for this Friday folks, meeting adjourned.
Agreed. He reported on the acquisition when it happened.
Funny that Stephan from Cisco "lost connectivity" when Inversor inquired about LWLG.
Maybe we're the "opposition"?
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=83039207
LOL.
I triple that sentiment.
Way to go Mr. Inversor86.
Buzz
TeraDiode - Dr. Leonberger
(From the SPIE conference)
Prism Awards honor innovations in ‘ubiquitous’ photonics technology
07 February 2013
2013 Prism Awards for Photoincs InnovationSAN FRANCISCO, California, USA -- An early-stage diagnostic tool for skin cancers, a portable device to test for toxins in water and food, and a versatile laser capable of meeting multiple industrial needs were among 10 winners of the 2013 Prism Awards for Photonics Innovation announced Wednesday 6 February at SPIE Photonics West in San Francisco.
Sponsored by SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics, and Photonics Media, the annual awards recognize photonic products that break with conventional ideas, solve problems, and improve life through the application of light-based technologies.
Winners are:
...
Industrial Lasers: TeraDiode (Wilmington, Massachusetts) won with its TeraBlade 2kW High Brightness Direct Diode Laser, a high-brightness laser emitter that allows direct diode lasers to cut and weld steel in industrial applications. Its wavelength beam-combining technology combines the output of any number, type, wavelength, or power of laser emitters into a single, incoherent laser beam while retaining the brightness of the original emitters.
...
http://spie.org/x92099.xml
Fred Leonberger, Co-Founder
http://teradiode.com/company/leadership-team/
"CC and the BOD"
I was also a bit disappointed that the BOD/Advisors will not be on the call.
But then I think of other companies' SH update calls.... When did I ever hear BOD members on there? Never? Not the venue regardless of what the message is.
I agree Six this could be a very good omen that things are coming together.
Disclosure - I'm usually wrong.
Nice Inversor - You should send this to T.Z.
Hopefully there are no clearance obstacles to get our foot in the door.
Also presenting today...
5:20 pm: All-polymer organic EO material modulator for high frequency low drive voltage applications, David L. K. Eng, Stephen T. Kozacik, Benjamin C. Olbricht, Shouyuan Shi, Dennis W. Prather, Univ. of Delaware (USA) . . [8622-29]
and this:
5:40 pm: Solution phase-assisted reorientation of chromophores, Benjamin C. Olbricht, Stephen T. Kozacik, David L. K. Eng, Dennis W. Prather, Univ. of Delaware (USA) . . [8622-30]
http://spie.org/Documents/ConferencesExhibitions/PW13-Final-lr.pdf
X I just took a look...
...and it appears Miller left the Dow-Corning board when he resigned from Corning...
http://www.ourmidland.com/news/article_15785b7a-a429-11e1-9d8e-0019bb2963f4.html
... but I'd bet he knows all about this waveguide material.
Man, wouldn't it be nice if Intel put our a PR touting their SPIE conference presentation like Dow-Corning's one today?
Nice find Wise.
I got pretty worried right off the bat, but it looks like this is simply a high temp passive material that can be used for optical interconnect waveguides; the technical paper makes no mention of r33 stats or any mention of the material being electro-optically active... no mention of it being able to modulate light.
I could be wrong though. A good question for the CC - Joe Miller should be able to answer it if he attends.
Ravens came out of the dark.
Flacco MVP. Check- Beer bongs at Tubby Raymond Field.
Now on to two big LWLG weeks.
Strong Buy.
Congratulations Mickelson.
Now, on to the SB and Joe Flacco -
THE... University of Delaware.
The emerging leader in Photonics research.
Optical Interconnect Expo
FYI
Technical Conference 17-21 March 2013 • Exposition 19-21 March 2013
Anaheim Convention Center, Anaheim, CA, USA
Lot's of IBM and telecom industry participants.
http://www.ofcnfoec.org/home/?gclid=CNqiz5ComLUCFQHNOgoduUYA-A
F2 - It's been on the agenda for some time.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=82388132
Silicon photonics and the data-centric datacenter
Marco Fiorentino, HP Labs
Date: 04/15/2011
An overview of the silicon photonics horse race as it stood 2 years ago.
Please note slide 14, bottom right.
http://ewh.ieee.org/r5/denver/sscs/Presentations/2011_04_Fiorentino.pdf
Aha.... thanks Inversor. Shoot I though I may've been able to put some in my 401K.