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I imagine that the water and salt are tiny costs. The electrical cables I saw on the machines suggest quite a bit of current. So the electrical costs are probably a chunk of the costs. The rest would be the usual people, building, office, machines.
I have no real figures, but given that they are selling fancy water for about $8 a gallon (based on the numbers guessed at on this board), I just have a gut feeling that they have a high profit margin.
I have the same plan, just multiply money and time by a few.
I believe both of us may be mortgage free this year.
Good luck
Thank you for your reports and all the best in your new endeavor.
RSI also nicely reset.
Thanks for the post.
I believe each loaded trailer can hold 5000 gallons, so 10,000 gallons in one day as previously suggested. Nice to have some degree of confirmation.
A big difference between SARS 1 and the current SARS 2 is the current virus is much more contagious. It is also contagious without symptoms, whereas the first one gave symptoms before you really became contagious.
The overall impact of a virus is a matter of how contagious, how sick you get, and how lethal. For instance, Ebola is contagious and lethal, but it makes people so sick so quickly that they hardly have a chance to spread the virus. Most out breaks of Ebola are quickly put out as the people are easily identified and isolated.
Hope this helps
I just boom timed my pants
In tandem with PCT Europe Ltd, the UK NHS company will introduce PCT technology to each NHS Hospital Trust with the intention of them rolling out PCT’s unique technology and system throughout the health services 233 Trusts comprising over 600 hospitals. In addition, approximately 14,000 Care Homes in the U.K. will also be introduced to PCT’s technology. A steady flow of orders is expected to commence throughout the remainder of 2020 and into 2021.
Yes, this morning they sent an email.
As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly.
Les Nessman, WKRP
Exactly true, you have to get people out of the room to use UV.
UV also degrades some materials (not just DNA) with prolonged use. I see plastics get messed up when exposed a lot.
I can see uses for UV, but it is far from the only ideal solution.
High .062
End .052
50 million volume
Chlorine = capital‘Cee’ and lower case ‘el’. Cl
In the study I read on the survival of the virus on different surfaces the finds were 1-3 days. Cardboard was about a day and stainless steel and plastic 3 days.
Off course temperatures and humidity play a role, but the basic fact is that transmission is mostly inside (the home, work) and is not wind blown. You are. Or going to get it through your shoes.
Honestly, the virus is not very stable outside. Spraying the streets seems dumb tome, but spraying surfaces that get touched a lot makes sense. Subway turnstiles, door handles, that kind of stuff.
Thank you, Snow. I use disposables and toss them after use. Wild that I’m treating shopping like working in the lab, but that is how it is now.
Your advise is good for those that don’t have disposables. Time, washing, and/or direct sunlight (no glass) can be used to help disinfect.
Really? I’d appreciate link.
As a Californian, who is also a scientist working to study CV, may I suggest you protect yourself by washing your hands after going out, wear a mask and gloves, and do your best to avoid other people. We all need to do this as a nation (world) to slow this thing down. Otherwise, efforts by one state are going to be undone if the virus is just brought back in from elsewhere.
Disinfection is also a matter of time of exposure. I believe what they are saying is that the time (10 min) used for Norovirus should also be used for SARS CoV-2.
Norovirus is another kind of virus that cause gastrointestinal disease. Most famous for infecting cruise ships (at least until SARS CoV-2 came along).
To be fair, they count days on a calendar in rocket science as well.
A paper preprint is out on the survival of CV in. The air and on surfaces.
Abstract
HCoV-19 (SARS-2) has caused >88,000 reported illnesses with a current case-fatality ratio of ~2%. Here,
we investigate the stability of viable HCoV-19 on surfaces and in aerosols in comparison with SARS-
CoV-1. Overall, stability is very similar between HCoV-19 and SARS-CoV-1. We found that viable virus
could be detected in aerosols up to 3 hours post aerosolization, up to 4 hours on copper, up to 24 hours on
cardboard and up to 2-3 days on plastic and stainless steel. HCoV-19 and SARS-CoV-1 exhibited similar
half-lives in aerosols, with median estimates around 2.7 hours. Both viruses show relatively long viability
on stainless steel and polypropylene compared to copper or cardboard: the median half-life estimate for
HCoV-19 is around 13 hours on steel and around 16 hours on polypropylene. Our results indicate that
aerosol and fomite transmission of HCoV-19 is plausible, as the virus can remain viable in aerosols for
multiple hours and on surfaces up to days
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.09.20033217v1.full.pdf
Not for long distances. This is why spread within households is much more likely than outside the home.
There have been even higher estimates made of 60-70% of the world population. These are hand waiving estimates that can’t really account for the measures being taken to slow the spread.
Because this is a new virus, nearly every human is fresh meat for this virus. We have no herd immunity. Best we can do is slow it down to not overwhelm medical facilities and eventually develop a vaccine.
So everyone trying to get back to the US has to fly through UK? Maybe even requiring layovers in lesser used golf resorts in Scotland?
Not sure how this helps contain the virus. It is already in most states, if not all when testing ramps up.
Golden Cross is oh so close.
You are correct. Virus like the CV are expelled in droplets. They can be very small.
During the next few weeks the company anticipates:
• Using newly developed smaller scale systems to expand marketing to assisted living facilities and possibly schools. Beginning marketing campaign at the end of Q1.
• Continued double digit growth with transition to cash flow positive and operating profitability during the second half of 2020.
• Remediation of Hydrogen Sulfide in the oil and gas industry – starting with “sour” gas in Oklahoma.
• Installation of systems at 6 new hospitals
Me too.
Chesapeake did call me today. Just asked if I wanted to be added to their e-mail list and I gave them my contact.
Just woke up, did I miss anything?
Surprise, my investment in a company that makes state of the art hospital disinfectant is the only in the green today when the markets are tanking over the fears of a viral pandemic.
https://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/node/139779
CMS prepares healthcare facilities for coronavirus threat As death toll rises to more than 600 worldwide, agency reinforces infection control responsibilities and guidelines for testing.
As the number of deaths from the coronavirus rises to 600 and the Coronavirus Task Force today holds a briefing, the Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has issued to U.S. healthcare providers and state survey agencies that inspect provider facilities, requirements and safety standards to prevent the spread of the infectious disease.
WHY THIS MATTERS
CMS wants to ensure compliance with current CMS standards so that healthcare facilities and clinical laboratories are prepared to respond to the threat of the 2019-Novel Coronavirus.
Every Medicare participating facility in the nation's healthcare system must adhere to standards for infection prevention and control, CMS said.
A memo provides information on infection control policies and practices and the use of certain laboratory tests.
In addition, CMS urges the review of information provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to aid in self-assessment of infection control and emergency preparedness protocols.
The memo also provides links to training and self-assessment tools for facilities to use as they review their processes and, if necessary, improve their practices.
A new study published by JAMA analyzed data on 138 patients hospitalized with novel coronavirus-infected pneumonia in Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the virus. The data shows that hospital-related transmissions of the disease was suspected in about 41% of patients. Of the 26% of patients admitted to intensive care, 4.3% died.
In a press briefing today, HHS Secretary Alex Azar said there were 12 confirmed cases in the U.S.
The CDC said there were 31,000 cases worldwide and a death toll of more than 600 people.
One of those who has died was Li Wenliang, a Chinese doctor who reportedly was threatened by the government after he voiced concerns about the new coronavirus.
In Japan, a cruise ship is quarantined at port due to a number of passengers confirmed to have the coronavirus.
THE LARGER TREND
In 2016, CMS established national emergency preparedness requirements to assist providers in planning for natural and man-made disasters and coordinating with federal, state, tribal, regional and local emergency preparedness systems.
The guidance for the Emergency Preparedness Requirements for Medicare and Medicaid Participating Providers and Suppliers emphasized the need for all hazards preparation.
In February 2019, CMS took additional steps to ensure facilities include planning for infectious diseases within their emergency preparedness program and added "emerging infectious diseases" to the scope of an all-hazards planning approach.
ON THE RECORD
"We are working diligently to ensure surveyors and health care providers across the country understand and comply with critically important guidelines that are designed to stop the spread of infectious diseases and keep patients free from harm," said CMS Administrator Seema Verma.
Well said!
They can’t even spell ‘pluripotent’ correctly on their website. My DD is over, I’m out of here.
Fully agree with your sentiments. I have no reason to believe BSRC doesn’t want to succeed. Yet, it ain’t done until its done, hence the penny stock bet. When and if they make a better battery, we won’t be at 4 cents any longer.
Thanks for posting.
These are the first images taken of the samples produced in the first batch of 21700 cylindrical lithium-ion battery cells incorporating BioSolar’s Si Additive technology. $BSRC pic.twitter.com/StqJfxGUQi
— NewHydrogen (@newhydrogen) June 4, 2019
That is only when you rent or have a mortgage. LQMTApple is sitting pretty with that income once debts are paid. San Francisco is only a little more expensive after you deal with housing.
Bridge pins are for acoustic guitars, not electric. There is other hardware on electrics that may benefit form liquidmetal, but that is another sale that needs to be made.
I don’t think the pins are a big revenue source, but have always felt it was good to work with Martin. Over time these pins could end up standard hardware and a long-term revenue source.