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Yes that one yes
but Why it is not on the investors hub or ttheir own website?
Thanks leif ! But I don't see it on the Hub website!
And nanoviricides Website either!
Is anybody can tel me where is the PR?
I cannot Find it !!
Hi W4N
We'll come back!
FN
FZ
Selling then Buying.
When NNVC will have his drugs approved then you will know what is going on with the stock .
Thanks DK!
CONNECTICUT October 2008
http://carolebass.com/samples/CT_Mag_nano_Oct08.pdf
New York-based Lux Research
projects that by 2014, 15 percent of manufactured
goods—a global market of $2.6 trillion—
will incorporate nanotechnology.
Viricides is one of perhaps a dozen small
Connecticut companies striving to carve a
niche in the growing but still nascent field of
nanotechnology.
Some, like NanoViricides, are working in
nanomedicine. Others, like Inframat and its
sister company U.S. Nanocorp, both based in
Farmington, are developing nano-enabled
materials for uses as diverse as fuel cells,
Navy propellers and filters to clean up contaminated
water. While government officials
talk about creating an infrastructure to make
Connecticut a nanotech leader, the scientist/
entrepreneurs who run these companies are
trying to forge their own paths.
NanoViricides is publicly traded. Inframat’s
financing relies heavily on military
contracts and overseas partners. Neither has
access to venture capital.
“I’ve been called a VC without the C,” says
Inframat co-founder and chief executive David
Reisner. “We have a mix of technologies
and applications, and we never know until
the last minute what the front-runner’s going
to be. We knew it would take about five years
to develop individual products. But nobody
in the nanotechnology community realized
how difficult it would be to get these great
products into the marketplace. Acceptance
is very slow.”
The Ph.D.s who work in nanotech like to
say that their technology is “very simple.”
To a layperson, the technical explanations
are actually quite complicated, but basically
nanotech is the science of creating and manipulating
materials at the scale of molecules
and atoms. (Nano, from the Greek for dwarf,
literally means “one-billionth part of.”) At
that size, ordinary substances like carbon
and common metals take on extraordinary
properties, such as becoming water-soluble,
conducting electricity and catalyzing chemical
reactions. Those novel characteristics give
nanomaterials their value.
The tiny materials are becoming big business.
The U.S. government spends about $1.5
billion yearly on nanoresearch. The consumer
market already boasts more than 600 nanocontaining
products worldwide, from stainresistant
fabrics to sunscreen that turns clear
on your skin. New York-based Lux Research
projects that by 2014, 15 percent of manufactured
goods—a global market of $2.6 trillion—
will incorporate nanotechnology.
With its research universities and educated
population, Connecticut should be wellsituated
to grab a piece of that expanding pie,
the state’s Advisory Council on Nanotechnology
figures. But, the council warned in
2006, “The need to act is urgent because the
pace of technology advancement is fast, the
competition is aggressive and we risk falling
behind.”
The state’s nano strategy includes industry-
university collaboration, small-business
October 2008 CONNECTICUT 45
grants
Can you translate in French or Italian?
I'm kidding!
I have read 10 times to understand your explanation!
Sorry!
FN
ZF
This Morning I asked you that question for a reason:
A friend of mine who was on the board told me at the time that there were a way to know approximately the price of the stock after passing the FDA!
Like Allan was saying: buy 10 000 shares and you will make a million box.
So over the years because I believe so much in NNVC , I decided to invest.
I had around 30 000 shares .
Now I have 7500 shares.
So if my first question that I sent you is crazy!
I think that it is a big drop of my shares!
And we shouldn't wait $70 to go to Hawaii but go at $20 like it was planed!
I understand that it's impossible to know how high will be NNVC.
And at the end of the day even if NNVC go to $100! I will be happy!
I will add that in my opinion NNVC didn't need a split for going to the AMEX!
We would be at $5,00 with out it!
Next year is programmed for success anyway !
The only change is that we bought time with our shares.
Prove me wrong!
I know you can and I would love that!
FN
Hi ZF
Before the split we could calculate how much the share price could go up after having drugs on the Market.
It was minimum $500
How is it now?
Are we at the same result: $500 = $1750 (minimum) ?
I do the same!
We have been up since February!
I respect MalibuMan post.
I had a problem with the 1st paragraph of that website.
Read it and you will understand my point !
FN
Who is right and who is wrong?
http://moneymorning.com/2012/06/26/investing-in-nanotechnology-fei-co-nasdaq-feic-is-the-top-picks-and-shovels-play/#
Investing in Nanotechnology: FEI Co. (Nasdaq: FEIC) is the Top "Picks and Shovels" Play
By GS Early, Contributing Writer
PrintEmailShareA++A+A Text size
The word "nanotechnology" gets thrown around a lot but it still remains a fuzzy concept for most people.
From a self-aware, self-assembling grey goo that takes over the world in a Michael Crichton book, to Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL) Nano music player or Tata Motor's (NYSE ADR: TTM) Nano car, it's hard to get a clear picture of what nanotech really is.
But as global World Economic Forum member and emerging tech guru Dr. Tim Harper explains, "Nanotechnology is to the 21st Century what chemistry was to the 20th Century."
Like plastics, computers, and the Internet before it, nanotechnology will change the world in ways that we can't even imagine now. That's how powerful the nano-world will become.
That's why every long-term growth investor needs to consider investing in nanotechnology. In terms of scale, the potential for investors is simply enormous.
That's why one company, FEI Co. (Nasdaq: FEIC) is on my list of "buys" as the top "picks and shovels" play.
The Miracle of Nanotechnology
So what exactly is nanotech?
It's a way of working with objects and materials at the atomic level, one molecule at time.
That means that in the near future, we will be able to custom design structures literally from the ground up, molecule by molecule, creating a quantum leap forward in medicine, materials, electronics, food, and fuels - practically everything we know of.
In fact, one of the biggest sectors where nanotech continues to have a huge impact is in drug development and drug delivery.
Recent nanotech developments include: cancer treatments without chemotherapy or radiation, long-dose treatment of diabetes with a single monthly injection, long-release or on-demand blood pressure medications, and textiles to build skin, bone or organs from you own cells.
Developments like these will invariably lead to big money
A recent report by Cientifica, a leading global emerging technology consulting firm predicts:
Nanotech-enabled drug delivery therapeutics is set to grow from a current value of $2.3 billion to $136 billion by the year 2021.
Global growth in the drug delivery market will be led by Asia with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 32.5% between now and 2021.
And the total addressable market for nanotech enabled diagnostics will reach $53.6 billion in 2021 from $2.4 billion in 2011.
But drug delivery is just a small piece of the sector. The truth is nanotech is going to impact every facet of your life someday.
Because if you look into every industrial sector from textiles to materials to electronics to energy to defense to computing to telecommunications to packaging, nanotech is the fulcrum that is moving the world.
[/color]
Well, we have 2 drugs so far. 1 in America and 1 in Europe.
In 2014 They should present at least an other one, maybe starting when the facilities will be ready.
If evrythings goes well I see them presenting 2 next year.
We also have other countries like:
Australia, St Africa, China, Europe etc....
But of course I could be wrong.
As you said we will have to wait and see.
FN
Thanks ZF!
I will if I have other questions!
FN
Well nothing is change!
We are up!
He knows what he is doing!
I will let you know if he did.
What my mother is telling me
His Doctor is really good!
So I would be surprised that they missed some important tests !
By the way his Dr is from India.
Thanks for your help!
Is hepatis C is a cause of a Chronic activation of the iron ?
Chages_iv
Thanks for thoses very important informations!
I realy appreciate your time, you are a great friend.
I will let you know!
FN
ZincFinger,
Thank you so much for your advice.
I do not know, but I will send your message to my parents.
My father had three interventions over last 3 years.
The hardest was the last one, the surgeon removes five nodules, then he administred chemo (a new treatment) to his liver. a week later he had a large hematoma (necrosis) and nearly died.
Now he's fine. My father is a force of nature.
It is very resistant but I don't know how long he can go on with out a new treatment.
They live in Italy but his Dr is in France
Thanks for everything.
FN
I thought that they would present a new drug every 6 months ?
Twice a year?
I know
We need NNVC to succeed!
rearden
I am sorry about your sister.
How is she doing now?
200 = 57 ex nnvc market with DengueCide and FluCide is very conservative!
I like $2000
I hope now!!
My dad cannot wait 2015.
rearden
I am sorry about your sister.
How is she doing now?
NNVC 5.6100 (D)+0.2640 [+4.94%] 100,251
Could it be Parick Cox effects ?
Thanks NPT for that piece of information about "Il Grande Cocomero"
I did also some research about Halloween in Italia
Here is what I found:
Between 1630 and 1640, the Catholic Church carried on a campaign to suppress surviving pagan traditions connected to All Saints' Day and its eve. These feasts vanished completely.
However, in the 1990s, Halloween was popularized by television programs and merchandising coming from United States, including The Simpsons' Treehouse of Horror (trick-or-treat's translation as "Dolcetto o Scherzetto", literally dessert-or-joke). As a result, Halloween has become a major festivity among Italian youth. The actual holiday, 1 November, All Souls Day, is still celebrated, with each region preparing their traditional plates and costumes.
A classic among traditional regional Italian cookies recipes, the Fave dei Morti are typically prepared around the 2 November, All Souls' day. The origin of this recipe goes back to pre-Christian time when fava beans were used as ritual offering to the dead and the gods of the nether world. These delicious cookies are shaped like fava beans and are baked in the Marche region for the festivity of the Giorno dei Morti or All Souls’ day.
"The Simpsons"
In Italy we never take things seriously!
That how we are.
FN
How does that great Pumpkin looks like?
Hawaii and Cortina d'Ampezzo my home town in Italy.
Dr Seymour will take us with his new jet!
Champagne on board!
ZF
Don't apologize!
It's great having you here, keep posting!
FN
NNVC 5.5400(JS) +0.1940 [+3.63%] 65,481
Yes weedie!
2014 is the year!!! $200?
I am looking forwar to meet you in Hawaii!!!
FN
No, I think that we all made the same mistake.
I think that he was talking about that one:
http://www.express.co.uk/news/health/437959/EXCLUSIVE-Jab-to-end-super-flu-Holy-grail-vaccine-will-give-lifetime-protection
EXCLUSIVE: Jab to end super-flu: 'Holy grail' vaccine will give lifetime protection
A JAB which gives lifelong protection against all flu strains could be ready within five years.
By: Lucy Johnston
Published: Sun, October 20, 2013
Scientists believe they have cracked the “Holy Grail” after positive results of the jab [GETTY / PIC POSED BY MODELS]
Scientists believe they have cracked the “Holy Grail” after positive results in the first human trials of a universal vaccine that works even if the virus mutates.??If it goes ahead, it could spell the end of annual flu jabs for millions and save countless lives.??Researchers in Britain and Europe are poised to recruit thousands of people for large-scale trials which they hope will lead to widespread availability of the injection by 2018. ??Professor John Oxford, Britain’s leading expert on flu and the study’s key researcher, said: “It’s terribly exciting. This vaccine has the potential to save thousands of lives a year. Everyone working on it is wildly enthusiastic about the first positive results from small human trials.”??Immunisation against flu viruses is difficult because they constantly evolve to develop resistance to vaccines.??However, Professor Oxford believes the universal jab would protect against all flu viruses even when they change.??The vaccine could also help prevent new deadly strains turning into epidemics like that of the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic which killed up to 100 million across the world.??At the moment patients are given annual vaccines to protect them against most forms of influenza. Vaccinations train the immune system to recognise flu and mount a defence – but the virus can evade detection by changing its outer “coat”.??The aim of the universal jab is to overcome this by attacking parts of the virus that do not change.??Scientists have been attempting to find such a vaccine for years, but this is the first positive news regarding human trials on almost 100 patients.
Britain’s leading expert on flu said the jab could save thousands of lives a year [GETTY / PIC POSED BY MODELS]
Related articles
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It’s terribly exciting. This vaccine has the potential to save thousands of lives a year
Professor John Oxford
The study, which last week received a multi-million pound European Union grant, showed the new vaccine could protect against a range of flu strains.??The news comes as fears grow over a new deadly bird flu strain in China which has shown signs of adapting to pass between humans. The H7N9 virus has now infected at least 134 people and caused at least 45 deaths. ??Professor Oxford, of the University of London, said a large-scale deadly epidemic was inevitable.??“I believe there will be new flu mutations within the next five to 10 years that will be a serious and definite threat to human life,” he said. ??“We are all travelling so much more that this is not a fanciful idea but a reality. This work on the universal jab is a very good contribution to public health.”??Meanwhile, Britain’s Chief Medical Officer, Dame Sally Davies, and health leaders have launched a new nasal spray flu vaccine for all two and three-year-olds. They are urging parents of healthy toddlers to protect them from flu this winter by ensuring they get vaccinated.??It is the first step in an extension to the national programme, which will eventually include annual vaccination of all children under 16.??A study published last week by Public Health England and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, found children are key “spreaders” of flu.
Researchers in Britain and Europe are poised to recruit thousands of people for large-scale trials [GETTY / PIC POSED BY MODEL]
Professor Oxford said: “The flu virus loves children. They do not have as strong an immune system to fight the disease as adults, they don’t think about their hygiene levels and they are often hugging and kissing each other, but it can be devastating, causing hospitalisation, death or serious complications.”??Dr Nick Phin, Government flu specialist, said: “We are urging parents to ensure children are protected and this will also offer protection to the rest of the family and elderly relatives who may be vulnerable.”??However Dr Richard Halvorsen, author of the book The Truth About Vaccines, said: “It is rare for children to die from flu and giving routine vaccines every year is a lot of extra vaccinations into an already heavy inoculation schedule. This is of doubtful value and may be unnecessary.”??Dr Halvorsen, who runs London-based BabyJabs, which offers a choice of single vaccines to parents, added: “The main reason for inoculating children against flu is so they cannot pass it on to frail elderly people, but I question the ethics of this.”??Flu is one of the biggest global killers, causing up to 500,000 deaths every year.??It poses its biggest threat when it mutates from a strain that attacks animals, particularly birds, and infects humans.??In the late Nineties, the H5NI strain jumped the species barrier and posed one of the biggest public health threats in years as it spread from the Far East to Europe.??In the UK, several thousand people die every year from flu, rising to 10,000 during an epidemic year. Until now people aged 65 or over and those at risk such as diabetics and pregnant women have been offered annual jabs.??Recent research on 14 flu seasons suggests targeting all over-65s “was not the best strategy”.??Conventional flu jabs attack proteins known as H and N on the outside or “coat” of the virus. These proteins are changeable and when they alter the vaccine is likely to become ineffective.??The super-jab attacks the M and NP proteins inside the virus. These are shared by all A strains, the types of flu that cause pandemics and potentially serious symptoms.??Proteins on the inside are stable, which means that the vaccine will stay effective.
Can we now leave the $200 SP and trips to Hawaii in '14 at the children's table where they belong?
There was a little miss reading on HIVcide and HCVcide between changes_iv, ZF, and I.
changes_iv, was responding to my post about HCVcide.
I was talking about HCV.
Robi
Changes_iv, I was curious about why Gilead might put off Phase 3 of sofosbufir, so googled it.
I know that NNVC is not thinking about HCVcide.
Dr Seymour would have told me.
I hope that sofosbuvir will pass !
I beleive they will.
FN
Thanks changes_iv.
The question is how long it will take for the medication to be on the Market after been approved?