When you have to reprice the options to 4 cents, so that Cornell makes money, clearly management is not on the shareholders side. And when the price is a nickel, and the asks just keep on coming, obviously there is nothing in the works in the background. When everywhere you go there is talk about mobile, but never a mention of NEOM, well its obvious.
Hows that big book launch with text books, and students going - brining in a lot of business is it?
And for the person who will say, its obvious I'm a basher - no, I'm just realistic about NEOM, wasted time, wasted space, and wasted money hanging on to this.
JP, to answer your question to me from the other day about bankrupcy; it makes little difference which chapter they use, as each chapter ends with the exisitng shareholders receiving nothing but toilet paper share certificates. But no doubt you can find soething in Asia that has something to do with something in Europe that has nothing to do with NEOM, but you'll make a link somehow. Try this one: How many degrees of seperation are there between NEOM and Kevin Bacon, knowing that is about as useful as the many dots connected here. The only dot worth noting will be the period at the end of the bankrupcy filing