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Re: Florinda post# 218882

Wednesday, 03/20/2013 12:58:48 PM

Wednesday, March 20, 2013 12:58:48 PM

Post# of 312015
Since I really do not know, and since a lot of the present "understanding" has ambiguity built into it, a big part of my question is exactly what you sense.

As the design of the machines gets standardized, how much of the stack test style approvals will be rubber stamped? Will they need to get certain things passed in NY and others in other states? That kind of thing.

Or ask it in other ways, such as:
What process will be involved in getting some kind of efficiency to the "rubber stamping" of the tchnology as the machines get set up in other jurisdictions?

Or:
How will the passing grade of a standardized design get passed on to other states?

What exact process will be in place to get a machine up and running in Florida? How much built and passed here... how much built there and passed there?

Basically, as I see things, if I were to embed in my questions a certain set of precise "angles", as it were, I may, by the very act of being too specific, give an avenue for imprecision in understanding things as they will actually work.

What we saw was two machines in the flux. A third being built. We saw a shut down that cost a lot of moola. What is going to be done about this NOT becoming the pattern in the future? What is the current expectation regarding making the process of getting machines approved in other jurisdictions? Basically.... just explain what is expected and explain what is different about what we can expect copmpared to what cause the shut downs that cost a lot of money?

What I actually want is to have the path understood. It looks to me like they had to fix #1, get approval for #2, and they have yet to complete #3. In that there are delays that cost time and a lot of money due to the status and the remedy for #1 & #2 in the recent past, it seems that long term shareholders like myself, who basically see the technology and the company in a favorable light, deserve a clear explanation of whether what cost a lot of money in the recent past is going to be a regular expectation.

Fix what caused the shut down.... thats my basic point. Don't let what recently happend be the pattern going forward. But again, if its more complicated than a simple "fix" can supply, explain what we can expect and how the "fix", whatever it is, is going to work.

I do not expect to find out that every time a machine gets built, we have to shut everything down, but IMHO, there is some "splainin'" to do.

Imperial Whazoo

"Just my opinions, folks. Do your own due diligence & make your own decisions. DO NOT... I repeat... DO NOT make any investment decisions on my comments. They are my opinions. That's all they are... OPINIONS."