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Watts Watt

04/06/14 11:09 AM

#49987 RE: gorgol #49985

I do a lot of gardening. I have noticed that, after the smell of roses fades, and the blooms fall to the ground, that they become fertilizer.
Gardening teaches a lot about life and investments. The value of blooms is very transient; fertilizer actually has much more potential and force for the future than the smell of blooms. You can grow a lot with fertilizer; can't grow squat with ephemeral effete fragrances.

Liquidmetal as an investment has stunk; and that's no bunk.

So many, many Liquidmetal dreams,
There have been reams and reams),
Building everything up to bridge beams,
Why is it there are no revenue streams?
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notshir

04/06/14 11:54 AM

#49991 RE: gorgol #49985

You know I hate to bring it up, but I will... When Apple put

the commercials out last year, they were beaming with pride. They

were bragging about lqmt!

I don't care how many times Clara tells me, I STILL say we R

being bought out by Apple.

There is so much we don't know.... This will be kept hush-

hush by many. (Some just want to keep buying more shares.)

What happened to the clamps?, The Lockheed Martin contract?,

The dental?, The Medical?, The Auto?, The Military contracts?,

"I can't comment on that"> "I can't comment on that".

IMVHO things have been way to quiet and to slow...

Arbitration ends in June? (%@!!%)

Could Apple want lqmt to be their U.S. made "i-metal" ?

Somewhere in the back of my mind I'm hoping that this new metal

alloy will be beneficial in the making o batteries too. ynotdream?

They've waited long enough for it to be the biggest product

launch of Apple ever! Wouldn't it be nice to be part of that>

In 1964 (50 years ago..) The U.S. built the first titanium

aircraft the SR-71 (It was 85% titanium!) It is Still the fastest

aircraft in the world.

Now we have a new metal alloy, that's 2 and one half times as

strong. I wonder if now (50 yrs later) we could do it again?

There are things being built of lqmt we have no idea of.....

The HTV-2 had a top speed of 13,000 mph. with a surface temp.

of 3500 degrees. Where could they possibly find a metal that

hard, that strong? "This is bigger den we tink."