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pitcook

05/15/18 7:21 AM

#37417 RE: inversor86 #37415

Right we need the board members and top Mgt to drive the share price higher with fake PR's. In case you are not aware, we are trying to solve a puzzle that nobody has done. Do you think that outside Big Boy corporations will spend a penny before we prove we have solved the puzzle?

Are you a trader or a holder of this stock. If you are a trader, I can see the need to drive the SP higher at all costs, but I am in for the longrun.

The only thing that matters is in the Lab.

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prototype_101

05/15/18 7:46 AM

#37418 RE: inversor86 #37415

If it quacks like Short

#IgnoreShorts?Ha!
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Rambos_Monster

05/15/18 10:10 AM

#37425 RE: inversor86 #37415

I simply (maybe too simply) understand "lab" to be somewhat of a metaphor for a finished, marketable product and he's using that thesis to simply tone down all the day-to-day PPS fluctuation banter/discussion...to which I'm guilty of admittedly.

Sure he values the team and their individual missions.
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terry hallinan

05/15/18 12:48 PM

#37432 RE: inversor86 #37415

if the lab hit a snags, god forbid, a healthier running company can keep it's a head above water a little easier.

:-)

Labs are mostly snags and blunders and interferences - nothing but a sea of trouble when you are doing R&D.

Our lab prophet apparently isn't aware that even the final-final run to perfection is fudged. As we have learned in recent decades even The Great Historical Scientists fudged their experimental data.

Obviously the labwork is crucial but claiming the labwork is all there is is like claiming boiling water is all there is to gourmet cooking.

There is a story that Mrs. Albert Einstein was among a group of other tourists on an astronomical laboratory tour. At the end of the tour, Mrs. Einstein asked the tour guide what the purpose of all these wonderful telescopes and other equipment along with all the scientists and staff was for.

"Madam," said the tour guide, "we are attempting to solve the riddle of the nature of the universe."

"That's wonderful," said Mrs. Einstein. "My husband is working on the same problem. He uses the backs of envelopes."

People looking at all the machinery and visual wonders and listening to fine talk would be well advised to see if they could find the the guy scratching out stuff with pencil and paper - or old envelopes - in a cubby hole somewhere.

He needs the former but he - or she - is the one best able to make sense of things - like Lebby, who lives hundreds of miles away from any LWLG labs.

JMO.

Best, Terry