InvestorsHub Logo
icon url

The Great Pumpkin

11/15/19 9:06 AM

#50276 RE: yanquitrader #50275

Old discrete tech. The market has moved on to better form factors and materials. Unstable material compared to the silicon PIC's coming and at market. Impossible and/or expensive to scale devices, no processes at fab foundry. Over two decades in business and have yet to produce and sell a single widget. Failed science experiment.

It's a paycheck scam!

#scam
icon url

walterc

11/15/19 9:15 AM

#50277 RE: yanquitrader #50275

legitimate question
imho because you first have to convince the sector before you can convince the institutionals.

polymers were long distrusted and were given up 15 years ago; Now 15 years later we come back and we say , we have been solving all of the problems of the past and can do a lot more than everything which exists today..
The sector says ok give us the data , prove it ...
And the financial market thinks;;; if you want us to invest , first let the sector decide whether they want you or not.
The same with financing; Of course there are VCs who want to invest , but at a price which is detrimental for the present shareholders and we may worse off than with Lincoln with these VCs.
So if we have the data and can convince the sector the situation may change overnight.

But that is just mho , and I am getting old ....
icon url

noblynx

11/15/19 9:38 AM

#50279 RE: yanquitrader #50275


I'd suggest you go here (https://www.slideshare.net/Protik007/uv-visiblespectroscopy) to get the chromophore thing, and especially the absorption of incoming light causing the "transitions" described on these two slides (and maybe think of those transitions as being between zeros and ones in byte science?). My (perhaps flawed) understanding of this science is that these complex chromophores are the dispersed, securely embedded little switches in the special, surrounding "plastic," and you just plain can't have that plastic softening or melting in those heated conditions (the chromophores drifting around?), and it's really challenging to create such stability and there have long been attempts by the likes of Intel and others - all of which have failed... until now, apparently. The scientists of little Lightwave Logic have got to prove this, though, because the accomplishment would be/is(?) beyond huge and the value (what LWLG should rightfully charge) is commensurate.
icon url

inversor86

11/15/19 10:32 PM

#50301 RE: yanquitrader #50275

If you were here 6 years ago, some would tell you that Lincoln Park is an institutional investor.

No institutional investor will buy this stock here. But if Lightwave begins to have success and sales, they will buy it up after it is already up 600%.