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spartex

11/16/21 10:50 PM

#84110 RE: Scope08 #84108

That last trade of 63,463 looks very interesting as it settled at 7:40:16 pm EST. Maybe a final large fill for an institution by the MMs??? If so, then I would assume it is bullish.
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noblynx

11/17/21 3:35 AM

#84114 RE: Scope08 #84108

Cathie will report on her 70,000 share purchase a little later today.
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Rkf302

11/17/21 7:19 AM

#84121 RE: Scope08 #84108

Excellent catch scope. Of course I have no idea..
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x993231

11/17/21 7:40 AM

#84126 RE: Scope08 #84108

Honestly that was a good move after hours 19:40:16 $14.01 63,463 that was $889k. I totally missed it but anyone buying north of 10k shares has very difficult time with out breaking it up into small purchases which is a pain because the MM's will push this north.

Just as we couldn't wait to trade a Million shares in a day I can not wait for one of the institutions to own 1 Million shares.

A Patented Polymer Material when added to Silicon Photonics Triples the Speed and uses half the power. Lightwaves material is so sensitive that as the Electrons roll off the Silicon it can embed that data directly into a laser without the need for a power hungry driver. You see in todays devices they have to increase the voltage up to 10 volts so not only is that expensive but it also produces heat which requires A.C.

Now where is that Green Mutual Fund At?

Please Read Photonics guys post not only is he in the field but does an excellent highly professional job on his posts

https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=166518317

https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=166533233

Connecting a few dots...

Let's review a few facts and see if we can draw some reasonable conclusions.

Facts:

1. Traditionally, Data Center operators (the FAANG's, Facebook, Amazon, etc.) contract with large hardware manufacturers/integrators (Intel, Cisco, etc.) to design/build the data centers to meet specific requirements of the operator. The H/W manufacturers then work with individual transceiver providers to build components that enabled the integrator to meet the requirements of the data center operator. This results in the entire system being "owned" by the data center operator along with all of the leverage that entails. For example, if LWLG modulators were used in this process, then the IP gleaned by Lightwave can only be sold to Intel – control over Lightwave’s revenue and access to markets is in the hands of Intel. This has resulted in an almost monopolistic control over the marketplace into the hands of the large system operators.

2. Dr. Lebby emphasized that LWLG is working with foundries (plural) to provide them with PDKs to allow LWLG IP to be embedded into the foundries' processes to enable various foundry customers to produce components that include LWLG polymers.

3. Dr. Lebby mentioned in the recent AGM presentation of the need for "standardization" in the fabrication of photonics products. Essentially, selecting the features desired from a catalog, customizing the platform and then fabricating them to meet a customer's specific needs.

4. Global Foundries (about to go IPO) purchased a commodity chip operation from IBM. From a Forbes article about GF's Malta operation:
Quote:
Through strategic acquisitions, such as IBM’s microelectronics business, and fruitful partnerships with the likes of Ayar Labs and MACOM, GlobalFoundries quietly became a force in silicon photonics. It’s already captured 10% of the foundry business—if it continues at this rate, it will soon be impossible to overlook.


Let's see if we can connect a few of these dots...

Suppose that LWLG and GF were to establish a partnership. This would easily enable any number of component manufacturers to include LWLG IP in their transceivers along with the performance benefits of polymers. Then these massive markets are able to be addressed in a much accelerated fashion with relatively small incremental investment as GF already has all the trained staff, factories and equipment along with LWLG's PDK processes in place to instantly spin LWLG polymers into these new components.

If this were to be the case, this partnership would hit the ground running and could ramp up at an astonishing rate. Lightwave would avoid the growing pains of building a company from scratch with the required staffing, training, equipment, real-estate development, testing labs, etc. that would be required if they were to go it alone.

Occam's Razor: "the simplest explanation is usually the best one."

I usually don't operate in the realm of speculation and conjecture, but when taking all the above facts into context and applying Occam's Razor results in the distinct possibility/probability that something similar to the above conclusion may be in the works.

PG

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