InvestorsHub Logo

Quikshft

04/15/22 12:46 AM

#39799 RE: twaflyer1 #39797

This is the same sack of garbage you've been spewing for years. You have some things stuck in your head you believe are facts, but the fact is that you don't understand.

where they licensed out the CHS product to make it productive,


They (Coretec) did not license a product. They licensed the rights to a patented method of synthesizing CHS that was NOT SCALEABLE. I've told you this multiple times, provided you the NDSU patent so you could read it for yourself and figure it out, obviously you choose to keep your head in the sand so you can believe the conspiracy theories you hatched out. NDSU's patent on CHS is worthless. That is why Coretec quit paying the license fees and Kraft hired a team to develop their own method of synthesis, for which a UTILITY patent was filed. Subsequently the patent was published and anybody (even you) can search for it and read it. Not hard to do. The patent will most likely be granted this year. What will you say then?

remember very well what happened shortly after the Licensing agreement, where Kraft went after every possible client, and promised us all how great he was doing!


More spew. Look back in any of the filings and tell us who these 'clients' were. There were no clients, there was just certain industries that Coretec believed CHS was potentially useful to. Without material to sell, there are no customers. Geleste could not scale CHS using the NDSU patent. Remember Geleste? That was a deal that Kraft made, but too bad NDSU's patent was garbage and useless to Coretec, Geleste and anybody else. Why do you find this so hard to accept? It is the plain and simple truth. You've dreamed Kraft into some kind of corporate boogey man. Do yourself a favor, read the filings and the patents that are published. It's all there for a person who wants to learn what has happened.

And we don't need a professorship from you or anyone else about what a Provisional patent is, as we knew why they were using that option years ago, and are still using it?


Yes, you do. A provisional patent is the FIRST STEP in the process of protecting your invention. You have an idea, a process, a design and you do a patent search to see if it might already be patented. If not, file a provisional patent which gives the inventor a year to tune and adjust the claims, do marketing research or whatever. A provisional patent is incredibly useful. The last point I'll make here - a provisional patent is a space saver. Your filing date is incredibly important because if someone else has the same idea you do, who gets claim to the invention? The first one who filed. You characterize a provisional patent as a worthless piece of paper. Lots to learn have you.

My hope was for the CHS product to be used in Electric Vehicle Batteries


Hello, anybody home? Not only is CHS viable in EV batteries, they are proving it by developing one of their own design. Not bad for a guy only working eight days a month lol.

If this Co' doesn't have sales in the next year, all I have to say is that you are missing out


Sales aren't even required for this company's stock price to attain a much higher level. They have I.P. which is a viable method of CHS synthesis and has already been vetted and deemed scaleable by Evonik, another Coretec partner. The research from the European agents was based on year long engagements. That is up in June for the work being done by Dr. Bakkers at Eindhoven University of Technology. Lots of irons in the fire that can impact the price of a share.

You really need to give up some of those bogus facts you're so in love with. Nobody cares about the past you keep dredging up, especially your version of it. Silicon anode technology is in its infancy, the winners have not been determined. Then there are several other industries where CHS has the potential to disrupt, not mention C-Space which is currently being pushed ahead by Adelaide University in Australia. The Coretec future is bright, how does Kraft do it all in just eight days a month?