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biosectinvestor

07/17/22 1:16 PM

#495777 RE: hyperopia #495775

I’m not going to discuss it further Hyperopia. I think you’re not understanding my points and they are quite obvious for anyone who has ever been involved in a large manufacturing organization, which I have been, though I do not post my personal particulars. You’re tying up a large space when most of the processing is happening inside of a cartridge. Anything that happens when the cells are left in disturbed for x days, can be done in parallel up to the limitations of space, and capacity for capable management. Processes in automation can be and are staggered for that reason. That is how automation evolves and works. As I originally said, deploying the machines initially that they had is likely version 1.0, but manufacturing tends to evolve so that the first version of the line at Ford’s Model T line is much different than the next and the next after that. First it is craftsmen, doing their thing, moving the process along, then it is less and less that as they figure out how to break the process down. That is how capacity increases. Much of the process is contained in a predestined “cartridge”, which makes it even easier to do this, though monitoring and zero defects is a critical part of the process. That ultimately also will likely be automated.

As you envision it, the machine is effectively the core pricess, sitting idle while the cells do their thing inside a cartridge. You do not seem to get the bigger picture and so when you make claims about space and limitations, it’s like a banker writing about manufacturing. Further I said that may be version 1.0, but that is not how an industrialization process works. The point of it is to keep and increase serial and parallel processing during periods when you’re not mechanically having to externally and physically do a lot of activities with the cartridge beyond the various connections that need to be maintained. That is the point of containing a process like that in an enclosed space. So that much of the process can happen in a much, much smaller space called the cartridge, not at “the machine” level, but at the cartridge level.

I did answer you, you just don’t want to accept the answer. And the pictures, I do not think, nor the presentation, elaborate on the process as you suggest. That’s just your layman’s conclusion.