OK, so you can talk about NP Aerospace, good. Do you believe that Sintx has or had a partnership with NP Aerospace? Do you believe that NP Aerospace is a stakeholder in Sintx?
Given the partnership Sintx has/had in place with Morgan Advanced Ceramics, do you believe that one of the aerospace supply agreements is to supply Morgan Advanced Ceramics or any of its subsidiaries?
In regards to the recent revelation of a co-funded study by Sintx and Biomet pertaining to use of both companies IP in testing, prior to 2007, do you agree that makes Biomet a stakeholder in Sintx?
Mr Bond, they have a saying in Chicago: 'Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's enemy action'.
One is an incident, two is a coincidence, three's a pattern, and four is enough for a warrant
========================================
Silicon Nitride, a Close to Ideal Ceramic Material for Medical Application
examples of their medical applications that relate to spinal, orthopedic and dental implants, bone grafts and scaffolds, platforms for intelligent synthetic neural circuits, antibacterial and antiviral particles and coatings, optical biosensors, and nano-photonic waveguides for sophisticated medical diagnostic devices are all covered in the research reviewed herein. The examples provided convincingly show that silicon nitride is destined to become a leader to replace titanium and other entrenched biomaterials in many fields of medicine.
Extra information on the status of a Si3n4 based hip implant:
Silicon nitride, silicon carbide and diamond-like carbon as non-oxide ceramics are considered to be the new generation of materials used in hip prosthetics, particularly in the manufacture of acetabular cups, due to their excellent biocompatibility, osteointegration, and tribological and mechanical properties, but all three materials need more study. However, silicon nitride is the nearest to commercialization, through businesses such as Amedica Corp. and SyntX Technologies