I simply asked for some evidence which you are declining to provide. Thus what you are claiming is pure hearsay. The rest of your post is typical disinformation with the exception of one statement where you claim there is evidence that there is something wrong with Sintx. What evidence indicates this? If you have to point to the stockprice as evidence or lack of management buying yet then you clearly have no real evidence there is something wrong with the company. Those only imply there is something wrong without anything of actual substance. If you wanted to make people believe theres something wrong with the company it is an effective method against those who do not look deeper.
Disinformation Techniques employed:
I have learned that you do not change positions regardless the evidence shown.
You've provided no evidence to support this claim, this is simply an ad hominem attack. Sidetrack opponents with name calling and ridicule.
Therefore Sint apparently is the ultimate victim of sinister forces extending all the way through message boards.
There is evidence of this in how the stock trades which you have, to a degree, agreed with. Ignore proof presented
I'd also argue that you engaged in the following to put me on the defensive. Emotionalize, Antagonize, and Goad Opponents.
Again if there was something so wrong with Sintx, evidence should be easy to provide. Also you wouldnt need to use disinformation techniques in your posts. IN addition to your use of disinformation techniques here over on ST, those bashing Sintx also mostly rely on disinformation or point to the stockprice they help manipulate.
Meanwhile here is actual evidence that the company has IP of significant value worth waaay more than SINT is valued. There is something wrong here and its on the market side not company side.
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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.
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