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adanac

12/10/11 9:45 AM

#81918 RE: jmhollen #81917

My comments are in CAPS
YOU WROTE:
Having helped design, build, and move high-speed pad machines for P&G and J&J
DID YOU DO ALL 3 JOBS FOR BOTH COMPANIES???
ARE THE MACHINES IDENTICAL,
WERE THEY BOTH HEAVY TO MOVE?
WHERE ARE THE PLANTS LOCATED, AS SOME HERE THINK KNOWING THAT IS VITAL TO THEIR INVESTMENT

Having helped design, build, and move high-speed pad machines for P&G and J&J (who have mega worldwide hygiene product markets), I'm extremely skeptical that these former Mellon Ball misfits can make much of a dent with their "who-da-fudge"-branded offerings even if they get Oprah to pump them.

IF YOU HAD DONE 'RECENT DD', YOU WOULD REALIZE THAT THE FORMER "MELLON BALL MISFITS" (LED BY MARIO PINO) ARE LONG GONE FROM MANAGEMENT (ALTHOUGH SOME HERE REFUSE TO BELIEVE IT)

If you have a daughter or sister who could do an in-house product test for you, then maybe some 0.0001'rs backed up by a LIMIT SELL GTC-60+ at +25% for 60% of your stash will Free-Share you out - so that you can watch the leftovers over time. Don't forget to keep the Roto-Rooter guy's phone number handy; tee hee... There will surely be a MMM manipu-Pop to grease the Innies and Pumpers; your GTC SELL will cover you on that score.

NOT SURE WHAT YOU'RE SAYING THERE.

If disposables were really a big deal, trust me, P&G would have been all over it years ago. These disposables will have to pass through strainers and traps in large buildings. I don't think they will degrade fast enough to suit the plumbing in most buildings already in service.

'trust me', IS A PHRASE USED BY CAR SALESMEN, NOT A GOOD THING TO USE ON A BB. (TRUST ME)

ARE YOU AWARE THAT 'OLDER VERSIONS OF THE PRODUCT' WERE SOLD IN VARIOUS PARTS OF THE WORLD, INCLUDING WALMART. OF COURSE YOU WOULD KNOW, YOU HAVING BEEN INVOLVED IN THE 'DESIGN, BUILD AND MOVE' OF 2 COMPETITORS.

YOU SEE, WOMEN DON'T HAVE TO FLUSH THEM, BUT THEY CAN. THEY DO IT WITH P&G AND J&J VERSIONS OF THE PRODUCT ANYWAYS.

crazyjerry

12/11/11 2:06 AM

#81954 RE: jmhollen #81917

Not familar with S1, so please explain, and I may want to join it, otherwise I'll just post publicly, have nothing to hide.
One closing note though, I just talked to a corporate accountant friend of mine from college and he said most start-ups lose money for 3-4 years once they are in production, and PYCT has only lost $183,000 accumlated, as of the 3rd Qtr with no production on the books yet, so their fins are in good shape. They could wife out that net loss in one year easily, making them 2-3 years ahead of the average start-up. At the point they are at now would be considered the start-up date because that's when they started producing.