That's a well composed article David - thanks.
A quick count of computers in this household comes to about 6 PC, tablets and smartphones, 2 Car based, 3 instumemts and machines, 4 Navigational aids on Sula and languishing in the bowels of the garage are 2 old PCs and at least 3 mobile phones. I don't know how many chips this amounts to ,given that circuit boards may carry more , there are cerainly additional chips on graphics cards in the PCs which add to the tally, my guestimate is 20 chips for this household. In many other households there are similar numbers. It would be a reasonalbe assumptione that the number chips in a household will increase in the future.
I am nursing my PC which has a sick graphics card and would like to change it but I am waiting out for the first POET powered PC. Not too long I hope. Clearly like my PC, all the household items above will turnover regularly say every 5-7 years. One wonders just how many chips will the average family use in a lifetime?
My point is that the global market for POET Technology with its faster, cooler, less power and cheaper to make format, is vast. These factors are selling points that cannot be ignored by consumers, a point that will not be lost chip manufacturers and the producers of such products.
Like david I have fatih that POET management's strategy is moving the company to commercilisation and moneterisation. This is a very interesting journey and I am so glad to be on the bus, regardless of the bumpy road for the SP.