Habeas Fides
posted on
Apr 01, 2014 06:57AM
I include at the foot of this page a 3 month graph of PTK share price. If you had bought 1000 shares on January 2 2014 they would have cost you $560.00 As I write at midday UK time they are worth $1360.00.
This represents a 1360/560 x 100 = 242% increase, i.e. almost a 2.5 times increase, in value over 3 months. This has been achieved by a company with no revenue stream, on the basis of an apparent groundbreaking technological idea and some supportive evidence from the company. I suggest this is a remarkable performance which should, in the not too distant furture, continue.
Many who read this forum will have been disconcerted by the messages from doubters. If you purport to write as an expert on technolgy issues then it is an imperative to understand what a microchip does and how it works. The speed of processing is determined by several factors, clock speed, chip conductivity, electron availability, circuit integration, density of transistors, band width of transmission etc.
POET's advantages are: it has more free electrons (that is a feature of GaAs' molecular structure), clock speeds are extraordinarily high (silicon has not changed for some years at less than 3 Ghz/sec because of in-chip energy losses associated with minaturisation etc.; GaAs can run above 60 Ghz), circuit integration is, as far as I am aware, unrivalled as all the processing is monolithic (single build on one chip, including CPU, memory, and not separated as in silicon) and because of its structure and reduced energy losses, its power demands are substantially lower. I am not aware of any other process that can, at this point in time, so dramatically reduce production costs and increase performance as this product.
Thus, a doubter should, at least, be aware of these facts. I did not see in recent entries on the forum any mention of clock speed or any understanding of molecular composition. My inclination is too dismiss the doubts as uniformed, though I am perfectly happy to be corrected.
My message is a positive one. Hold on to those shares all ye longholders, your day cometh, habeas fides. From here in the UK, as oft in the past, westward look, the sky is brighter.
David