RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:warrant speed up is a sign of ?I think the most significant thing going is their demo project but I am still not sure how that monetizes. Do the companies involved pitch in sales and marketing afterwards, or is it the recognition that is supposed to sell itself.[/quote]
Another thumbs up.
It must be recalled that this "demo project" is not a new installation, nor a current model, but merely a refurbishment or upgrade of an old system that has already been in place for ten years. [see reference at 12:40 of the video]
If people had been beating path to the door of this "world class" enterprise, they have had ten years to get to the door, let alone open it, have a look inside, and come to a purchase decision.
The window for the early redemption of the warrants -- if anyone has the disposable resources or desire to purchase them, even at 10 cents, rather than let them expire unexercised as a lost cause and (more) money down the drain -- which expires in a few days, may put a quarter mill or less in the kitty to keep the lights on and buy a couple of lattes (it's B.C. after all), but that money is not derived from "sales" nor does it represent "revenue".
As the news from Colorado reported by G100% usefully discloses, the big boys now in the sandbox playing with SHR engineering are Enwave and Brookfield Infrastructure Partners who, as they say, being Brookfield Boys, have a grip and a fist.
Any hope left for the Spitfire and Bamboo Boys and Girls are, under the new business model, marketing (and sales of) smaller scale niche products, and, as it would seem from the ten-year experiment that has not ignited sales, some with a yet-to-be-proven track record.
Will G100% consider this reality check as "bashing"?
Or more correctly and pragmatically, as one element of doing due diigence, and keeping an eye on investments in a portfolio so as to "know when to hold 'em and...." https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BY8t7ckqWOc