RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:More Dyna-math....First of all - employees and officers of the company cannot "post" things or submit press releases that are not based soley in fact. The comapany's shares a sold publicly, and there are strict guidelines as to what they can publish and what they cannot publish. They are following the law strictly - as they should. Second --- with all due respect -- when you make a comment like " ... would probably result in ap ositive move in the share price ..." ... you again are demonstrating naivety in your expectations of your "investing" activity. Like I said before -- movements in a stock price due to "news" or "public sentiment" are artifcial and meaningless to begin with. The ONLY thing that truly determines a company's stock price - is its "value." A business's value is solely a function of its cash flow - anything else is neither real nor sustainable. The company is not "pre-revenue," but it is indeed "pre-profits." Until the company's sustained sales growth yields a free cash flow that determines an increased value to the business - there will be no REAL grown in the stock price. Indeed, you have to be patient - but watching this day to day hoping for incremental movements in the stock price to make yourself feel better is an exercise in futility and frustration. This is indeed what novice investors expect - but who inadvertently put money into a speculation without understanding where growth and value actually come from. If you want my humble advice it's this --- this is a penny stock. Whatever money you have put in it so far - you should resign yourself to expect to lose every penny of it - and stop gluing yourself to the stock reports hopeing for some glimmer of movement. Any glimmer of movement between now and next year is meaningless anyway. You won't see any profits, until this company EARNS profits, and that's going to take another few quarters -- maybe anohter year. So yes - be patient - but more importantly - stop beating yourself up by feeling like you made a mistake to put money into this business. No one can predict whether it was a mistake or not - until the company either ramps up sales into overdrives or shuts down. Whichever happens - you have no control over at this point. This is why it is a speculation - and NOT an "investment." People have to realize that putting money into stocks is MORE OFTEN THAN NOT - nothing more than gambling. When you go and buy a lottery ticket and lose - you don't run around demonizing the lottery commission for their incompetence -- you expect to lose that money. People need to understand that the same is ttrue when buying penny stocks of a startup company. It is always a gamble - because like I wrote in my first post --- this company could do everything absolutely right - and still could fail because of things beyond anyone's control. That is the reality of nature. So - do yourself a favor - stop sweating over what you have already put into it, and consider it a lesson. Sit back and wait. The product definitely works and works well - I've seen it with my own eyes. But that's not enough. Getting a few major trucking companies to grow the balls to become early adopters is no easy task -- this is not something that can sell itself, much to the chagrin of many people out here. However I am certain that once one or two major trucking companies finally wakes up to the exceptional benefits they can gain from employing this technology on a fleet - the possibilities are huge. But these are just "possibilitieis." That's what speculating is all about. So sit tight - stay calm, don't panic, and if you cannot accept speculating on something for which you might lose every nickel you put into it -- then don't. You have to know yourself and your appetite for risk. If you are not a gambler - then stick to only buying dividend-paying stocks of long established companies whose stock price is at least $5 per share. This is one of the basic guidelines followed by fund managers -- and that is for a reason. They are investing "other people's money," and must employ discipline to invest - and not speculate. I hope this helps.