RE:RE:RE:RE:Stock PriceIt is of course risky to buy into an "idea". Riskier if the "idea" is far fetched and doesn't make any sense from a sciencific and engineering standpoint. And riskier still if the technical details are conveniently withheld. In my own mind, even if you could "print" a battery someday, is it economically viable? I mean will it first take $5 billion in R&D. Then you will design a printer that costs $20 million to buy and takes about 3 days to print each battery at $500 a crack. And then those "batteries" maybe not half as good as the ones you buy at the store for 50 cents. Or maybe the printer will be $50, the batteries it prints will cost 5 cents and print at 1000 per minute; and the R&D is all trite. A really BIG MAYBE. My own impression is it is more likely the former than the latter, and there is nothing of any real economic value here. And the share price does not need to hold at $1. It can drop to 50 cents, and then 25 and then 10 and so on. It may even drop all the way right down to what the company and its fanciful idea is actually worth. The really smart ones are the ones that bailed at $2.50, and everyone who got out over $2.00 is happy. And if you bought in at those prices, you made a mistake, and it is better to cut your losses now, than to lose it all. At least that has been and is still my opininon.