RE:RE:RE:HPQ Silicon on track for disrupting the solar industryLOOK AT THE SPECIFIC ACCOMPLISHMENTS OF THE MANUFACTURING MANAGERS AND ENGINEERS NOT AT THEIR CREDENTIALS!" Applies perfectly to my other spec play (RGX CEO interview posted today coincidentally). Cheers, Nap
LeMarcus wrote:
I think we can see PYR has a lot of accomplishements and a growing business.
So, that bodes well for that part.
3N/4N better cheaper!
For the rest, to be continued.
Top scientists who are also top engineers are rare. Scientists will the skills to choose engineers and managers who can commercialize their dreams are rarer. LOOK AT THE SPECIFIC ACCOMPLISHMENTS OF THE MANUFACTURING MANAGERS AND ENGINEERS NOT AT THEIR CREDENTIALS!"
Read more at https://www.stockhouse.com/companies/bullboard/v.hpq/hpq-silicon-resources-inc?postid=25331699#R78d3xoiVAdgVbtQ.99
IvanVanBeethoven wrote: Reply of Jack Lifton
:
"Disruption is unlikely in established well capitalized manufacturing. The real hope for those ventures offering to supply high-tech goods in volume is that their management and marketing teams are intelligent and perspicacious enough to see that they must enter the market by offering the same goods at lower prices. Their goods must be identical in quality and on time delivery to customer specifications at the agreed price. Even so it will take time to be approved as first an alternate supplier and then as the designated supplier. Thus sufficient capital and stick-to-it-iveness are the keys to success for “disruptive” technologies. Top scientists who are also top engineers are rare. Scientists will the skills to choose engineers and managers who can commercialize their dreams are rarer. LOOK AT THE SPECIFIC ACCOMPLISHMENTS OF THE MANUFACTURING MANAGERS AND ENGINEERS NOT AT THEIR CREDENTIALS!"
regards
Ivan