RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:Slow is smoothcanyousayiii wrote: They can have a time range for listing, but it is not fully in their control. They can have some time range for client contract signing but obviously they can't control it. Nasdaq listing and contracts are not coordinated. We are listing on Nasdaq forever. Any big listing splash is temporary and great for those of you that are trading it on volatility. Slow is smooth, smooth is fast. They've been at this for 25 years, those having invested during the slow part have been nicely rewarded. I got into the fast part so no sales announcement can come too soon. Peter will need to explain pretty soon why "eager" clients cannot decide in months how to proceed with a price quote. I get client A piloting the one torch. And if client B knows of this pilot and is maybe delaying the decision to see how the pilot goes, let us know.
I thinks a bit more complicated than most people think. Besides negotiating the price, they have to decide on how many. If it's a large number say 100 or more, they have decide which ones to switch out first. Then there's whatever government regulations have to be met . Also the electrical connection and what's involved with setting that all up. These are not problems that are solved in one day or one month. For sure its not just one person involved with each company but more likely a committee, especially when dealing with millions if not hundreds of millions. These are just a few things that I can think of that would take time. Jmo