Part 2 with first of 2 next post ( ie In reverse order of two posts) of 2: Kathy Knight-McConnell Special Update: 
  On July 27, 1999, Rhombic Corporation announced that a third proposal has  been accepted from the University of Missouri at Columbia that uses the  company's "Forced Diffusion" technology to produce a quality line of colored  diamonds for the rapidly growing high-end accessory market. The "Forced  Diffusion" process will be used to change ordinary colorless white diamonds  into beautiful and valued shades of pink, orange, blue, and green and  possibly the very rare red. The color changes to these diamonds will be  virtually undetectable from natural colored diamonds. Colored diamonds, known  as fancies, are valued for their depth of color, just as white diamonds are  valued for their lack of color.
  The company's initial 1996 experimental work in altering color in diamonds  was successful in producing diamonds in a color range of range to carnation.  In the same year the figure for annual retail sales of colored gemstone  jewelry was estimated at $10 billion while the world jewelry market is  estimated to be between $50 and $60 billion according to Cheryl Kremkow,  Director of International Colored Gemstone Association Gembureau. Plans for  implementation and development of the new project are scheduled to commence  on September 1, 1999.
  Since the color change will be used to enhance natural diamonds, the "Forced  Diffusion" process will produce colored diamonds with the same properties;  physical, optical, chemical, brilliance, and fire of a natural diamond unlike  moissanite or cubic zirconia that are only simulants containing a different  chemistry, different optical properties, etc.
  June 28, 1999, Rhombic Corporation announced that the company has accepted a  second proposal from the University of Missouri to participate in a joint  research plan to develop doped diamond electrodes and undoped diamond film  for the hydrogen fuel cell market. 
  The doped diamond electrodes will be non-corrosive with the unique features  of excellent thermal, chemical, and electrical conductive properties. The use  of boron doped diamond film in the development of these electrodes will add  efficiency to hydrogen fuel cells now being produced for automobiles, buses,  and trucks. Work on this project also is expected to begin on September 1,  1999.
  On June 21, 1999, Rhombic Corporation announced that the company has accepted  a proposal from the University of Missouri to use its laboratory facilities,  technical equipment, and personnel in the purification of silicon carbide and  gallium nitride wafer materials using the Rhombic technology "to purify the  gallium nitride of the unintentional oxygen and silicon impurities  incorporated into the structure, and to purify the silicon carbide wafers of  the pollutants boron, nitrogen, and oxygen." This project began July 1, 1999  under the supervision of Dr. Mark Prelas. The wafers which were purchased  from US manufacturers in two and three inch crystal sizes are being treated  with Rhombic's patented "Forced Diffusion" process. 
  The gallium nitride wafer is a blue laser generator, and silicon carbide is a  major factor in high temperature, high speed electronics. Both materials are  light emitting diodes that can be modified to produce photovoltaic cells that  assist in the conversion of ultra violet light to electricity. Reducing the  impurities in the wafers would give them an improved effectiveness with a  longer life span, and simplify the construction of photovoltaic cells.
  According to the 1999 Industry Report, "Silicon will remain the dominant  material for substrates and wafers for the foreseeable future with demand  exceeding $7 billion in 1999. The push for ever greater performance at lower  prices has brought new wafer technologies into the market."
  Rhombic's patented "Forced Diffusion" process can be used to add to or to  take out impurities from diamond, silicon carbide, gallium nitride, and other  special materials to midify the optical, chemical, electrical, and mechanical  properties of those materials.
  ...deleted some... On April 14, 1999, Rhombic announced a six weeks feasibility study being  produced by three major computer corporations on the applications and  economic viability of Rhombic's diamond technology.
  The Nuclid Battery The nuclid battery which is a more advanced version of the nuclear battery,  owned 100% by Rhombic Corporation, produces energy from the breakdown of  unstable isotopes of a number of basic elements such as Krypton, Strontium,  and Cesium. The battery's single purpose is to provide a generation or more  of constant energy for both manned and unmanned space flights to nearby  planets and eventually outer space.
  Dr. Reinhard Hopfl of Germany, represented Rhombic Corporation's nuclid  battery at the Geneva, Switzerland June 12-14, 1999 summit meeting of  International Computer and Communications.  Initial contacts have been made  among the top producers of satellites during the IC&C summit.  The Russian  Academy of Sciences was among new members being sponsored. Rhombic  Corporation soon will have the honor of being considered as a member.
  Special Update - On April 9, 1999 a special report was released on the Nuclid  Battery which stated, "Recent planning among the Russian and German  co-inventors of the Rhombic Radio Nuclid Battery (Dust Plasma Battery)  includes information about extensive experiments by the Russian Academy of  Sciences with anticipated new runs on the MIR Space Station. 
  Members of the forthcoming International Space Laboratory, after docking its  third module, and scheduling astronauts for the year 2000, will provide a  priority experiment in space to be performed by the Rhombic Dust plasma  Battery. 
  The last experiments in the MIR space station were continued throughout  January 1999, and are still being evaluated at present. One of the first  experiments in the manned flight in early 2000 will be on dust plasmas. A  Russian team will cooperate in the experiment with a team from the Max Plank  Institute in Germany.
  Dr. Heinrich Hora, representing Rhombic Corporation, recently initiated  contact with the International Computer and Communication Corporation (IC&C)  in Reston, Virginia in order to promote the Battery for use in the low  orbital communication satellites being launched in the near future to  accommodate the quickly expanding cellular and internet business. Large-scale  development and mass production of the Battery may necessitate the  involvement of a large satellite company or a consortium of them. Doctor  Hora's contacts with communication companies, in particular IC&C, may help  Rhombic in these developments.  
  Dr. Hora's latest report indicates that the much lighter weight and lesser  cost of Rhombic's Super Compact Battery may prove essential to reduce the  projected cost of the first 400 satellites into space.  Former vice president  of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Dr. Vladimir Fortov, lately reported to  Dr. Hora that there has been "extensive progress" of work on the SRB with  dust plasmas. 
  Diamond Flywheel Battery  In May 1997, Rhombic Corporatio... deleted some here....
  Rhostar.com and the Rhombic Explorer RhoStar.com will offer an innovative online distribution channel for software  and information products. Their mission is to provide product developers and  consumers with new and more powerful relationships and will offer a  qualitatively distinct method for achieving rapid results  A spinoff of Rhombic Corporation, RhoStar.com is in the planning stages to be  an online distribution channel offering product developers a self-selecting  means to achieve faster market penetration. The customers will become the  distribution channel and each party will benefit. Initial products for this  distribution channel will include the Rhombic Explorer.
  The Rhombic Explorer will make life easier for millions of Internet users. It  will also make thousands of organizations more efficient and productive  because the Rhombic Explorer will provide a powerful tool for gathering  information automating the painstaking and tedious process of manual web  surfing. The Rhombic Explorer will accomplish this by giving consumers and  organizations a new set of capabilities. 
  The Rhostar website is now under construction and may be viewed at  rhostar.com. Overview of the Software  The Rhombic Explorer will automate Web searching, the most commonplace and  time wasting task performed on the Internet. This task has only been possible  for a few years so the opportunity to automate it has only now emerged. The  Rhombic Explorer integrates familiar design principles from other kinds of  software, making it easy to use and to understand. It provides new powers and  tremendous convenience and timesaving to every individual and every  organization that uses the World Wide Web. It is a new type of software, with  all the potential that statement implies. 
  Individual Benefits include: * Automates a slow, manual task * Uses off peak  hours  * Prevents redundant searching * Provides condensed versions of sites *  Reduction of online charges * Corporate Benefits * Reduced staff costs.  Employees are freed to perform other tasks. * Improved staff productivity *  Reduced communication costs. Queries can be consolidated and executed at the  most cost effective times and dates.  * Central coordination of searches for improved efficiency and supervision  * Elimination of duplicate searches * Accelerated response when queries yield  sites already searched. Instead of downloading and scanning a site, taking  many minutes, the database constructs a response in seconds. * Automated  construction and maintenance of a corporate knowledge base 
  Millions of individuals and knowledge workers spend more time surfing the Web  than on any other Internet activity. 72% of Internet users surf the web at  least once a day, 41% 6-10 hours a week. Searching the Web is fun, but it is  also a slow, painstaking and inefficient manual process. The fun wears off,  but the work remains. Studies of Internet usage by SunSoft and others reveal  harried workers racing through web pages under deadlines, scanning rather  than reading web copy, missing most of the available information for research  tasks, and duplicating their own searches and those of their co-workers. The  costs and waste are enormous.  Individual users suffer the same frustration and inconvenience. Stymied by  slow response times and frequent dropouts during peak usage hours, many North  American users do their Web research in the small hours of the morning, when  they should be sleeping, or after getting up very early. This leads to  increased fatigue and stress, and a host of secondary health and productivity  effects in the workplace. 
  The Rhombic Explorer solves these problems neatly. It provides an easy,  convenient way to automate manual work. The benefits provided to individuals  are multiplied when used by organizations. The Rhombic Explorer is a new  class of software that creates a vast new market. Powerful cost/benefit  justifications open up the corporate and government markets. 
  FaxKey The FaxKey will be a compact, simple device to send, store and receive secure  facsimile documents without demanding any action beyond the insertion of a  key. Both the sender and the receiver are freed from the need to key in pass  codes or instruction sequences. The security provided would be equivalent to  that provided by more complex protocols without demanding error-prone extra  steps. The competitive advantage of this design lies in its ability to offer  convenient and flexible security at low cost.  The FaxKey will be a separate device, able to operate with any fax. The only  connection to the fax unit would be a short length of phone line. Power  requirements will be small because the FaxKey design will employ low power  chipsets like those in palmtop or laptop computers. No power cord is required  because it will draw power from the phone jack (as standard telephones do).  The FaxKey would be a simpler device than a computer, with a low parts count.  When not encrypting, decrypting, or storing secure faxes the FaxKey will act  as a passive buffer, taking no action. The FaxKey will offer the option of  storing printout faxes if the connecting fax unit is unavailable, for example  when connected to a personal computer, which may be turned off or removed. 
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  Kathy Knight-McConnell Investor to Investor investortoinvestor.com
  Disclaimer: Knight-McConnell Information Retrieval Service and Investor to  Investor Newsletter is not nor does it claim to be a licensed stock broker,  analyst or financial advisor.  This service and newsletter has been set up  strictly to provide research information.  All research information is  obtained from sources believed to be reliable.  I and my research helpers  take no responsibility for decisions made by individual investors based upon  information provided.  All research is provided for informational purposes  only. If in the course of my contact with said company(s) I should be  instrumental in providing Internet consultation services or making  introductions to other parties who may be in a position to help said  companies and it is totally unrelated to my writing about said company(s), it  is not beyond the realm of possibility that payment for those particular  services might be received. In that event I will make full disclosure. I may  on occasion trade shares of stock that I have purchased and am under no  obligation to announce all of those trades.  However, if I should sell a  position due to adverse conditions, I will so inform my readers of that  adverse condition so that they may make their own evaluations in that regard.  Investor to Investor is a subscription based newsletter.  All subscription  fees are nominal and cover the costs of research and time spent compiling  information on publicly traded companies.  The first issue is always free to  new subscribers.
  NOTE:   I have been writing about NUKE since I wrote my first review in the  May 1998 issue of Investor to Investor  for which I have not been paid nor  have I requested payment for that review.  I have recently been retained by  Pacific Bay Financial to provide services as a market information support  systems consultant in regard to the writing of press releases and other  documents for Rhombic Corporation.  Payment for my services was originally  stated to have been 20,000 stock options exercisable at .50.  This has been  changed to 10,000 shares of stock which has been received for services  rendered in connection with the agreement with Pacific Bay Financial.  I have  not been paid by Rhombic Corporation, any of its  directors, officers, or any  of its affiliates to provide any services whatsoever to the company itself. P.S.- Chucka Adds- P.B.F. and the SEC I mentioned are ...Pacific Bay Financial above lines and my Sectuities & Exchange IR assistance to P.B.F. PP ( or Personal Profile at S.I. ) Disclosure- ie I am helping promote Rhombic for 20,000 options for 20,000 shares in which I write a Check for $10 K or $13 K ( up to $13,000 for 20,000 shares with my own funds up to 5-1-2000 with my thinking- THAT THIS IS A GREAT DEAL- so at this current price- NOW- you can play it also in a similar but NOW way at the same or better 65 cents rate of per share level- LOVE you say, yeap! ) |