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Biotech / Medical : Chromatics Color Sciences International. Inc; CCSI -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jeffrey L. Henken who wrote (5580)10/15/1999 2:00:00 PM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Respond to of 5736
 
A post from Yahoo detailing the probability of additional sales materializing soon:

messages.yahoo.com

this company just moved from an intellectual property company to a viable, legitimate, fully productive manufacturer of a great product. They now have sales revenues and will be profitable this quarter probably, next quarter for sure. They are continuing to fulfill the terms of their agreement with Datex-Ohmeda and the next step is the current delivery (per contract) of another 500 units along with around 200,000 more lensettes. That's gotta be over $2million in additional revenue.

I love a good rumor!!!



To: Jeffrey L. Henken who wrote (5580)10/15/1999 3:05:00 PM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5736
 
Dr. Alan Greene could be a powerful voice aiding parents to make the world a little more friendly to their newborn infants.

The good doctor's site gets 1 million hits a month!!!

CCSI's TLc test, has proven 95 percent accurate, compared to traditional blood tests, according to a study published in the Pediatrics medical journal in September 1998.

''It should make a big difference,'' said Dr. Alan Greene, a pediatrician in San Mateo, Calif., who also runs a pediatric Web site.

drgreene.com

Dr. Greene's HouseCalls currently receives over 1,000,000 hits per month from people all over the world. We are also the proud recipient of many awards including the Yahoo! Internet Life Four Star Award.



To: Jeffrey L. Henken who wrote (5580)10/15/1999 4:42:00 PM
From: Bradpalm1  Respond to of 5736
 
<<McFarlene hopes to use the technology behind the jaundice test to develop noninvasive tests for other medical conditions, such as skin cancer, thyroid disorders and sickle cell anemia>>

What a crock! Darby continues to undermine any hint of credibility she gains with idiotic comments like this....but what else is new? She relegates her "chromogenic" categorization of diseases to the intellectual level of silly pseudo-science and then wonders why the market won't take her technology seriously.

If you weren't such an obsequious butt-kisser, you'd recognize this yourself.