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Microcap & Penny Stocks : TFRY (was FRYA) Tasty Fries, Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Janice Shell who wrote (2345)4/19/2005 10:47:51 PM
From: yardslave  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2405
 
I was thinking about the the "putting the machines into production" problems. I think the biggest things would be to manage the logistics of having a machine that actually fries something. I don't think the machines themselves could be that complicated. I mean there are extremely complicated machines out in the public today. Things like copiers and such. There are no real secrets to manufacturing anymore. What I think would be difficult is maintaining the machines. You need to reload them with grease and food. You need to package the food. You have to figure out how your going to deliver all this stuff out to the machines. You have to train people. You need to clean the machines. You need to monitor freshness (power outages would damage your product). All this in a machine that is doing something that presents a fire hazard risk. Any one of these things wouldn't be a show stopper, but I think all of them put together is a major project. Not impossible, but it does require someone with a lot of talent.

Bill