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Technology Stocks : JMAR Technologies(JMAR) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bilberry who wrote (3937)11/12/1997 8:44:00 AM
From: jeff  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9695
 
Anyone: What happen to red chip rev. should have
been out on the 5TH .
Has anybody seen it yet?
Thanks Jeff Bensinger



To: Bilberry who wrote (3937)11/12/1997 9:05:00 AM
From: Ed Newman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9695
 
I don't believe the Street cares about a small company' potential. They want to see performance and, frankly, JMAR is just a small company without high-flying revenues or earnings. I love the company's prospects, but they still haven't really done the big wingspan thing yet.

One firm I have an association with does not care a fig about understanding what a company does. They have a formula that rates earnings growth and revenue growth and some other proprietary numbers.

As everyone knows: Pro JMAR all the way.... Long.
e



To: Bilberry who wrote (3937)11/12/1997 10:22:00 AM
From: Frank Haims  Respond to of 9695
 
Bilberry,Appreciate your posts. I believe the Jmar Britelite would be used to make multiple holes in a high definition TV mask. This would require precision and power to do multiple holes in one pass. It would also cut the cost of making the masks one of the key componets to HDTV
That was what I garnered talking to the company a month or so ago. Frank



To: Bilberry who wrote (3937)12/31/1997 6:01:00 PM
From: timwa  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 9695
 
Does anyone know anything about JMAR's involvement in LCD technology. It is my understanding that this is one of the areas that their lasers will be used for.

I did find a reference to a paper written by someone at JMAR and others from Hitachi presented at a conference last February.

Harry Shields, JMAR Technology Co. Excimer ablation lithography (EAL) for TFT-LCD (Invited Paper), K. Suzuki, M. Matsuda, T. Ogino, N. Hayashi, T. Terabayashi, K. Amemiya, Hitachi, Ltd. (Japan) [2992-16]

source:http://www.spie.org/web/meetings/programs/pw97/conferences/pw97_2992.html

JMAR has often refered to how their lasers interact in "unique" or "revolutionary" ways with materials.

It sounds as though they may be referring to laser ablation, which is a process that uses short pulses of high peak power laser radiation to rapidly heat and vaporize thin layers of contaminants.