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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Integral Technologies -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Michael L. Bland who wrote (109)2/13/1998 10:58:00 AM
From: Benchman  Respond to of 1108
 
That sounds like a good question. If no one here gets back to you. I 'll call Mike Pound and ask him.

Rob.



To: Michael L. Bland who wrote (109)2/13/1998 12:48:00 PM
From: Benchman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1108
 
Just talked to Mike Pound. He said that Government business should out-pace civilian business in the short-term. In the long-term ITKG is actively looking to find more avenues to sell the attennae's. Mike couldn't go into detail. Also, remember that's not their only product. They seem very high on their counterfeit checking machine. Anyway, I went ahead and picked up 1000 more shares (I know I said I wouldn't, but, couldn't help it). I think we are going to roll with this one.

Rob.



To: Michael L. Bland who wrote (109)2/16/1998 8:04:00 PM
From: Daniel E. Smith  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1108
 
Michael,

The market is huge as this antenna will do things that no other will. For military applications it will make former dream projects a reality.
Also, the call for this antenna in the military and government arena is overwhelming and companies will pay a higher dollar for specialized antennas for specific applications than a cell phone company will pay for a general use antenna. Don't get me wrong, the antenna will eventually dominate all communication areas, but at this time the military need the antenna to enable some of its projects, while the commercial companies would thinks that the antenna is great but already have there financial planning built around other cheap mass produced technologies.The military and government is cream while the commercial is milk and in the short term this means greater profits for Integral.

As for IAS they are a fine company but there is one grey area that has yet to be addressed in regard to the eventual marketing potential of the antenna. That area is intellectual property. Emergent a wholly owned subsidiery of Integral seems to have the manufacturing and production rights to all areas of the antenna. While IAS is licensed to sell the antenna it can not produce them without Integral.

As you can see this makes Integral necessary for IAS to succeed but not the other way around. The intellectual rights to the antenna are owned by Integral.

Betting for the long term or the short Integral wins hands down!

Dan