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To: RealTime=NowTime who wrote (1093)7/10/2025 4:40:24 PM
From: N. Dixon1 Recommendation

Recommended By
dimtint

  Respond to of 1520
 
Didn't have time to watch the whole thing, so I printed out the transcript:

0:02

Welcome to Alpha Wolf Capital. I'm Tim and I want to personally thank you for stopping by. This channel is designed to

0:09

help small companies, both public and private, gain exposure with potential

0:14

consumers, investors, even partners. Take for example today's guest,

0:22

CEO Joe Harrari from Research Frontiers, Inc.

0:28

Research Frontiers is revolutionizing the way the world experiences glass.

0:33

Their patented SPD smart glass technology let you instantly control light, enhance comfort, and transform

0:42

environments with electronically dimmable glass products. Instant light

0:48

control at your fingertips. Their patented SPD smart glass empowers users to precisely control daylight, reduce

0:55

harsh glare, and reject up to 95% of heat. All with touch of a button or

1:02

through automated sensors. SPD equipped electronically dimmable windows, skylights, sunroofs, and more provide

1:10

enhanced comfort, efficiency, and aesthetics across many industries while maintaining views and blocking out 99%

1:18

of UV rays. This is an impact company. They have a

1:23

report that shows that they can reduce building temperature by 18°.

1:29

Imagine if we have been using this film and all the windows of all the buildings

1:34

that we've built since 1965. Because that's how long this company has been in business. How much energy could we have

1:41

conserved over that time period? I'm going to let I'm going to let Joe

1:47

tell you more about that in just a minute. This is not to be taken as investment advice. I am not a certified

1:53

financial planner. This is for education and entertainment purposes only. I

1:58

encourage everyone to do their own due diligence.

2:04

Here we are inside a factoryinstalled option for Mercedes in the S-Class. It's a SPD smart glass roof. And if I press a

2:12

button, it instantly changes from dark to clear

2:20

and back again. Imagine if we had this technology in every home, building, hotel, where you

2:28

walk in, the room is blacked out just like that. But a $2 sensor picks you up

2:35

and clears out the window so that you can see the view when you leave the

2:40

room. and there is no movement detected,

2:46

what will the window do? It will black out again. How's that for energy conservation?

2:54

And why don't all our buildings have this technology?

2:59

How much energy consumption would we have been able to reduce by using this

3:07

smart glass? Imagine driving your car and you turn

3:13

turn the corner right into the sun and it darkens your windshield, a third of

3:19

it within a second. Doesn't that make sense to you?

3:28

Hey everybody, Tim from Alpha Wolf Capital coming at you with a uh a brand new company, brand new uh interview. And

3:37

uh this is this is actually a company that I I looked into I want to say

3:44

easily probably 10 years ago. Uh I I'm fully aware of this company. never met

3:50

anybody from management but was very intrigued with their product and the uh

3:57

the the name of the company is research in frontier research frontiers inc

4:04

ticker symbol is referr to be confused with marijuana has

4:10

nothing to do with that at all I've got Joe Harrara here from Joe you

4:18

are the CEO of Research in Frontier, right? How long

4:25

you been with them? Well, Tim, I started with Research Frontiers in 1986 when I was a junior

4:32

lawyer on the team that took it public. And in 1992, I joined the company as a

4:38

part-time general counsel. Uh the chairman, Bob Sachs, may rest in peace,

4:44

uh had asked me to work part-time there and have my law firm the rest of the

4:49

time. Uh my wife and I cashed in all of our frequent flyer miles, uh flew to

4:55

Hawaii, sat on a hammock, and stared at the ocean. Came back and decided that we were going to take Bob Sachs up on his

5:02

offer. And he gave me every caveat and reason not to do this. He said, "Joe, we're a small company. We only have two

5:08

lences at the time. Now we have several dozen by the way. Uh and they're all huge companies. But uh you know and

5:15

there's no guarantee that this is going to be successful. But I trusted him because he was the one client I never

5:21

had tone down in his public statements when he said something. You know he had six ways to Sunday to prove it

5:27

scientifically, business-wise, etc. So I knew he was an ethical person and he was

5:33

a smart guy. He had a uh MBA from Harvard and also a degree in physics

5:38

from Harvard. And um how he got started, he was a security analyst on Wall Street

5:44

at what was Cun Lobin Company at the time. And they sent them out to look at smart glass technologies in the early

5:50

60s. And the company they sent them to investigate he said they really don't

5:56

have anything. But in the course of his analysis, he ran across some work that Edwin Lan from Polaroid had done. And

6:04

Edwin Lan invented the first suspended particle device or SPD, which is what we

6:09

call our technology um device. He called it a light valve because just like a water valve will

6:15

control the flow of water, this could control the flow of light. But Edwin Land, as smart as he was, couldn't get

6:21

it to work. and he tried and he tried and he tried and kind of in a funny full circle story uh years later we got it to

6:29

work when we started research frontiers and put in a very sustained and focused

6:35

development effort and about $125 million we got it to work and Polaroid became a lency so the technology came

6:42

full circle back around and something that someone as smart as Edwin Len couldn't get to work Bob Sax could and

6:50

um I said, "Bob, how'd you do this?" He said, "Joe, you got to think like a molecule." So,

6:59

and and by the way, that's what he did. He he was brilliant in that he looked at the structure of the materials that

7:06

Edwin Lan was using and he said, "Well, if I could put a carbon atom here and a and an ionic bond here, I could get this

7:13

to be much better." And then he figured out how to do that and then he did it.

7:19

Unbelievable. So when we're talking about this, you and I, we were talking before we hopped on. This technology has

7:27

been around since well really since what did you say 1935? Oh, I could even go

7:32

back further. Dr. Herapath in England had a dog with an upset stomach. And you

7:38

and I are both dog lovers, Tim. Um, this dog had an upset stomach, so they fed

7:43

him quinine bulfate. And quinodinine was what was used back then in the 1850s to calm the stomach.

7:51

And the dog urinated in a tray of iodine somehow. And these scientists came into

7:58

the lab, they saw this and rather than hitting the dog, they put the crystals

8:04

that had formed in the um in the tray under a microscope and they saw that

8:09

they were really really good light polarizers, these crystals. and they

8:15

wrote up the experiment and nothing really happened. And then Edwin Lan, flash forward to 1934,

8:21

was looking for a cheap polarizing material for sunglasses because back then they used fairly expensive

8:27

materials like tormylene, you know, semi-precious, you know, jewel stones to

8:32

polarize light. And he came across this experiment that Dr. Herapath had done

8:38

and duplicated it using a dog, believe it or not. And uh I kind of kid people

8:44

in the beginning that had we not come up with a synthetic way of doing this, we probably would have had elephants in the

8:50

lab when we got into mass production urinating. But but we you know

8:55

fortunately figured out how to do this artificially. But um but Edwin Lamb then discovered the next part of this

9:01

equation which was if you apply an electric field to these particles they will line up

9:07

and allow allow light to pass through. He called it a light valve, but he couldn't get it to work. It very quickly

9:13

degraded into, you know, a mush, if you will. Okay. Yeah. Think of Edison's

9:19

light bulbs. How many of them burnt out before he got one that lasted, right? Same thing here. Edwin Lan couldn't get

9:25

it to work. Um, but through determination and some very smart

9:30

scientists, we were able to get it to work. And we realized that

9:36

we're good at some things, but not at everything. we weren't going to be able to manufacture this as well as some of

9:43

the large glass companies and chemical companies in the world. So, we

9:49

established a licensing business model where we would license the technology to these companies and let them do the

9:57

heavy lifting, let them build the factories, let them use their sales force to go out and talk to their

10:04

existing customers. And also, we weren't so arrogant. We knew that in markets like automotive,

10:12

we're in five different markets, but automotive is our biggest. Um, in those markets, if you're Mercedes or Cadillac,

10:20

you're going to feel more comfortable dealing with the companies that are already supplying you with glass, right?

10:26

So, we license the who's who of the glass industry. So we had at one point the number one, number two, number

10:32

three, number four, number five glass companies in the world, all licensed to use our technology. So when Mercedes

10:39

wanted to put this in their cars, two of them, their two top suppliers of

10:45

glass were already lences. They just called them up and said, "We want you to supply us with this new thing called SPD

10:53

or suspended particle device, smart glass." and the rest is history. And that was in

11:02

2010. They floated the idea at the first trade show and they told me that if this

11:10

was going to get positive results, they hope to put this in series production in 2011. Now, what I learned after that is

11:18

that they've spent over 5 million euros validating our technology and five years

11:24

of testing. And some of the people actually did their PhD thesis on SPD,

11:30

you know. So, um, they were very serious about making sure that whatever they put in the car was good. And their motto was

11:38

the best or nothing. And we were the best smart glass technology on the planet. We still are. And the

11:44

bestselling. So, they launched this in the SLK Roadster

11:50

in 2011. Um, it was very successful. They didn't know

11:56

how this was going to work out because the SLK was a small car, $45,000 or

12:02

$45,000, and this was a fairly expensive $2,500

12:07

option at the time, and they didn't know if this option was going to sell or not.

12:13

It sold multiples of what their expected take rate was for this. So then they put it in the SL Roadster, which was the

12:20

$100,000 big brother the next year. And then after that, that was very

12:26

successful and the take rates were off the chart from what they expected. So they started to put it in their

12:32

flagship, the S-Class coupe, the Maybach, the S550, the S450. And around

12:38

that time, McLaren started putting this in their cars. And then after McLaren,

12:45

Cadillac approached us and wanted to put it in their new Celesteic, which yesterday was the first day that it was

12:51

delivered to customers, but the glass has been produced already, you know, for that car uh in anticipation of this. And

12:58

then Ferrari. So, we kind of have this really long list and growing list

13:04

because we have a lot of other companies in the pipeline. Just today I actually met with one of them to um get SPD smart

13:12

glass incorporated into their vehicles. So along the way you had this really aggressive intensive testing program by

13:20

Mercedes and um and that gave us the credibility

13:26

to make it into other cars and other markets like the aircraft market, the

13:32

yacht and cruise ship market and now the architectural market. So we're basically in all these different markets now. Um,

13:40

so that's that's that you just nailed. So when I looked into this company,

13:47

it was such a no-brainer to me. I I just thought to myself from an energy

13:53

conservation standpoint, maybe let me back up. Maybe you should

14:00

explain what the benefits. It's not just it's not just that you can shade out the

14:06

sun. You're blocking out the UV rays and you're controlling temperature, right?

14:15

So, when Mercedes first put a small sunroof in the SLK, it was about a half

14:20

a square meter. They did a lot of testing. And by the way, the way they tested this car for

14:26

durability will blow your mind. Um, I mentioned they did five years of testing. Yeah. They did an Endless

14:33

Summer test where they took this car into every hot climate in the world.

14:38

Just like the movie The Endless Summer, the surfers would follow the waves around the world. They were following the sun around the world from the

14:46

deserts of Dubai to Larredo, Texas to Death Valley, pretty much everywhere

14:52

where it's really, really, really hot and really, really, really hostile. And

14:57

they did the same thing on the cold end. They tested this in the Arctic Circle, okay? And they've admitted that these

15:04

conditions just don't exist on Earth, but our customers have to have a car that works. And you know, the postcript

15:11

on this is there tens of thousands of cars on the road today with our glass in

15:16

the roof. The roof is the hardest part, by the way, of a car to withstand the heat. And there hasn't been one reported

15:24

problem ever. Now, I wish I could say that about other things in my car, but the glass is

15:30

really, really robust and good, and that helped us get into all these other markets, too. But, um, but they, you

15:38

know, they really, really kicked the tires hard. And being Mercedes, they also kicked the supply chain pretty

15:44

hard. And that was really good for us as a company because all of our lences had to rise to the occasion and come out

15:51

with a world-class product. And they did. And along the way, we became the industry standard, the gold standard, if

15:58

you will, for smart glass. And there's other stuff that is trying to do what we do or have tried and failed to do what

16:05

we did. But, you know, we just stuck to our knitting and, you know, we had

16:11

blinders on. We wanted to make Mercedes happy and we did. And after that, we made everyone else happy. So, I asked

16:17

you before we jumped on, I asked you, you know, would you credit Mercedes for being the ones to

16:23

to really kind of kick you guys off, right? I mean, here's a company that's been around since 1964.

16:30

I mean it this this is the thing that drives me absolutely bonkers is that we

16:37

have had a technology that if it was being implemented into the

16:43

buildings and the vehicles since 1964

16:50

our energy consumption wouldn't be nearly where it is today clearly. I mean

16:56

there are a lot of things that we could have avoided that we didn't because we didn't have

17:04

the adoption of your technology. Yeah. Yeah. We we have a philosophy um

17:11

which we talked about make the world a better place than it was when you came into it and if you keep doing that the

17:18

world will constantly improve. And we had a mission to make the world more

17:25

energy efficient, more comfortable, more safe. You know, there's safety aspects of this, especially in automotive. Okay.

17:32

Where you can Can you can you can just a temperature inside a car? I live in Vegas.

17:38

Okay. Let me give you an example. So, you leave your car parked outside in on the street in Las Vegas for two hours

17:45

and you come back in, it is very, very hot. Yes. and to the point where and I grew up in

17:51

Florida where same thing happened. You'd go to the beach with your friends, you'd come back and you couldn't sit in your

17:56

car. So what the car makers do is they overpower the air conditioner by a

18:01

factor of 5x so that you'll be comfortable maybe

18:06

within the first five minutes of getting in your car and blasting the air conditioner. Right. Well, well, now imagine you got

18:14

in the car and instead of the car being 90°, it's 72°.

18:21

Well, that's what Mercedes test results show our glass did is it reduced the temperature inside the car by 18° F.

18:30

So, without using the air conditioner, just having the car sitting there,

18:36

not using any power, we've now reduced the temperature inside the car by 18°.

18:42

That means your air conditioning compressors could be 40% smaller. You

18:47

have less weight to travel to bring around because they're smaller. You have more room inside the vehicle, and um

18:55

you're using the air conditioner a lot less. So, what does that mean? Let me let me put some numbers on that one. So

19:02

in a internal combustion engine car, icy ice car, you have

19:10

an increasing the driving range of 5 a.5% because you're using the air

19:15

conditioner less less. Yep. And you're reducing CO2 emissions by four grams per

19:22

kilometer. Now, if you don't know what that means, I'll tell you. In Europe,

19:28

there's a standard that came out that requires car makers to pay a penalty of

19:34

€95 per gram per kilometer that their cars do not meet the emissions

19:41

standards. And they've tried everything. First, they were trying diesel, but then you had the dieselgate scandal, so they

19:48

abandoned that. The glass will save 4 g per kilometer.

19:53

That's huge. Okay, it increases the driving range by 5 and a half%. So, you're getting better gas mileage. Now,

19:59

move to an electric vehicle world. Okay, two things. Number one, you can increase

20:05

the driving range of the electric vehicle also by about 5 and a half% which is huge. I mean, they really try

20:11

to to increase the driving range by hook or by crook to to get these cars to go

20:17

further. But also, if you think about it, you're sitting on a b a bank of

20:23

batteries in an electric vehicle that are underneath your feet. So, headroom becomes very, very

20:30

important to you. So, now let me flash back to 2010. The guy that developed

20:35

this for Mercedes developed pretty much every iconic car that they made from the S-Class on down. But he was a very tall

20:43

person, much taller than me. and he really was sensitive to the fact there

20:49

wasn't a lot of headroom and um he was looking to get a couple inches extra

20:55

inches of headroom, but if you put a pull across shade like you shade most sunroofs,

21:02

you wouldn't be able to do that. Right. Right. So, he needed something that would eliminate the shade

21:08

of the car to increase the headroom. That's where we came in. we were a

21:15

couple extra inches of headroom. That also translated into all those other benefits I mentioned, lower CO2

21:22

emissions, increased driving range, better comfort, okay, all of these things and better stability in the car

21:28

because if you raise the center of gravity of the car by raising the roof up higher,

21:34

you're going to decrease stability. So by keeping as low a profile you can

21:42

actually increase the stability of the car on the road. Now who would have thought that glass would have done this

21:47

smart glass that happened to change tin but these are all the benefits that happened out of that.

21:53

See that's that to me is that's the that's the key right there. Right. So that's what I mean by if we would have

22:00

implemented this right out of the shoot. right now. I guess I guess the the issue

22:07

could have been the cost because the costs are higher when you when you have when you don't have a lot of uh

22:14

production. Right. Right. Right. You have to come up the economies of I used to be an economist at the Federal

22:19

Reserve Bank of New York. We looked at economies of scale all the time. I learned two things that and you can't

22:26

predict micro trends, but you could predict macro trends. And the macro trend is my friend. So I looked at major

22:35

macro trends, energy efficiency, move towards electrification, higher energy costs, uh better safety in

22:43

cars, um you know, and maybe the best thing I could say is and and this is not

22:51

my thought. This was the leading glass consultant in the world who did the building envelope consulting work for

22:57

pretty much every skyscraper that's gone up over the last 25 years.

23:03

He said to a a panel where he was introducing the idea of smart glass and it was not just our smart glass but all

23:09

smart glass but I think he had a special place in his heart for ours because when it came time to put the glass in his

23:16

office he put ours in his office. Okay. But he said you know when it's hot out

23:21

you take off your jacket and when it's cold you put it back on. Why can't your building envelope do the same thing? Why

23:28

can't it work symbiotically with your your your your windows, your air

23:35

conditioning, your mechanical rooms? So, you're in Vegas. You don't have this

23:40

problem. You have hot weather 12 months. Well, 11 months out of the year, maybe

23:47

10. That bad, man. Right. We we we have the opposite. In New York, you have two

23:55

months out of the year where it's unbearably hot. happens to be now. Okay. Uh so you design your buildings for

24:02

those times and you design your mechanical rooms for those times and you

24:07

design your equipment for those times. Okay? So what happens is your building

24:13

has oversized mechanical rooms. That means less rentable space for the landlord.

24:20

Okay? It also means that for 10 months out of the year,

24:25

your equipment is working at suboptimal efficiency, right? Because they want,

24:32

you know, July and August, they want you to be cool. Yeah. Okay. In the winter

24:37

time, you have the opposite. You want to bring daylighting into a structure, but if you put a heavy window tint on a

24:43

building, you're not doing that. So now imagine we change the way these things are thought

24:49

about where our glass, and this is not theoretical, our glass can go

24:57

20 times darker than the darkest window tint you ever see on a building

25:05

to five times clearer or anything in between. And how fast of a time? One to

25:11

two seconds. So there's other technologies that could do the same thing, maybe not with the same range,

25:16

but they could switch from clear to somewhat tinted and it would take them

25:22

on a typical architectural size window 40 minutes. So you flip the switch and 40 minutes later it adjusts. We're doing

25:29

this in one to two seconds. So, you when you and I first talked, you

25:36

gave me an example of something that makes so much sense to me that I I I

25:43

cannot believe that it it isn't in every single car.

25:48

And that is the visor, the third of a window, your windshield.

25:56

I hate those stupid visors that never

26:02

block all the sun and are in your way because you can't

26:08

see through them. So, they're really pretty much useless. I mean, they pretty

26:13

much and if you're tall or short, they're really useless because they're not designed for for for, you know,

26:20

anybody unless you're a certain height. Um, you know, Bob Sachs and I, he he lived in Manhattan, so we would drive at

26:27

the end of the day west into the sunset and we always were talking about the sun

26:33

visor as being the killer app because you have this problem, as you perfectly

26:39

articulated, Tim, of they don't really work well. Now, we're

26:44

going to change the dynamic on that to do what Jim Morrison from the Doors

26:50

said. Keep your eyes on the road and your hands on the wheel. Hands by the wheel. You don't have to touch anything.

26:56

You can hook up these sun visors to a photo cell. So, as soon as you turn into

27:01

the sun, boom, they go dark. As soon as you turn away from the sun, boom, they

27:06

go clear. Or a tunnel. You drive through a tunnel. Exactly. All of a sudden, all

27:12

your windows in your car clear up. You're inside a dark tunnel. But the second, maybe a half a second after you

27:19

leave, all the glass goes dark. Now, if you don't believe me, go on our website, go

27:24

to our YouTube channel, you will see a car that's completely outfitted with SPD

27:30

smart glass that Continental Automotive did this video. And it's incredible because it shows all of that. It shows

27:37

going into a tunnel and having it automatically lighten up. And as soon as the driver comes out of the tunnel,

27:42

dark. Sun visors with multi-segment adjustment. So if the sun is high on the

27:47

horizon, only the top third of the sun visor may darken. So you're not blocking

27:53

the rest of your windshield. If it detects that the sun's a little bit lower on the horizon, maybe the top two

27:59

of the three segments will darken. Uh I'll share with you um a comment made by

28:07

an automotive engineer. So they asked us to actually embed the sun visor inside

28:12

the glass and and we did it. It's not, you know, we could do that. It's easy. Um, and it

28:19

had a three segmented sun visor and we pulled it out of the crate and they sent

28:24

their whole team of engineers over to see this thing in operation. And um,

28:29

they're videoing it and they have their iPhones out and they're taking pictures of it and things like that. And then we

28:35

flip the switch. And I'm gonna clean this up a little

28:40

bit, but Oh, the And I have this on audio from the video. Oh my freaking god

28:49

was the was the reaction. So So it works. It works. So why is it taking so

28:56

long? Well, there's a lot of noise out there. There's different technologies that are

29:01

all trying to do what we do and they're all promising everything including lower

29:06

costs and things like that. Nobody has actually come up with a non-subsidized lower cost than we have. Okay? We don't

29:14

subsidize anything. Our licences are in this to make money and the technology is

29:19

really good and by every right you deserve to make money

29:24

and our licences have built meaningful businesses and they've made meaningful investments in doing this as have we.

29:31

But we always wanted this to be economically viable. And I think the mistake that a lot of our competitors have made is they think that they will

29:39

buy market share by heavily subsidizing the market. And if the technology if

29:45

their technology allowed for that, maybe that's a you know a viable approach. But

29:51

it wasn't. You know, one company that went bankrupt last year, um, they had

29:57

such poor yields and such poor economies of scale and they were throwing away so

30:03

much glass that subsidizing and doing bigger projects just dug them a deeper

30:09

and deeper hole and and you know they say when you find yourself in a hole, stop digging. Well, they didn't and they

30:16

went bankrupt. So, so Joe, I I I

30:22

am looking at this thing and I'm saying, "Okay, I live in Vegas. All the casinos are glass." I mean, every every one of

30:30

them are glass, right? Uh I look at I look at the cars. The

30:37

visor thing is such I I don't know why every every vehicle does not just have

30:43

your smart glass as a visor. Oh, we'll just add the word yet to that. Okay. Um

30:50

Okay. I the cost has come down a lot since we started and it's coming down even further as more and more cars adopt

30:56

it. So, um so it will get there even in the cost sensitive areas of the market.

31:03

Um right now it's mostly in the al although the first car was an exception. It was a $45,000 car that was able to

31:10

sell, you know, a $2,500 option. Now it's a lot less um expensive for the car

31:17

makers to put this in and they could put it in more and more vehicles and you know we have things in the works for all

31:23

different levels of vehicles. Um getting to Vegas for a minute. Um so imagine I'm

31:29

staying in one of the casinos and

31:35

you look on the outside. It's mirrored glass. Think of the Venetian as gold glass I think. Right. You could do that

31:42

easily with our technology. From the outside, you wouldn't know which glass was smart and which one wasn't. From the

31:47

inside, you have so much heat coming in. So, imagine I left my my hotel room to

31:54

go out to a conference or to go gamble or go see a show.

32:00

The windows in my office have proximity sensors, motion detectors.

32:06

When I go up to the window, it clears up. It's almost like it's reading my mind, saying, "Joe Joe wants to look out of his window." And when I walk away, it

32:13

darkens again. And you can set the interval on how long it takes to darken. It looks like it's magic. It looks like

32:19

it's reading my mind. It's not. It's just simply putting a motion detector onto our glass. Very easy to do, right?

32:26

I think it's a $2 item, right? So imagine now in a hotel where I leave

32:32

my hotel room for the day, how much air conditioning they would save, especially in Vegas, if

32:39

excuse me, if after I left the room, an occup occupancy sensor said there's

32:44

nobody in the room and darkens the glass and then Joe comes in after lunch, maybe

32:50

it clears it up so I can look out at the beautiful Bellagio fountains dancing or something and then boom, it goes back to

32:56

being dark. You're going to save a lot of energy that way. Also, how often do

33:02

you think they clean the the vertical blinds in these hotels?

33:09

I have no idea. One word, never. So, you know, so and then how often how often do you

33:17

think that the me mechanized motorized shades break? One word. Always. Right.

33:23

Right. So, so, so now imagine where you have a window where it does both of

33:28

those things. It doesn't break. There's no moving parts. We've done

33:34

it must be about a 100 million onoff cycles by now. So, you know what? I I

33:41

Joe, I I got to bring this up to you because I literally just went and watched F1 the movie. Yeah. And I don't

33:49

know if you know since we have F1 come to Vegas, right?

33:54

the walkways over. So, in order to keep the

34:01

pedestrians from that didn't pay to see F1 from seeing F1,

34:07

they're literally like coating the the the the bridges

34:14

that glass so you can't look through it. I love it. I love it. Imagine flipping a

34:19

switch when the F1's in town and or you know for other reasons, you know, right?

34:28

I you need to have somebody because I think literally it's a mess. It's a

34:36

mess. They they are like all these walkover bridges over the over Las Vegas

34:41

Boulevard have this glass that they're putting stuff on so that during that

34:47

time period people can't see. Right. Yeah. That is that is like a no-brainer

34:54

in my head. All right. Yeah. And there's a lot of things that like that that are

35:00

not immediately obvious, but then when you think about it and see it become very obvious as good uses for SPD smart

35:07

loss. Um, you know, and and you said we should have people going out and and pitching this what we do and fortunately

35:16

our business model is such that we license our technology. We have about 250 patents worldwide and we license it

35:23

to the hoou of the glass and chemical and automotive and aircraft industry. And you know, you know, you can throw a

35:30

stick at almost any major name and somewhere they've been using SPD smart glass for something. Um,

35:38

but it's our lenses too that are beating the bushes because they have built

35:44

factories and businesses and they have sales forces throughout the world that are out there paying calls on

35:50

architects, paying calls on the automakers, explaining to the automotive engineers what the benefits are. I do

35:57

that too. I did it today with a major, you know, OEM, new OEM that was needed to be um, uh, updated on where things

36:04

were. And um I explained to them this is not science fiction. This is stuff we've

36:11

done now. Yes. I this is what kills me, man. This is

36:16

what I try to convey to everybody about the stock market and the ability to be

36:23

part owner of a company that literally

36:29

changes the world for the better. Right. And if I think we spend a lot of time I

36:36

just look at the two political parties and I want to make everybody understand I don't like any politicians. I just

36:44

don't like look I like you certainly wouldn't hire them for your business. I like logic. I like common sense. I like

36:51

smart. I like this is better for the environment. This is makes sense. I like

36:57

logic. That's what I like. So when I see a company like this that's been around

37:03

since 1965 and it's it took till 2010

37:11

to really have this thing start to kick, right? And I mean when it your glass the

37:18

roofs you can have it in quadrants. We were talking about that. I mean the kids

37:24

are in the back they're watching t you know a movie. They got that thing black as black me, right? I'm in the front

37:30

seat driving and I want to stay awake. I got the sun blasting down on me,

37:37

right? So, how cool is that, right? It

37:42

just this exists. This isn't this is not the Jetsons. This is this is real,

37:49

right? And there are real tangible benefits to this and nobody knows about

37:54

it. Nobody talks about it. Consumers have power. They really do. If if

38:01

because you look when they get behind something, look at Apple, right? Look at Starbucks. I mean, $8 cup of coffee.

38:08

Let's all go to Starbucks. Great idea. I I mean, when we focus on something,

38:14

Reddit, I think, proved with AMC and GameStop, which are two not great

38:20

company mo not. I mean, look, those models are broken.

38:26

But they proved that there is strength in numbers. Clearly. Clearly. You know,

38:31

and if you think about where I think a lot of companies make their mistakes,

38:38

it's taking inappropriate shortcuts. There's a lot of roadkill on the side of

38:45

the road of the smart glass industry from companies that took inappropriate

38:51

shortcuts. And

38:56

the other mistake I think that people make is they make the assumption that something

39:03

is something that it isn't or vice versa. And we have a lot of noise in the market because there's a lot of wannabes

39:10

that want to um be in the smart glass space. And a lot of it is hype. A lot of

39:18

it is things that will work on a very very small scale in a lab. And I remember when we were in a lab, um, and

39:27

there's a huge difference between that and being in the real world. And

39:33

the thing that bothers me, Tim, you you mentioned the frustration of if we did this in the 60s, how much better off

39:39

would we be? Um, there's so many things that I've seen happen in large corporate

39:45

America where stupid decisions are made routinely every day, but they get away with it. And um and there's so many

39:53

things that could exist that don't exist because of that. And the difference often is is somebody determined enough

40:02

to overcome that inertia of the middle manager where it's easier to say no to something and keep your job for five

40:08

years than say yes to something and lose it in three. But your company may not be

40:13

around in five years if you don't innovate. So that's the problem where you end up at the same result. You just

40:20

nailed it. Yeah. So, so yeah, we have a lot of patents, okay, as

40:26

a licensing company, you know, that's that's important. But the real secret to

40:32

our success is smart determination. I spend 150th

40:38

of what my competitors spend and I have more to show for it. Trying

40:44

to be smart, especially when it's shareholder money. You know, I fly economy. It's shareholder money. Not

40:50

when I'm on my own personal vacation, assuming I took one, but for business, I

40:56

fly economy. It's a shareholders money. For marketing, for manufacturing, for

41:01

all of the things that go into a business, you want to get as much bang for the buck as you can, right? And you

41:08

can if you are willing to do the homework and think through these things and come up with solutions that are not,

41:17

you know, let's, you know, my my son is in venture capital. He tells me, you know, you could predict Facebook's

41:24

revenues pretty much to the dollar every quarter. I said, how do you do that? says what you do is you go on Crunchb

41:30

and you see how much venture capital was raised in that quarter

41:36

and every business plan of every startup in Silicon Valley is you take 40% of

41:42

your money and you throw it into Facebook ads. So now we know what Facebook's revenues are going to be

41:49

because she got the leading indicator, you know, crunch face. Um these are

41:54

brain dead um approaches. They'll work for some people. Sometimes they work really well and sometimes they're just

42:03

peeing money down a hole. So, you always try to be efficient in what you do. And

42:09

having determination to succeed, I think was one of our strong suits, you

42:15

know, and Bob Saxs, our founder, said, you know, the difference between uh spending 30 years doing something

42:22

um if you're successful, you're a persistent genius. If you're not successful, you're a stubborn crackpot.

42:30

Well, I think history has shown with Mercedes and McLaren and Cadillac and Ferrari and Boeing and Airbus and um the

42:39

yachts and you know and and the architectural applications that Bob Saxs

42:44

was a persistent genius, not a stubborn crackbot. you know, it was that determination

42:50

um that you know and that culture that was imbued in this company that you know, if you can't do something, it

42:57

doesn't mean it can't be done. It just means you haven't figured out yet how to do it. And that's been something that I

43:03

think has been a mantra around here and why we were able to succeed where, you know, the experts said we would never be

43:08

able to do this. Listen, you're fortunate because I look at I look at companies today that are tackling huge

43:18

problems that nobody knows about them. I mean,

43:23

literally, you're not going to see them on CNBC. You're not going to see them on Bloomberg because

43:29

they're too small. They're just little tiny companies that that built it and

43:34

thought they would come and that's Field the Dreams. That's a

43:39

movie. That's not reality, right? reality is you build it, you think

43:46

everybody's going to come because it makes so much sense and nobody comes and then then it's like literally

43:56

it's painful to try and get people to understand why this is so important

44:03

and why it could make such a huge difference in the world. and and people

44:09

are so myopically focused on their personal lives and their political

44:14

parties and that all this other stupid And I'm sorry to say it that way,

44:20

but it is stupid Yeah, usually the word goes after stupid.

44:26

I learned that in second grade, right? We were diagramming sentences. It's like

44:32

we just get so caught up in stuff that just doesn't matter in 10

44:39

years from now. Not going to matter. Whatever that that protest was, not

44:45

going to matter. Yeah. What matters is stuff like this where

44:51

if there was a a a a a ground swell movement saying why are we not putting

44:58

this on all of our buildings all of our glass buildings why is that not being

45:04

done because it would save energy. I mean, there's this this is such an

45:12

obvious thing to me. This is something that you could feel good about getting

45:17

behind and supporting and saying, "Hey, this is what should be happening. Let's

45:23

make this happen, right? Have a ground swell for that." Yeah.

45:30

Yeah. Obviously, obviously. Um let's make it happen

45:37

needs to have two other conditions which is uh a solution that works has to be

45:43

practical and it has you have to have a team from the receptionist on up that is

45:50

dedicated to making it work and and has the ability to make it work. If you don't have those two things, there's

45:56

going to be a lot of stuff still sitting on the side of the road, you know, that never makes it into the real world. And

46:02

that's the tragedy here is that we can be so much better than we are. Yep. You

46:08

need a couple people with guts, a couple people with smarts, and a couple people that are determined to make something

46:14

happen in a positive way. And you push the other stuff aside. You

46:20

push, you know, you know how we bridge the gap between the rich and the poor.

46:27

You know, Sam Walton, Walmart when he he

46:32

everybody had got shares of stock down to the janitor, okay?

46:39

And when Walmart went public, there were a lot of people that became millionaires

46:44

that I mean, and I'm talking just the everyday employee.

46:51

What happens with Wall Street is the when the private equity and the and the hedge funds get involved,

46:58

all those programs like the janitor getting stock, they go away

47:06

because they try to figure out how to make the company more profitable. Right?

47:11

There are what's what's your your stock today is priced at a a maybe a couple of

47:18

bucks, right? bucks 70 or so. Yeah. You could scrape your couch and your car and

47:26

probably find enough change to buy a couple of shares. Right. Right. No, it's

47:32

it's definitely a a very good buy. And what you said about incentivizing people

47:37

is very important. You want everyone waking up feeling like an owner. And and

47:44

I used to tell a receptionist, she goes, "Well, I'm just, you know, I'd ask her opinion on something. what do you think of this market or what do you think of

47:50

that? She goes, "Joe, Joe, why are you asking me? I'm just a receptionist." I said, "First of all, you're not." And

47:57

number two, you're our director of first impressions. When someone walks into the door, you're who they see. You're who

48:04

they see. Okay? And when you answer the phone, you're who they hear. And you're extremely important part of that

48:10

experience that anyone contacting our company has. So, of course, you're going to get stock options.

48:17

Everybody at my company gets stock options. I even wrote an article for Inc. magazine years ago, which to me was

48:25

common sense, but to them they thought it was startling. It's called Stock Options for All.

48:36

You and I get it, Joe. I wish the rest of Wall Street got it because I I think

48:43

Wall Street is really really screwed up now with the algorithmic trading and the

48:50

you know uh naked short selling and I mean it's just it they make it so

48:55

difficult for small companies to succeed. You know, it's as if you walked into one of the casinos near you and

49:02

there was no regulatory uh environment to prevent a crooked casino from

49:08

existing. Yeah. Right. That's what the market can be like. It's a crooked

49:13

casino. And I remember years ago, we had a fairly notorious short seller

49:18

attacking our company. And I went to the SEC, the NASDAQ, uh when they started

49:25

threatening my family, I went to the FBI. But

49:30

I said, "There's something called naked shorting going on." They said, "Oh, no. There's no naked shorting going on." Um,

49:36

this is Yeah. Unfortunately, one of the biggest profitable areas for brokerage firms is lending out my stock

49:43

without my knowledge and making money on it. And it's against my interest because I want my stock to go up, not down. So,

49:51

you know, I don't keep it in a margin account. you know, you don't you don't do these things to allow them to make

49:57

money on it and go against your interest, but nobody knows about this stuff. And it's, you know, a little bit

50:03

of education goes a long way. That's why Tim, I really love what you're doing, which is educating investors.

50:11

That's what I'm trying to do. I I don't know how that is so important. That is so important because you know at at some

50:18

point you're going to have the fidelity problem where you know fidelity became

50:23

so large it became the market so it was very hard for it to outperform the market right with all these program

50:29

trading and things like that they're going to be having a hard time outperforming you know and as economists

50:35

when you have these kind of things the commoditization of something which is really what these program trading has

50:42

become Okay, all the profit goes out of it. All the ability to make profit. It

50:48

becomes a commodity. It becomes something where you know you're going to eat along with a very very modest

50:53

return. So the only way I know is to step outside that box.

51:01

But people feel they don't have the tools or the ability to go up against these large brokerage firms and these

51:07

program trades and these hedge funds that are doing this. And they can. And if you look at our

51:15

shareholder base, it's mostly very wealthy, very smart people. A lot

51:20

of them are scientists and made their money in science related businesses, but made a lot of money doing it and have

51:26

huge positions. It's not the institutions that are

51:32

Yeah. So, so, so something's happening. You know, I feel as though the investor

51:38

is becoming a thing of the past, right? I mean, everything's about the fast money. And look, Warren Buffett, average

51:45

holding time, 10 years, right? This company has been ex in existence

51:52

since 1964. I bought my first share in 1987.

51:57

Oh, okay. All right. So, I've held it for a while. So, I'm I'm sitting here thinking to myself, okay, look how long

52:06

this is. This is to me a no-brainer technology that should have been being used since 1975,

52:14

right? I mean, it literally should have been being used the entire time. We'd be in a very different place if if if we

52:21

were using it, right? Yeah. So, it's taken that this. That's what I mean by

52:26

the adoption curve, right? I mean, it's uh I knew I I I met the guy that

52:33

actually came up with RF RFID. Yeah. 20 something years ago.

52:41

It It took that long for it to be adopted. It's just like I don't know

52:48

what it is. I mean, look, I I'm guilty of it. I held my Blackberry phone

52:53

for for way too long while everybody else had smartphones, right? I I like my

52:58

Blackberry. But, you know, there's a thing to be said about let's look at what something

53:05

does. Let's make the case that this is much better than what we're currently

53:10

doing. And then if every look if this is the one thing that the retail investors

53:16

have a big advantage in when it comes to a small cap company

53:23

because the funds have gotten so big 10 billion 20 billion 30 billion and they

53:29

invest as a percentage of their portfolio.

53:35

They can't even look at a small cap that's got a 50 or a hundred

53:42

million market cap. They can't. I mean, they just And and a lot of the funds, they can't invest in stocks that are

53:48

below five bucks and they can't invest in stocks that are below a buck.

53:53

That's an advantage to the retail investor, believe it or not, because you can get

54:00

into an amazing company like this that I think could make the world a much better

54:06

place in and in in several areas, right? Not just one, a lot of areas. And

54:15

then you get behind the company and you start asking communities, why are we not doing this? Right? I mean, force it to

54:22

happen, force it to be used. There is hope, Tim. There is hope. I'll give you an example. So, um,

54:31

there's a company that makes construction equipment. And

54:37

they took what I would consider a non-obvious use of our technology and

54:44

incorporated it into their construction equipment. What was it? It's a windshield that has a transparent OLED

54:52

display, but now transparent OLED, it's just like OLEDs that you have on your TV, except

54:57

that they're transparent, so you could put them on things like windshields. But the problem is daylighting will wash

55:04

out the image. So they said, "Aha, put an SPD film

55:12

next to the transparent OLID." And when it's too bright out and you're washing out the image,

55:18

darken the SPD film. And when you want it to be completely clear, lighten the

55:23

film. And I was at CES and I saw this

55:29

earth mover and they had a augmented reality windshield

55:36

and it used our technology and transparent lid technology in combination and they were superimposing

55:44

on the windshield where all the gas lines and electrical lines were in this field that the guy was digging.

55:50

so he doesn't inadvertently cut a gas line. Right? So here's a very practical

55:56

application. Increases safety, increases productivity.

56:02

Right? So there's a lot of things that we haven't even begun to scratch the surface on at Research Frontiers. So I

56:08

want you I want you just brought you just hit you just nailed one of the biggest uh so I have been on

56:16

a company for five years that literally identified underground utility location

56:23

as a problem. There are 400 people that die a year from accidental utility

56:29

strikes. Okay. Yeah. Because the stuff's been in the ground for how long and we

56:35

don't know where the hell it is. It's on asbuild plans which are paper somewhere.

56:40

Who knows? Right. Right. There's 35 million miles worth of utilities in the

56:46

United States. 35 million. To put that in perspective, we have 2.6 million miles of paved road.

56:56

Okay. 35 million miles of utilities and we don't know where the they are.

57:03

Right. There is a guy that came up with a software

57:08

system that can identify underground utilities within centimeter accuracy.

57:15

I have been talking about this company for five years

57:20

and I just the other day saw another gas line was struck. somebody died

57:27

and it I start out first I'm s I'm I'm sympathetic to whoever lost a loved one

57:34

and then I get frustrated because I have been talking about the solution for this

57:39

for five years and the traction of getting

57:46

construction insurance uh municipalities

57:53

nobody gives a and and and it's like I don't get it. The company is

58:00

struggling because they can't they don't have a massive sales force. They can't

58:06

do a huge marketing campaign. It's a little company that solved a

58:13

billion dollar problem. This it cost this country between 30 and 50 billion a

58:20

year plus the deaths. Yeah. And I think to myself,

58:26

why? Why? These things don't have to happen. There is a solution. They don't have to happen. And that's the tragedy

58:32

here is that, you know, there's many solutions out there and they have to

58:38

bubble to the surface. And um and some companies have the wherewithal to do it

58:45

and some don't. Um and this is where Wall Street is all jacked up because

58:50

here's the deal. You get these companies to go public, you tell them they're going to get institutional investors.

58:58

No, they're not. When they're little, they're getting retail investors and that's all they're getting, right? And

59:05

retail investors are emotional and don't know what they own and they don't know how the capital markets work, which

59:12

makes it even worse, right? So you look at this whole thing, this whole system

59:20

and NASDAQ just raised the minimum. You used to be able to IPO for $5 million.

59:28

Now it's 15. Who does that help? Does that help the

59:33

small company take a risk and uplift? No. You just

59:39

made it harder for that little company, right? That's what we seem to do. We just seem to keep making it harder for

59:45

the little guy and more lucrative for

59:50

the NASDAQ. Yeah. Right. I mean, that's what you did. We were a $5 million IPO

59:57

in 1986. Bingo. And we didn't need more money than that and we didn't want to

1:00:04

dilute our shareholders more than that. And you know, we've been very cautious ever since. So now they're creating an

1:00:12

adverse incentive, a perverse incentive so that you have to go to the

1:00:19

alternative sources for capital which are not Does that mean you're a better business or you're a better company? No.

1:00:24

What it means is you have access to capital. Yeah. That's what it means. Right. Right. Not not that you're a

1:00:31

better company or or or you know there were it's worth NASDAQ's time to think about you at 15 million where it's not

1:00:38

at five. Right. Exactly. And that's what disgusts me because the small business

1:00:45

is the is the economic engine of this country. Certainly is. It certainly is. Microsoft, Nvidia, Apple, Tesla are the

1:00:55

next Microsoft, Nvidia, Apple, Apple or Tesla is not going to come from

1:01:00

Microsoft, Nvidia, Apple or Tesla. It's going to be some little company that

1:01:07

comes up with something big that people recognize and that's going to be the

1:01:12

next one. Yeah. But if we keep making it difficult for the little guy to get list

1:01:17

to even get to the to the field to play the table. Yeah. Right. If we keep

1:01:23

making it more difficult, we're not going to have them. They won't come. We're just we're we're literally

1:01:31

being anti-inovation, anti-ingenuity, and at this particular point in time, I

1:01:37

think we need to be all of that and more. So, absolutely. I mean, Joe, this

1:01:42

has turned out to be an amazing interview. I mean, I really truly we haven't I really enjoyed our

1:01:48

discussions. I really do. Tell me tell me tell me real quickly how many shares outstanding fully diluted. Uh it's about

1:01:55

36 million fully diluted. 33 and a half on a straight basis. No debt. No zero

1:02:02

debt. Zero debt cash for the long haul. Very modest expenses. Our burn rate is

1:02:08

about $200,000 a quarter. So, you know, and one car,

1:02:15

one aircraft makes us profitable. So, you know, we're on the cusp of becoming profitable. Um, I've given up on trying

1:02:23

to predict publicly. I I have my own spreadsheets that show things pretty

1:02:28

clearly, but I won't say them publicly because there's always things that could happen between the cup and the lip. And

1:02:34

I, you know, I don't want to be unfair to people by um giving them expectations

1:02:40

that any need to raise capital at all, Joe. Not unless it's strategic. I mean, if Mercedes came to me tomorrow and

1:02:46

said, "Joe, we want to put 20 million into you." I'd figure out how to take 20 million from them. But um just to just

1:02:52

to get get them a little more pregnant, you know what I mean? But um but uh but no, we don't we don't need capital. Um

1:02:59

you know what we what we need is um what we have is a very loyal shareholder

1:03:06

base. We're very very fortunate uh to have a very loyal shareholder base that

1:03:12

understand what they've bought and they understand the time frames and they understand how we're going to get across

1:03:18

the finish line in every one of our markets. It's always going to be a different way for each market, but it's

1:03:24

the same technology and the same basic approach, you know, and you win you win a ball game by hitting singles and

1:03:30

doubles and triples, not necessarily home runs and grand slams. um you know

1:03:35

what what are you most excited about within the next Do you feel as though

1:03:40

you potentially have some catalysts in the next 6 to 12 months? Yeah. So so

1:03:46

what I'm the most excited about Tim first of all is our pipeline. Um the

1:03:51

frustrating part about the pipeline is you can't always talk about it because the customers are trying to do their own

1:03:58

thing. Um, I respect that. As long as they pay their money, they and use our

1:04:03

technology, I know that everything else comes along. Uh, but I'm very excited about the pipeline. I'm very excited

1:04:09

that a lot of the noise that has been out there, even though there's been more and more entrance, a lot of people are

1:04:15

realizing that some of these technologies are just not as advertised, you know, and um, and they're not able

1:04:22

to deliver what we've been able to deliver reliably. And you know we have the credibility which uh you know

1:04:29

through Mercedes and McLaren and you know Ferrari and and um and Cadillac and

1:04:35

Boeing and Airbus and all of these household names that have entrusted

1:04:41

their products to our technology as part of it. Um and that builds on itself. It

1:04:48

builds on itself. Um, and I'm just excited that we have a good team of

1:04:54

lences around the world that are also similarly understanding what they have

1:05:00

invested in as as lenses and what the potential is for the market and how they

1:05:06

can make a lot of money and make the world better by doing this. And

1:05:11

architecturally, I mean, and we talked about it before we hopped on. You have

1:05:17

essentially what you've done is you don't have to replace the windows. You actually have a uh you come out, they

1:05:23

measure the window, and they you put a window on the inside of the window, right? Yes. And it's it's like buying

1:05:30

carpet. um you know, you uh you go to the store, you pick out the color, they

1:05:35

come and measure your house, they order it from the mill, it shows up and it's installed, and you have new carpet. We

1:05:41

now have basically carpetized the smart window market. No one else can do this. And um and um in terms of

1:05:49

near-term catalyst, that's probably the biggest one because I know what's coming in automotive, I know it's coming in

1:05:55

aircraft, I know what's coming in the marine market. Um, you know, those have

1:06:02

longer sales cycles, but if you wanted this in your home this year, you could get it in your home this

1:06:08

year, you know, and through a retrofit. And what would that do to your power

1:06:14

bill, right? We've done some Well, the hardest thing to quantify is

1:06:21

what the question you just asked because every building is different. It's different. I'll give you I'll give you a

1:06:27

simple example. You have three buildings identical in the same block in New York. One houses a retail store, one houses an

1:06:35

accounting firm, and one houses a law firm. They're going to have totally different energy footprints. The law

1:06:41

firm, you have people working from 8 a.m. to midnight. Yeah. The accounting firm, you have people going in and out a lot, but really not the same hours. And

1:06:48

the retail store has its own, you know, traffic pattern, right? So, it depends

1:06:55

on the use, depends on where the exposure is. Is this in Manhattan? Is it in the UK? Is it in Las Vegas? But what

1:07:03

we've seen typically is you can reduce your air conditioning bills by about 20%.

1:07:11

Yeah. Now, I'm saying smart deployment of SPD in the right areas. Yeah. Now,

1:07:18

the other other benefits here, you have a nice view. You have a a high-rise apartment. Go to any high-rise

1:07:25

apartment, you'll see the vertical blinds are completely wide open. They paid a premium for the view. They don't

1:07:30

want to block it. Well, now they get there's couple hours a day when they either have to close those blinds, which

1:07:36

is a little bit of a chore, or they leave them open and suffer. now changed the equation where you could just

1:07:42

basically take a remote control. Little key fob like this operates some

1:07:48

of the windows in my office and open and there you go. Or talk to my Amazon Alexa. I better not say it too loud

1:07:54

because the window inside will turn on. But I can control my windows with an Amazon Alexa. Yep. Or a photo cell. Have

1:08:02

it automatically adjust. There's so many different things you can do here. And

1:08:07

it's simple. It's it's not rocket science. It's not science fiction. It's basically simply interfacing,

1:08:15

you know, an intelligent control system of some sort, whether it's a dimmer switch, a smart speaker, a photo cell,

1:08:24

AI, whatever. Oh my god, I got to the windowing

1:08:30

telling it to darken. I think I think this is an exciting company that has been ignored.

1:08:38

I can tell you this. I I'm look I looked at the chart and so you know I'm not I I

1:08:44

was always a fundamental guy but and I never could understand what the hell is it looking at a chart going to tell me

1:08:51

about a stock and then like 17 years ago I took a course in technicals and now

1:08:57

it's the first thing I look at. Right? What I've learned is that price action

1:09:05

can actually tell you a lot and areas where there is congestion that

1:09:10

tells you where supply and demand is, right? So, there are things that you can tell from the chart and I can tell you

1:09:17

this. So, you just had a a massive pop, right? From uh 90 cents right up to

1:09:26

about I mean up to two and then it came back down. So, two round numbers are a psychological thing

1:09:34

for for human beings. So those always have significance when it comes to

1:09:39

trading. Uh but what was what was the spike from 90 cents up,

1:09:46

Joe? What was that? There's a number of things. Um Mercedes introduced a vehicle

1:09:52

at the um uh Shanghai Motor Show uh where they were kind of using our

1:09:58

technology in a different way than in the past. Not just in the sunroofs, but in the side windows and a concept. I

1:10:04

think that got people's imagination going as to other uses for the technology. Um, you know, we've had a

1:10:11

lot of singles and doubles and triples that once you clear out the person that

1:10:18

has to sell their stock to pay for a wedding or whatever it is, you know, creates, you know, positive price

1:10:24

action. You know, ultimately in a company like like ours or any small cap or micro cap company, it's not the

1:10:31

fundamentals so much that move the company as supply and demand for the stock that will move the stock price.

1:10:36

So, if somebody is making a wedding and needs to sell something or has a margin call because of something else, right?

1:10:43

Has to sell something, right? That can affect us. You know, what we learned to

1:10:48

do though is obviously you tell the story as broadly as possible, Tim, and

1:10:53

you're a big part of helping us with that. Um, because I think you have an informed audience um that, you know,

1:11:00

understands what you're telling them and why it's important. Um, but also, you

1:11:06

know, we stick to our knitting. We don't get ahead of our skis. We don't, you know, we are out there beating the bush

1:11:13

every day. I mean, if I told you my day today, it was constant, you know, meetings with prospective customers for

1:11:20

the technology, right? Um, including major auto companies. Why? Because those

1:11:27

seeds that get planted grow and they grow faster when you have other seeds

1:11:32

that are growing around them. And we've had those other seeds. You know, we had good success in each of the markets

1:11:38

we've been in. And you know, and we're fortunate that we actually have five markets to go after, whereas most smart

1:11:45

glass companies will pick one. Usually it's architectural and usually that's a very tough market to break into because

1:11:52

it's not predictable. You have I I think I mean, as I look at

1:11:58

it, I mean, I've always thought when I looked at this company years and years ago, architectural was the thing that

1:12:05

that was just in my head. I just thought you guys it was a no-brainer home run, right? Same here. By the way, if you

1:12:12

told me that a price sensitive market like automotive was going to be our bread and butter, I would have said, you

1:12:18

never would have thought that, right? Yeah. I would have thought not. You're nuts. But you know what I learned to do is realize that I I don't have a

1:12:24

monopoly on the truth here. you know, and if you adjust, if you adjust and and

1:12:30

are able to build a business model that could adjust, you know, I I once gave the analogy about how to build a good

1:12:36

company. I said, "What you need to do is" and and I was lecturing a group of

1:12:43

um engineering students at a at a major engineering university and I was saying,

1:12:50

you know, if you can build something that has the resources of an aircraft carrier and the maneuverability of a

1:12:57

skiboat, you've built a good company. And then I figured out that's what we did through a

1:13:04

licensing model. We have the resources of an aircraft carrier. We have the

1:13:09

world's largest glass companies, the largest car companies, the largest chemical companies, the largest material

1:13:15

science companies, all involved as lenses. That's the aircraft carrier. But

1:13:22

Research Frontier sits at the focal point at the steering wheel of all this with the maneuverability of a speedboat.

1:13:29

I need to all of a sudden move from automotive to construction because of

1:13:35

this breakthrough we had in the um in the retrofit application. I don't have to spend money

1:13:42

to do that. I just need to turn the wheel, you know. Yep. Yeah. I mean, look. Yeah. I think

1:13:50

this is the story here is I I look at everything from a riskreward, right?

1:13:57

Yeah. 90 90 cents. It It was not an accident that it bounced off of there because you had some real real

1:14:03

congestion in that area. You can see that from the Oh, well, actually, you can't see it because I have a green line

1:14:11

and because I have green screen, you actually can't see the line. So, that's uh Let me change the color of that line

1:14:18

real quick. Um,

1:14:30

let's see. Okay.

1:14:36

So, if let's go with a blue.

1:14:42

There we go. And then I'll change one more.

1:14:53

Okay. So, if you look at the 90 cent area, that

1:15:01

isn't an accident that it found support there because you can go all the way back

1:15:07

over here and that is in 2019

1:15:13

you had support at 90 cents. So, isn't it something that it just came down here

1:15:19

in 2024 and found support there and then it came

1:15:25

down and what you just did was you did what's a called the double bottom test.

1:15:32

So, in other words, you hit the low, which was a previous low back in 2019,

1:15:39

you bounced off of it, and then you came back down and you tested it again, and

1:15:44

you bounced right off of it again. So, that's a double bottom, which is a bullish formation.

1:15:51

And then you did something interesting. you broke above the long-term downtrend,

1:15:58

which the longer the trend, the more dominant the trend, right? So, you have

1:16:04

a dominant downtrend from the upper left to the lower right.

1:16:11

You actually So, and and it's tough to get break through that because it's like inertia, right? So when something's got

1:16:18

momentum, you have to have something of greater or equal to break that momentum

1:16:24

and go the other way. So it's tough to do, right? So you have a long-term trend

1:16:29

down. Well, you just broke it. You didn't hold it. You but you did pierce

1:16:35

it, right? And now you're at this area of about a buck 65, buck 70 that's

1:16:43

acting as support. And that is an area of congestion right here. It's acted as support. It's acted

1:16:49

as resistance. So that's a little battleground.

1:16:55

I have a feeling what I try to do is I try to match up a

1:17:01

good-look chart setup with a fundamental story.

1:17:07

and you because I think your odds of of are of of having a a home run

1:17:13

increase significantly when you match up technicals with fundamentals, right? And I think the second half of the year,

1:17:19

Tim, when the retrofit starts to, you know, come out, that'll have a

1:17:25

meaningful impact on our revenue. That's predictable. We we'll have other meaningful impacts from pipeline things,

1:17:32

but that is kind of a a sea chain. So that's So that's what I try to do. So, I've got a chart that is telling me it's

1:17:40

trying to break the long-term downtrend. So, you were in this trend for one, two,

1:17:47

three, four, five years. That's been a downtrend for five years,

1:17:53

right? You break a fiveyear trend, and this is where it's breaking.

1:18:00

This could be the beginning of a five-year uptrend, right? a whole new

1:18:06

trend and that's where you are right now and you are also there fundamentally

1:18:12

from what you're telling me because you've got I think this is a very exciting time for

1:18:20

research right uh my I don't tell people what to do I

1:18:26

don't tell them to buy I don't tell them to sell it's not what I do I'm not a financial adviser what I would say

1:18:33

though is This the riskreward here is definitely in the

1:18:41

reward fave. I mean, if if you go to zero, Joe, are are you going to go bankrupt on me in the next year?

1:18:49

I mean, you've only been here since 1965. Yeah, right. I I don't think we're going anywhere except up. But, uh, but

1:18:56

we and by the way, we're also very very conservative on fiscally, so we're not

1:19:01

going bankrupt. Okay. So, my downside risk is maybe I go back

1:19:08

down. I I I test 90 cents. If it did do that, I would back up the

1:19:14

truck. That's where I would load up, right? I would start here and and start

1:19:20

dipping my toe. So, what I would tell people is if you don't, you know, this

1:19:25

is the thing. You hear the you watch the video, you see this, it sounds good. Two weeks from now, you forget all about it.

1:19:32

and you're back in the your everyday life and you forget about research,

1:19:37

buy it. Buy one share. Buy one share. I could tell people to buy one share, right? Because what

1:19:45

happens when you buy one share and you go to their website and you sign

1:19:50

up for their email alerts and you are now invested. You have one

1:19:56

share and you will pay attention to what's happening with the company. You will regret that you only have one

1:20:03

share if it takes off and goes to 10. But at least you participated, right?

1:20:09

It's worse to not participate at all. At least you have one. Right? That is what

1:20:16

I am starting. That's that's actually a CEO of another company said that on in

1:20:22

one of my interviews and when he said that I thought that was the most brilliant thing I think I've heard

1:20:28

anybody say because he's right I mean buy one share see what happens right I

1:20:36

think you have a fantastic story there's a lot of history here there's a lot of stuff we didn't talk about Hitachi

1:20:42

Mercedes a lot of stuff fascinating stuff to me I love stories like this and

1:20:48

and I love the fact that you are doing you do something that makes it more

1:20:55

comfort quality of life improves quality of life right I live in Vegas I would

1:21:02

like to have those windows on my house right now because it is hot as hell yeah

1:21:07

I don't I don't think any company could ever go wrong by doing something that has a societal benefit

1:21:13

if we can make people's lives better will be a market and people will understand what that market is and they

1:21:20

will act on it and they will buy it. Yep. So there may be competitors out there that try to have their claims.

1:21:28

This is the real deal. This is a proven company that the deserves the support of

1:21:34

the consumer, right? That really deserves the support

1:21:39

of the forget the new guys that are trying to come out with bogus claims and all this stuff. support this company.

1:21:48

Simple. And you could feel good about doing that, right? So, that's that's

1:21:53

where I'm at. Joe, if I could if I could leave your your viewers with one thing,

1:22:00

go to smartglass.com and look at some of the videos and understand none of this stuff is

1:22:07

computerenerated. None of this. It'll blow your mind what's possible. It'll

1:22:13

inspire you. not just about us but in general that people can do things that you didn't

1:22:19

think were possible. Yes. But this these shareholders that have been holding in

1:22:25

and in invested in this company, they deserve to be rewarded for their

1:22:31

patience, right? And for supporting the company. So I I I think it's time that

1:22:38

you had your time in the sun, right? No pun intended.

1:22:45

But I do think that it is a deserving company. So here's what I want to do.

1:22:50

This is our first interview. I think it's going to be an amazing I think it's an amazing interview. Uh when when do we

1:22:56

have you back, Joe? Whenever you want. I enjoy our discussion so much. I really do. So

1:23:04

anytime you want, Tim, I'm listen I I learn from listening. So keep talking.

1:23:10

When when do we when do you feel as though there could be an event or

1:23:17

something that we'd have you back and maybe want to update shareholders on?

1:23:25

Well, I think when the retrofit comes out, which we're saying is the second half of this year, so we're talking, you

1:23:31

know, Yeah. Well, starting in a week. Um,

1:23:38

okay. But yeah, I I think I think that uh you know, are you going to be doing any shows uh any uh the what what what

1:23:46

shows would you be going to conventions and stuff like that? Would you Well, there we just got back from the um

1:23:52

cruise ship design show. Okay. Miami. And that was phenomenal because um

1:23:58

everybody there that was relevant to our market knew about us, knew about SPD,

1:24:03

knew about our licenses, right? And they're able to put a face with the name

1:24:10

so that now they know how to get, you know, move things forward, you know,

1:24:15

faster, if you will. Okay. You know, you have a number of car shows coming up in

1:24:20

the fall. Um, in the summer there's, you know, there's a lot of prep activity,

1:24:26

but um, but I think what you're going to see is, you know, um, we, uh, we really,

1:24:34

you know, work towards the seeds that we've planted, making sure they sprout, making sure they grow. And the new seeds

1:24:41

that we're planting now with the retrofit are also something that we're very focused on right now, which I think

1:24:46

is going to be huge because it's enormous potential revenue and very

1:24:52

visible benefits to the consumer or to the building owner or facility manager.

1:25:00

The the the builder show is in Vegas. Yeah, the one it was in February. Yeah,

1:25:06

I like going to that. Next time I come, I'll look you up. Okay,

1:25:12

absolutely. Yeah. Okay. CES is always good. So, I'll make sure that I see you

1:25:18

in January of this coming year, too. You'll see me every month in Vegas for

1:25:23

something, maybe. All right. That that works for me. Joe, look, man. I really appreciate you taking the time to do

1:25:28

this, and it was a pleasure. Yep. We're we're going to have you back. I think

1:25:34

probably as soon as I see a headline that I think is is really worthy of maybe going beyond the the press

1:25:40

release, right, and explaining how important that is to the to the company and what it could mean. And I think

1:25:47

people will see good things happen with the company. You know, we, you know, we have a very easy to understand business

1:25:53

model. We license technology. You get a 10 to 15% royalty. We have no debt. We're very conservative and we're in

1:26:01

very big markets and we have other people doing the heavy lifting. So these are the kind of things that you know

1:26:07

hopefully make me look smarter than I am. I think you're a pretty smart guy. All

1:26:13

right, Joe. Thank you so much for doing this, man. I really appreciate it and uh I can't wait. All right, hold on one

1:26:20

second. I'm I'm gonna shut this off. Thank you for tuning in to another CEO interview here at Alphawolf Capital.

1:26:27

Today we had Joe Harrari from Research Frontiers, Inc., ticker symbol REFR.

1:26:35

I hope you enjoyed today's interview and if you did, do us a favor, give us a like. How about giving us a share? And

1:26:41

while you're at it, make sure you smash that subscribe button. All of those things are extremely important to us

1:26:47

here at Alpha Wolf Capital, and we want to thank you for taking the time to do

1:26:53

that. Until next time, stay safe. Alpha Wolf Capital wishes you the very best of

1:26:59

success.

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