On 11 May 2012 at 22:31, Jochen Kunz wrote:
No, you wherent. To try and fail can be very
enlightening when you
realize _why_ you faild. --
I think the important thing that's been missed in all of this is that
the outfits involved are attracting capital from investors and
"licensees" without delivering a single functional unit--just
promises.
After all, Keeley fooled his investors his entire life. Only after
he died was his fraud discovered--and in the meantime, he had all of
their money.
Lest anyone think that Keeley's scam died with him, consider Black
Light Power:
http://blacklightpower.com/
Or PlasmERG:
http://blacklightpower.com/
Or Nanospire:
https://nanospireinc.com/
...or a host of other people.
The rule of thumb is to get a too-good-to-be-true idea, surround it
with some mumbo-jumbo and then pay some should-never-have-been-
awarded-a-degree PhDs to lend credence to you.
So why not take these things on blind faith? Well, for starters,
having blind faith in a huckster can lead to unfortunate
consequences:
http://bit.ly/Jo0cjD
Some times, it's wise to do your own research and take claims with a
grain of salt.
Anyone want to buy a laundry ball?
--Chuck