On Mon, 7 Feb 2005 21:18:33 -0800 (PST), you wrote:
And look at how many
patents Sam gets every year -everything they fund,
they keep the rights to.
---
Yes, and what's irked me for years is that they do the development
with public funds which, unless there's some compelling reason not to,
At 10:39 AM 2/7/5, Mark S Bilk wrote:
He's had a number of companies interested in it, but none of them
has met his demand of $10,000,000 up front and a major share of
the profits, without which he won't release any of the material,
although he will allow people to bring their own equipment to
Mark,
I believe the material was real. A lab assitant who worked with him, and
then worked for GE, told a USAF research director that he had done a 4 point
probe and measured zero resistance.
However, Vahldiek, who I have contacted several times, has so far been
unwilling to work with anyone
Mark,
Incldently, he was a test pilot for Nazi V1 flying bombs. He would ride
them up and then jump off and parachute down.
That's pretty wild. How would such bombs be launched? I'm picturing a
cartoon-like scenario of a man wrapping his arms around a missile...
Vorts-
Incidentally, Mark has
--- Akira Kawasaki wrote:
I do not believe this. I take this mention to be
done in jest. In my fascination with rocketry and
WWII history, I have never run across this item for
the V1 flying bomb being partially piloted.
Truth is stranger than fiction. It was called the
Fleseler Fi 103
From: Grimer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Room-Temperature Superconductor Invented 25 Years Ago
At 03:51 pm 07-02-05 -0800, you wrote:
Mark Goldes wrote in part:
Incldently, he was a test pilot for Nazi V1 flying bombs. He would
ride
them up and then jump off and parachute down.
I do
Subject: Re: Room-Temperature Superconductor Invented 25 Years Ago
At 10:39 AM 2/7/5, Mark S Bilk wrote:brbrHe's had a number of companies
interested in it, but none of thembrhas met his demand of $10,000,000 up
front and a major share ofbrthe profits, without which he won't release any
on to GE claimed
RTSC.
On the other hand, perhaps it was just another USO. An Unidentified
Superconducting Object:).
Mark
From: Michael Foster [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: Room-Temperature Superconductor Invented 25 Years Ago
Date: Mon, 7 Feb
--- Mark Goldes wrote:
On the other hand, perhaps it was just another USO.
An Unidentified Superconducting Object:)
This is probably correct, and Mark is in the best
position to judge, but the strange story behind MgB2
is not so different... it is not Room-Temperature, of
course, but the
At 5:35 PM 2/7/5, Jones Beene wrote:
This is naive. Trade secrets are routinely withheld. I
have never seen a patent successfully challenged for
withholding a trade secret, although it is definitely
in the wording of the patent law. I suspect most
patents withhold many secrets. It is just way
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