Rossi can write "Ni powdered" and "NI powered" whichever he prefers. ;-)
Now seriously unless the statement below is fake, which is unlikely, the article must be taken for what it says: NI and Rossi have made a deal. """ On November 10, 2011 4:39 PM [MST], regarding the above story, I received the following from Trisha McDonell | Corporate PR Manager | National Instruments. Subject: Re: final Re: contact info for E-Cat / NI contract Thank you Sterling for allowing us to review. We approve the text, especially the National Instruments portion of the story that include Stefano's quote and information. Best regards Trisha """ mic 2011/11/11 <peter.heck...@arcor.de>: > http://www.ni.com/legal/trademarks/ > > Rules for usage, excerpt: > # Do not display any NI Trademark more prominently than your own trademarks, > service marks or trade names. > > This means, if Rossi has no trademark, he cannot use the NI Trademark. > He must get an own Trademark first. > > > ----- Original Nachricht ---- > Von: Akira Shirakawa <shirakawa.ak...@gmail.com> > An: vortex-l@eskimo.com > Datum: 11.11.2011 00:53 > Betreff: [Vo]:National Instruments signs to do E-Cat controls > >> Via PESN: >> >> "Today, Leonardo Corporation, led by Andrea Rossi, inventor and >> developer of the one-megawatt cold fusion E-Cat plant, signed an >> agreement with National Instruments (NI), to have them make all the >> instrumentation for the E-Cat plants, which began commercial sales on >> October 28, following the successful test in Bologna, Italy of the first >> 1 MW heat plant to the first customer." >> >> More details on PESN: >> http://pesn.com/2011/11/10/9601953_National_Instruments_signs_to_do_E-Cat_co >> ntrols/ >> >> Great news! >> S.A. >> >> > >