Here's how I think it will go down based upon long term observation and
Rossi's hints.

It will be a positive TIP report. The TIP report will be ignored in the
industry.

Rossi & IH will announce that they intend to demo to their patent
application which was denied recently due to being "impossible", similar to
how the Wright brothers were denied publication of an article in Scientific
American because such a thing was impossible.

Rossi will set up Hydrofusion to do a public demo. Whoever wants to pay the
$5 fee can go & see a cold fusion reactor working in the field. IH will
propose that their patent demo should take place on this site. It is
intended to create the same kind of media circus that the Wright brothers
created for their demos.

The industry will be turned on its head before Rossi is even granted the
patent. CYPW Cyclone Power stock will skyrocket. Oil futures will plummet.
Bye bye, petrol-funded terrorism. Huge patent wars will break out, just
like what happened when dozens of people stole the Wright brothers' IP
(like Glenn Curtiss), but it won't be resolved in the same manner. That's
because it was a patent mashup effort by the military in WWI that forced
the Wright brothers' hand and gave shysters like Curtiss more than their
fair market share.

The way I view Rossi is that he's like Daniel Boone. He will lead everyone
to the green pastures of the Ohio Valley but he won't think the end result
was worth the effort because so many of those who came after him trampled
on the beautiful territories he opened up.


On Tue, Jun 3, 2014 at 8:34 AM, Jones Beene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> In a bit of historical retrospective, last evening I watched a fabulous bit
> of history about the beautiful aftermath of "treachery" ... at least that
> is
> one way to describe the "Silicon Valley, the American Experience" a film by
> Randall MacLowry of WGBH Boston.
>
> There are parallels to LENR which are worth thinking about.
>
> The documentary covers the miraculous transformation of Santa Clara County
> from cheap Orchard land into the most important bit of technology real
> estate on Earth, with a GDP twice as high as Saudi Arabia. The backstory
> episode was known as  "The traitorous eight" in reference to the eight men
> who left Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory in 1957 to form Fairchild. The
> two dozen multi-billion dollar companies that formed later from further
> treachery, following the initial dispersal are called Fairchildren.
>
> William Shockley had received a Nobel Prize in Physics for inventing the
> transistor but was unfit as a corporate manager, and his prize team of
> recruits left the company at a time before Venture Capital encouraged this
> tactic - and in fact VC pretty much developed out of the progression of
> Semiconductors ->  ICs -> CPUs -> Computers -> Internet -> Cell phones.
>
> Anyway, in some ways the LENR optimist could envision a scenario which is
> not unlike this former one in Silicon Valley being poised to happen for the
> upcoming development of the new technology of alternative energy based on
> LENR in a prime area with the proper funding and labor supply.
>
> Even if the TIP announcement of the Rossi effect is more momentous than
> some
> believe it will be, and despite the availability of Sand Hill Road, I do
> not
> see this same rapid deployment happening again in Silicon Valley, although
> it could in principle... since the brain-power and VC capital is here.
>
> In the USA as a whole, and Silicon Valley in particular - prices are too
> high, there is too much wealth, and the vision of a sustainable future is
> clouded - plus money can go anywhere and it usually chooses the best value.
> But even China may not provide the best value.
>
> "The Next Big Thing" in breakthrough technology will probably happen in
> alternative energy, but the location of "Hydrogen Valley" is undetermined
> for now, and could be influenced by a single wealthy individual - and then
> of course - by an aftermath of treachery.
>
> I also noticed that some fool was willing to pay $2 billion for a
> basketball
> team - what a waste considering that kind of seed money could bring in more
> to one location than the $1.5 trillion that Sherman Fairchild's small
> investment did for SV. That kind of money put into the first LENR program
> could assure at least that the Pioneer company, whether it be IH or Clean
> Planet (the Japanese startup headed by Yoshino and based on Mizuno's
> technology) - would at least attract the talented traitors.
>
> BTW - Yoshino seems to have many of the same qualities and the charisma of
> Bob Noyce.
>
> Jones
>
>
>

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