(Total Views: 801)
Posted On: 06/15/2018 1:13:52 PM
Post# of 22465

One thing that gets ignored in Squires Shareholder Update, is that although displays is still the main focus, he says qmc is working in MedBio, solar and other areas. When I worked there we looked at all applications and you would be surprised at Squires depth of knowledge in them. QMC is no one trick pony! I also think Squires has been as "transparent " as is possible and if you read between the lines you can conclude that there is a lot going in the labs and meeting rooms. There is repeated mention of the high quality of our QD, commercial-ready, meeting specs. Where I have been surprised is that qmc has developed so much new nanomaterials.
Blue QD by itself would be a reason for incredibly high future company growth in the QD LED market, to say nothing of its potential backlight applications in the display industry.
If you Google Carbon Dots and their applications you may come to the same conclusion that I have, that Carbon Dots can replace Cad-free metal QD in most applications and be the most common QD going forward. QMC's advantage is that it can make tons of it, all highly uniform, and other competitors cannot. I have not read up on carbon dots in solar photovoltaic uses, but that would seal the deal on carbon dots becoming ubiquitous in the near future.
Squires is not hyping these advances or pushing them on us, but always takes the high road and understates, leaving us to do our own due diligence on their implications and importance.
Blue QD by itself would be a reason for incredibly high future company growth in the QD LED market, to say nothing of its potential backlight applications in the display industry.
If you Google Carbon Dots and their applications you may come to the same conclusion that I have, that Carbon Dots can replace Cad-free metal QD in most applications and be the most common QD going forward. QMC's advantage is that it can make tons of it, all highly uniform, and other competitors cannot. I have not read up on carbon dots in solar photovoltaic uses, but that would seal the deal on carbon dots becoming ubiquitous in the near future.
Squires is not hyping these advances or pushing them on us, but always takes the high road and understates, leaving us to do our own due diligence on their implications and importance.

