It is a kit that is "the product". Check on Evviva's management and see where they people went to school. I bet that at least one went to Stanford. NanoLogix's Flatpack is patented and no one is messing with the patent. As to using the kit to test general toilet bowl and keyboard bacteria that is just a generalized petri and agar setup in which you are waiting for unspecified bacteria to grow as opposed to the specifically targeted capabilities of the NanoLogix technology configured for really bad bacteria. Remember this is being sold by this company as a "toy" being used to introduce people to science rather than a really serious infectious disease technology. This also suggests, however, that an enormous market exists into which the tech should be introduced to high school science programs. I think the idea is to create marketing partnerships with various entrepreneurs and let "the flowers bloom" as they design specific market niches.