I first met Jed at the CETI demo.  It was nice to really meet him in person.








-----Original Message-----
From: Blaze Spinnaker <[email protected]>
To: vortex-l <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, Dec 20, 2014 11:43 pm
Subject: Re: [Vo]:1995- CETI 1kW reacto claim . fraud or not?


Perhaps Patterson realized he didn't have anything which is why he blustered 
instead of accepting a deal that would only lead to disappointment.


On Sat, Dec 20, 2014 at 2:48 PM, Bob Higgins <[email protected]> wrote:

As I recall, the deal was $10M, spread over various milestones of development.



On Sat, Dec 20, 2014 at 5:27 PM, Terry Blanton <[email protected]> wrote:
If it makes any difference, Jed confided in me this whole story when it 
happened.  I found it appalling.  Patterson wanted the $1M from Motorola but he 
wanted control of the secret.  I had empathy for Motorola since they gave me my 
first job out of school and I wanted to see CF succeed.  CETI could probably 
have easily have gotten a 40% share out of the batwings but they were greedy.


It was a horrible story and we were devastated by it. 



I was disappointed at the time, but not devastated.  I expected Cold Fusion to 
rise out of the ashes and I would get to work on it when it became clear that 
it was real.  It was not until Rossi's Ni-H claims that I was able to make a 
case to start a small project.  This was just before I retired.  When I left, I 
took the project with me.  At the time of Patterson Cell, Bob Galvin was in 
charge - a man of real long term vision.  He knew he didn't need to fully 
understand it to make money with it.  He made a big leap and took Motorola into 
semiconductors when that technology was little beyond alchemy.  He felt he 
could do the same with Cold Fusion (as it was told to me).  After Bob Galvin 
left, Motorola slowly divested itself of most of its physical science research 
capability; and today, it may not be possible for Motorola to pursue such a 
project without re-tooling its workforce and facilities.  Back in the early 
90's Motorola could make at least one of anything in its labs and then drive it 
to product - if a UFO had been given to Motorola for back engineering in 1990, 
we would all be flying them now.





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