----- Original Message ----- From: "Terry Blanton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 5:32 PM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Self Runner


The Testatika's technology is guarded by a European sect as I recall.
This is the device which taps static electricity?
===================
The general appearance of the Testatika is a electrostatic generator. No electrostatic genmerator has the Testatika perfomance of a) self running and b) power to light a large incandescent lamp. I have seen a ideo purporting to show this, but it is so counter-intuitive as not to be trusted. Yet many have seen it and there are may attempts to replicate it, but no successes that I know of. Supposedly several of these machines provide power to the community.

Mike Carrell
====================

Terry

On Thu, Jun 5, 2008 at 11:25 AM, Mike Carrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
A machine with the properties proposed has existed for decades, creating
great puzzles and legends all its own.
Use Google and look up "Testatika". At a forum at Temple University some
years ago, I talked to a lecturer who had actually seen the device and
watched it operate. reportedly it self-ran, once started, and lit a 300 W
incandescent lamp.

Mike Carrell


----- Original Message ----- From: "Stephen A. Lawrence" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, June 05, 2008 11:53 AM
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Self Runner




Terry Blanton wrote:

On Wed, Jun 4, 2008 at 7:19 PM, Jones Beene <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

With an IPO that raised say $10 billion (which alone
would drag things out an additional 6 months) you
could count on the first product capable of powering a
home coming to market in 4 years- at the very least.

Has there ever been an IPO of that magnitude?

Yes.  Biggest one I found in a quick Google search was $19 billion, by
Industrial & Commercial Bank of China.  See:

See:


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/20/AR2006102000207.html

There have been other "monster IPOs" as well.  However, the really big
ones are typically either for long-established companies that have been
going concerns for a long, long time, but just had never gone public, or
they're for spinoffs which were wholly owned subsidiaries of larger
companies until the IPO.

For a new company with little income and a few dozen employees the numbers
are normally much, much smaller.



Terry



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