The handful of partners who will initially invest in the DGT technology
will be entering into a joint venture where the partners will be evaluating
much more than the technology.

These partners will be looking at DGT as an organization that will be
capable of providing continuing improvements to their nascent  cold fusion
technology over many years into the intermediate future at the forefront of
that LENR science.

These partners will be capable of testing DGT and adapting these systems to
meet their own needs  and evolving those systems to meet there current and
future product requirements.

DGT must be able to explain the finest and most obscure points of LENR
science within a framework of a new unified scientific paradigm.

The partners who do due diligence will evaluate the key personnel of DGT to
insure that this technical and management team will provide cutting edge
science into the indefinite future.

This management will also include the security and intellectual protection
of the HEMI technology which will insure a vanguard position in the field
of LENR both now and into the foreseeable future.









On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 11:13 PM, Eric Walker <eric.wal...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On Wed, May 21, 2014 at 7:35 AM, Axil Axil <janap...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> In procurement of systems, it is the buyer's responsibility to do due
>> diligence:
>>
>
> This argument seems to be a different one than one in which DGT is held to
> be basically sound but misunderstood.  In this line of reasoning, it would
> seem that DGT are free to do whatever they like, including squirly business
> practices that approach fraud, and it is up to potential investors to make
> sure they know what they're getting into.  This does not seem like a
> promising approach to exonerating DGT.
>
> Eric
>
>

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