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Business/Finance See other Business/Finance Articles Title: What’s “Neural Imprinting,” and will it really “wipe out pain and generate $2.86 trillion in new wealth?” What is Michael Robinson teasing for Radical Technology Profits? This article originally appeared in the Friday File for the Stock Gumshoe Irregulars (our paid members) on November 20. It has not been updated or revised, but weve had questions about the ad of late (and virtual reality continues to be a hot topic, it was also the focus of another Friday File not long after that), so were opening it up for everyone to see now. In the months since this piece was published, the price of the secret stock that is the primary focus of the ad (OK, its NVDA no more secret!) dropped a bit and then recovered on the strength of a good report, some optimistic guidance, and some raised earnings expectations, so its now up about 10% from where it was then. The meat of the ad appears not to have changed at all, including the continuing promise to send you a prototype (you can buy one yourself for $5 too, if you like, more on that at the end of the article). I personally own some 2018 LEAP options on NVDA, which I bought around the same time that the article originally ran, and will not trade those for at least three days following this re-publication of the following article my opinion hasnt changed from whats written below. ===from 11/20/15=== The Money Map Press folks seem to have replaced Stansberry (both are Agora affiliates) in the position of quickest to saturate the known universe with email ads the two theyve been pushing this week, the solar spiel from Dr. Kent Moors that we talked about earlier in the week and this new Neural Imprinting promo from Michael Robinson that well talk about today, filled my inbox faster than anything else in recent memory since Dan Ferris old Next Great Royalty Company pitch for Stansberry. The big picture claim is that you have a chance to position yourself in this company and see 6,642% growth because of the dominant patent position that this secret neural imprinting company has in virtual reality and a special kind of computing power. Sounds pretty enticing, right? Presumably hes making the leap of faith that nearly every big picture newsletter pitch does, assuming that because this company has some technological advantage in some way, and the overall market is perhaps going to grow dramatically, that this company will control the market in the future. That sounds awesome, every time, because we remember Intel (INTC) and their dominance in personal computer chips, and remember how that generated 4,000%+ gains for INTC stock over the last 25 years thanks to the strength of the Wintel market position (or 40,000% gains over 40 years if you go back to when IBMs Altair 8800 was the first PC with an Intel chip)
many of us do not always remember that there were other companies developing chips back then, too, or that many of them failed. Just as an example, one of the few competitors from back then thats been a publicly traded company over that whole time (many more have disappeared, were small parts of big companies, or have been bought or sold along the way) is Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), the company that licensed Intels designs to be a second-source supplier for IBM that was back in 1982, the beginning of what became a very contentious and litigious relationship between those two companies. If you had bought AMD on that news and held on for 33 years, you would have lost 26%. If you had bought Intel on that same day, you would have gained 16,000%. The winners and losers are not always all that clear before the game is over and, of course, if youre a person who dreams about 16,000% gains, remember that they can be very difficult to handle emotionally
to get to that 16,000% gain in INTC as of today, you would have had to sit through at least one 80% loss and a handful of 20, 30, 40% losses over the years. Could you invest $10,000, see it grow over decades to $2 million at the peak, and not sell when it drops below a million? If so, congratulations! Your $10,000 in INTC 33 years ago today (inflation adjusted, that would be about $28,000 today) would have turned into $1.6 million. But anyway, my point is to remember that business history favors the winners and quickly forgets the losers. Its easy to forget that for every Apple theres a NeXT, an HP, a Compaq, a Packard Bell, a Commodore, a Digital Equipment, a Tandy. People arent as good at predicting the future as we think we are, particularly when it comes to specifics about revolutions. Heres a little bit of the intro from the story, for those of you who havent killed a half hour reading it yet (if you print out the transcript, its 55 pages long): While on patrol on the outskirts of Kandahar, Afghanistan, First Lieutenant Scott Jacksons Humvee rolled over an IED buried under the dusty road. The explosion transformed his vehicle into a twisted inferno. And while he was able to heroically escape the wreckage, 30% of his body had been covered with life-threatening, third-degree burns. First Lieutenant Jacksons injuries were so severe, he was immediately air-vacced to a burn specialization unit in Germany. But the doctors were unable to effectively treat him. Morphine was useless. The agony had so enveloped his body that even in his sleep, he dreamt of being on fire. Out of desperation, he was sent to the Institute of Surgical Research at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas. Here, doctors had begun testing an experimental new treatment: A Neural Imprinting device. It is non-invasive, drug-free, and has no dangerous side effects. But, most importantly, during initial studies, it had demonstrated a nearly miraculous ability to eliminate extreme pain. Robinson provides a few other examples of this, too phantom limb pain, chemotherapy pain, etc., all cured with Neural Imprinting. So whats he actually talking about? Virtual reality. Video games, particularly immersive virtual reality video games, have reportedly shown some substantial potential to distract people from their pain. And when you distract people, the pain subsides sometimes. I can vouch for that with regular video games, you dont even have to have virtual reality sometimes for one of the Little Gumshoes, Im quite sure I could remove one of his toes without him flinching if he happened to be playing Minecraft at the time. Robinson goes on and on to build the argument about the power of this medical and technological revolution, and to argue that its built on the technology of one specific company: Which is why a single company thats less than 1/20th the size of Johnson and Johnson, yet is at the center of this $2.86 trillion medical and technological revolution
Wont take 30 years to deliver these kinds of returns. In fact, over the next three years
80.2 million Neural Imprinting devices will be sold around the world
Launching this companys revenues up 6,640%. And you now have a chance to be right there at the beginning of it all. What else do we get by way of clues? Here are a few:
the same firm Ive been telling you about today controls 7,300 patents tied to this technology. So anybody who wants to tap into what theyve created will be paying a hefty price. And when they do, you could get a piece of the action as well. Mmmm, patents. Patents for what, I wonder? Its the final piece thats the real breakthrough. This is what makes Neural Imprinting, and all forms of virtual reality, possible. The Virtual Processor Unit which Ill just abbreviate as a VPU from now on. The VPU creates virtual worlds faster than the speed of thought.
instead of the eight to 10 cores on a typical CPU
The VPU can holds up to 8 billion microscopic transistors. To put that into perspective, at just 232 square millimeters a VPU would be lost under a single business envelope. Yet it holds more of these micro-transistors than there are people in the world. This allows the VPU to use an advanced method for handling immense amounts of data called Parallel Processing. With Parallel Processing, data signals are able to run through all 8 billion micro-transistors at the exact same time, performing up to 8 trillion tasks per second. Thats up to 300 times faster than some of the best CPUs on the market today. So thats what were looking for here the company that makes this VPU
more from Robinson
The VPUs secret weapon Parallel Processing gives neural imprinters the ability to create 360-degree, 3-D responsive worlds in real time. With a VPU, instead of watching a video of someone walking alongside a lake, you can become that person. Youre not forced to look at a scene in one fixed direction. Instead, you can see 360 degrees of your surroundings
created in real time as you turn your head. The millions of digitally rendered blades of grass move under your feet. You can skip a rock on the water and watch the ripples as theyre created. This happens so fast that your brain instantly accepts it as reality. Thats why Neural Imprinting is so effective. Anything else? We do get a few more little snippets about this secret small company
The same small company that invented the technology dominates the VPU patent pipeline. Because, as Ive mentioned, they control 7,300 VPU patents. This has made them an almost unbeatable power in virtual reality allowing them to tap into this exponentially growing industry. That means theyre positioned to get a piece of the lions share of VPU-enabled devices sold over the coming years. And that goes far beyond Neural Imprinting and the $635 billion pain relief industry. This firms patent pipeline will dramatically change nearly every aspect of how healthcare is practiced moving forward
. That same processing power is now being used to revolutionize medical imaging. By replacing the standard CPU in MRI machines with VPU technology, doctors were able to cut that imaging time to just 97 seconds. It cuts CT scans down to 59 seconds
And PET scans down to a blazing fast 13 seconds. What else do these VPUs do? VPUs grant cars the gift of sight. Heres a way to understand this. With Neural Imprinting, a VPU helps imprint a virtual world in a human brain. With cars, VPUs work in the opposite way. They help imprint a real world, in a virtual brain. If you have bought a new car recently, chances are it is equipped with hundreds of sensors, as well as front and back cameras. And for more and more of these cars, the information being captured and recorded from these devices is being fed into the virtual brain of that automobile. Its being fed into a VPU. The VPU is processing this real world information to create a virtual 3D map of the cars surroundings. This way, in real time, it can identify objects on actual roads
. For instance, Googles self-driving prototypes rely on VPU technology. And they have already traveled more than 1 million miles
the equivalent of 75 years of human driving experience
. Audi made headlines when its autonomous car drove itself 550 miles to CES in Las Vegas. BMW is developing a feature called Remote Valet Parking assist, which drops you off at your door then parks itself in your garage or on the street. And in October, Tesla released the beta version of an updated Model S car that literally drives and parks itself. All of these car makers Audi, BMW, and Tesla rely on a VPU to act as the brains of their autonomous features. And each of them have a standing relationship with the one company that controls this 7,300-strong patent pipeline
.
. the biggest player in the automotive industry is no longer a company that makes cars. Its the one that makes the virtual brains the VPUs inside them. So what are these VPUs, really, and how much do they cost? Today, the firm that invented the VPU is selling a basic model for just $27.50. So think about that. Theyve found a way to produce this technology cheaper than what a current CPU costs. And the VPU isnt just for traditional computers. Its now cost-effective to use the VPU in every tablet and smartphone. With a VPU delivering as much as a 300-fold boost to the processing power of the fastest computer on the market, you can imagine how much of an improvement it could deliver to the devices you are using in your everyday life. Which is why this company has already quietly formed deals with Apple, Microsoft, IBM, HP, Toshiba and Google. OK, so why havent we all heard of this company? Well, you probably actually have heard of it. One more small slice cluey deliciousness: The founder and CEO was a microprocessor designer at AMD the $1.7 billion chipmaker. His co-founder was an engineer for both Hewlett Packard and Sun Microsystems. Their executive vice president also jumped ship from Sun Microsystems, where he was a board member. And leading their financial team is a former senior VP of Cisco. And together theyve quickly developed the VPU technology that could make this one of the biggest and most lucrative companies on the planet. This companys revenue streams are directly dialed into more than 20 multi-billion dollar industries. This is, as you may have guessed by now, graphics chip pioneer NVIDIA (NVDA). Which has also been teased as the brains behind self-driving cars in a series of Motley Fool teaser ads that we covered last year here, and its still apparently a prime pick of David Gardners. Their biggest single market today is graphics processing chips for desktop gaming, particularly at the high end of the market, but their leadership in visual processing is impressive and does provide at least a reasonable backdrop to Michael Robinsons promises that theyll dominate in virtual reality and medical imaging and self-driving cars and whatever else. Neither virtual reality nor driverless cars are going to make NVDA rise 6,000% in the next few years, things dont move quite that fast, and I suspect that a chipmaker is never going to become the biggest revenue winner from increasing sales of more advanced medical imaging equipment, but Robinsons not the only one who sees those areas being drivers of their future growth. NVIDIA has also been on a nice run over the last few months, rising by more than 50%. Its a good-sized company, with a market cap of about $17 billion and as weve grown accustomed to with big tech companies, theyve got plenty of cash (about $6 per share in net cash). They are profitable, and they are growing both revenue and earnings, but analysts are not as optimistic about it as Michael Robinson (or David Gardner) over the next couple years. Average analyst estimates indicate that revenue will rise about 20% over the next couple years (in total), and that the margins will improve by a few percentage points, which will bring earnings per share to about $1.35 by their next fiscal year
but theyre expecting earnings growth to slow markedly after next year, growing by only 5% or so per year. This isnt so unusual analysts get bogged down in actual orders, industry forecasts, pricing trends and the like and are often much less optimistic than pundits who start with big picture excitement about fantastic ideas. Thats not to say that pessimism is always the better path, since it will make you miss a lot of genuinely fast-growing stocks
so if Gardner or Robinson are right about this one, for example, you might think that its a bargain at a forward PE of 23. And maybe it is its definitely priced for more growth than the analysts are expecting, but its certainly not ridiculously inflated
if you back out the cash, the forward PE is only about 18. Not cheap for that kind of growth rate, but far from ludicrous. I kind of like NVIDIA, though Ive not owned shares as far as I can remember. Its an appealing founder-led and investor-friendly company with a strong and long-lasting leadership in a niche that has become more important (graphics and video processing), and theyve made a real effort to diversify the business, mostly in data center processing and automotive. Gaming is still the lions share of their business, as it has been since their first GE-Force graphics cards enabled the rise of much more advanced desktop gaming about 15 years ago ago, and its also still growing with Virtual Reality as a part of that, including their new GameWorks resources for VR developers, so despite the diversification efforts gaming remains the real driver on the bottom line, and that will probably be true for the foreseeable future. Their chips are not necessarily in the virtual reality headsets, but those headsets are not stand-alone devices in most cases, theyre getting their computing power from the machine theyre connected to and thats more often than not going to have an NVIDIA graphics processor, at least for higher-end applications. Those are not the $27.50 ones, of course thats about what an entry level graphics card for a desktop PC will cost you, the fancier new ones that theyre selling now, like their latest TITAN graphics card, top out at something like $650. You can get a very brief overview of what they think are their key businesses and growth areas from their most recent investor presentation here, or a much more exhaustive set of presentations on their various businesses from their Investor/Analyst Day back in March. And one of the better Motley Fool analysts had a nice quick piece on their most recent quarter here thats worth a look. From what I can tell after doing just a little browsing, the concerns that analysts have are mostly about gaming they are worried that gaming revenue is not going to continue to be a big growth driver as it has been this year, presumably because new consoles and mobile devices continue to supplant PC gaming to some degree (and even if NVDA processors make it into some of those devices or consoles, the margins may be much lower than for high-end desktop gaming equipment)
and gaming has been both the biggest segment and the growth engine for NVDA for most of their history. Despite the fact that they are making inroads in data center processing and automotive and other areas, those just arent big enough yet (or growing fast enough) to make up for any real shortfall from GE-Force and gaming. If such a shortfall appears. So that appears to be the risk: Their growth areas are still dominated by gaming, and investors worry gaming may not carry the load in the future. Still, they are making strong inroads into automotive processors and in-car entertainment systems, and they do make a compelling argument that their processing acceleration will be the next wave forward for increasing processing power and speed as chips hit a cant make them smaller and faster anymore physical limit. And they do pay a small dividend and buy back a lot of stock. Robinson goes on to say that
You will also discover that, since this is a virtual reality technology, this firm is perfectly positioned to capitalize on
The coming $20 billion a year virtual reality video game revenue stream. Because the systems that run these games rely on VPU technology. And even though that figure would represent just a fraction of their overall revenue streams, it could position this firm as the #1 gaming company in the world. Bigger than the revenues from Microsofts Xbox and Sony Playstation combined
.
it is at the center of what is, in total, a record-breaking $2.86 trillion opportunity. I dont know how you can make those numbers fit reality, at least for the near term. Microsofts total annual revenue from their devices and gaming division, which includes the Surface as well as Xbox, is maybe $4 billion or so. Sony is probably similar, I havent checked. NVIDIA already has annual revenue of close to $5 billion, though perhaps only half of that is specifically from their gaming businesses. NVIDIA did make some of the chips inside the first Xbox, and it was a big win for them a dozen years ago, but they also had a pricing dispute and they apparently ended up losing money on a lot of that business. Their OEM chips and intellectual property revenue are the large legacy business at NVIDIA that they dont talk about much, and theyre not focusing on growth in those areas at the moment. And yes, they do have about 7,300 patents, as teased
I have no idea how many of them are valuable or generate licensing revenue (their IP revenue, from licensing those patents or designs, is very small right now). NVIDIA does completely dominate the market for high-end graphics processing units (GPUs), the gaming-focused chips that they invented and which formed the foundation of the company back in 1999 and which, who knows, might become more important in virtual reality and other areas for visual processing. But just to come full circle, guess who has the second position in those graphics cards behind NVIDIAs GE-Force? Its good ol AMD, long-time second banana to Intel, which bought NVIDIAs competitor ATI back in 2006 for about $5 billion. So far, its another flop for AMD as theyve failed to bite back more than about 20% of the market for high-end graphics cards (and yes, AMD itself is now only worth about $1 billion). So I think NVIDIA can pretty much be confident that theyre not going to lose this core part of their business if needed, theyve got plenty of financial flexibility and they could just drop prices by 15% and probably put AMD out of business entirely within a year or two, but they havent lost market share yet from the reports Ive read. NVIDIA is also selling a sort of competitor to the Xbox, their SHIELD performance tablet designed for gamers, and TV box thats like a more gaming-friendly Apple TV neither of those is likely to be a big revenue driver, given the size and dominance of the competition, but you never know. So as a stock, this is really another mismatch: Do you buy the big future potential from as-yet non-material businesses like virtual reality, and embrace their technological leadership in visual processing, or do you worry about the somewhat slower-growth immediate future if gaming growth slows a little in the next few quarters? Ive been meaning to dig further into NVDA for a while, so while I wish I had done so before the big jump the shares have made over the past month or two I am generally liking what I see
as long as I keep my rose-colored glasses on and imagine stronger-than-the-market-expects growth for their virtual reality and automotive processing businesses. Largely as a way to remind me to keep track of this one, Ive purchased a small position in call options I dont want to commit a lot of cash to it at this level, I think there may be a chance to buy a bit cheaper in the months to come given what is widely expected to be a pretty tepid fourth quarter for them without a big growth jump, so Ill wait before making a decision about a real position in the equity
but Ill lay a few chips on the board with some LEAP options in case the analysts are wrong and its just off to the races for NVDA. I have not shown any great prescience in my past investments in semiconductors, so you probably wouldnt be wrong to take even this tepid optimism from me with a grain of salt. But thats about it either the valuation is a bit too high at ~18X next years earnings (ex cash), or the growth expectations from analysts are a bit too low at 5% a year to 2020 Im willing to make a small bet that its the latter, but not a big one. Oh, and Ill go out on a limb and say that the Neural Imprinting stuff Robinson talks about for pain relief through virtual reality, though very cool, is not going to show up in a meaningful way on NVIDIAs bottom line in the next five years (or ever, probably). Even if it turns out that this immersive virtual reality stuff is very useful for analgesia, as it seems to be for at least some people, theres no indication that health care facilities would need anything more than a low-end gaming machine and a virtual reality headset for a few hundred bucks to provide this service
they did find that immersive virtual reality was much more effective than just playing Nintendo games, but that virtual reality system they used in the story cited by Michael Robinson for a burn victim, though it cost about $35,000, could probably be replicated for much less than 10% of that cost today (the story, which you can read here in GQ, was published back in 2012 but the events took place in 2006). So even if every hospital and therapy center bought that, or every patient, that would be dwarfed by the consumer gaming market. I think consumers are going to drive virtual reality (or fail to drive it, perhaps), and any therapeutic benefit will be just a nice bonus for society, not a meaningful generator of revenue for any companies who make virtual reality hardware or software. And finally, probably just to make me cranky, Michael Robinson tosses in a little spiel taking credit for his recommendation about a special opportunity in Living Metal, He says is a sign of his ability to bring wonderful things to his subscribers that was his pitch about Stellar Biotechnologies (KLH.V, SBOT) from August of 2014, just as the stock was getting up well over $1 (on the strength of Robinsons pitch and other hype it got over $1.50 for a very brief while) because Robinson and others were certain that it was on the verge of uplisting to the Nasdaq, and he said at the time that you had to jump on this chance to buy round lots before it IPOd. I wrote about it at the time, of course, because thats what we do. And, as we said then, anyone who wanted to could have bought plenty of shares, round lots or no, since it had been trading on the Venture exchange in Canada and OTC In the US for years
and all the hype about an IPO uplisting did was get the shares lifted to even more ridiculous levels, only to drift back down again for a year. None of which made the economics of the company seem any more sensible. And now it has finally uplisted to the Nasdaq after a 10:1 consolidation/reverse split, trading at SBOT instead of the old OTC SBOTF. Split adjusted, the shares today are trading at
75 cents. $7.50 after the consolidation. The company is still moving remarkably slowly, more than two years after a different newsletter (from Nick Hodge) pitched it at also about 60-70 cents, as I recall, and told us it was about to change the world of immunotherapy and cure cancer and fix pretty much everything else that ails us. Revenues continue to creep up slowly, expenses creep up slowly, and theres a lot more press releases about possible uses for KLH that might drive prices up than there are actual sales of KLH or agreements to receive royalties on KLH-enabled drugs in the future. The cash burn is fairly slow, so theyre doing OK for now but, on the flip side, thats because, according to their financial statements at least, they dont seem to be really spending much money on building the business or marketing or R&D. Seems to me like theyre sucking blood out of their mollusks, selling it to labs, and hoping someone will make them wealthy as a result Im sure thats not the way theyd tell the story, and maybe there will be some hope, but after a while you just have to let your cynicism take hold. They can grow molluscs pretty good, and bleed them without killing em
its just that, so far, the world doesnt care very much. And it makes me grouchy that Robinson is touting this as a win for his subscribers at the time, and a reason why new folks should subscribe now. Oh, and I almost forgot to mention about that Neural Imprinting Robinsons going to send you a free prototype too: I will also send you a prototype of the revolutionary Neural Imprinting device. Again, this is only for the first 500 people who respond today. You dont need any special equipment to operate this Neural Imprinting headset. All you need is an Android or Apple smartphone to download the virtual reality simulation apps
Within minutes of your device arriving, you can follow the simple step-by-step instructions and experience the incredible effects of Neural Imprinting and virtual reality for yourself. And this gift is yours to keep. But you must hurry. I anticipate these membership slots will fill up fast. Hmmm
wait, I can do this with my phone? Then why the heck do I need this fancy VPU chip from NVIDIA, or a fancy virtual reality headset? What Robinson is undoubtedly going to be sending you as his Neural Imprinting Device Prototype is some variation of Google Cardboard which does look pretty cool, its basically a way to turn your phone into a fancy next-generation stereoscope so you can see immersive postcards, basically, though apparently you can also view 3D immersive video and play some games so its not just still images. You can buy one yourself for five or ten dollars if you like in lots of places online, most of them are literally made of cardboard and its designed to provide a cheap, accessible version of virtual reality without waiting for the $400 Oculus Rift headset to come out in a few months. Certainly theres no reason to pay much more than $20 unless you want one that looks like an old ViewMaster or is made of aluminum or something
once youve got it, you just download the Cardboard app from Google (or one of the many others that uses the technology now) and put your phone inside the viewer and it creates the stereo vision thats enhanced by 3D and 360 degree immersive imaging (as in, you can turn around in a circle and see a 360 degree view of whatever is in the app or game or video youre using, and the stereoscopic vision means you can see it in 3D). Its pretty cool, and Ive been meaning to try one out, but I think Ill just pay $20 for it instead of sending Michael Robinson $1,950 for a subscription to his newsletter, his special report on the secret VPU stock that is actually just good ol NVIDIA, and a Neural Imprinting device prototype. And frankly, Id kinda like to see him pay me for his past, highly misleading promotions about Stellar Biotechnologies and the SharesPost 100 Fund. Just kidding. Keep em coming, Michael I cant get enough of the ridiculous promises, and thanks for continuing to give Stock Gumshoe so much to chew on. Poster Comment: Robert Graf says: March 7, 2016 at 7:58 pm You cant. Its just a VR demo. The whole spiel is basically lies based on inaccurate translation of technical specs. I could go over it point by point, but the gist of this, is that what you would get is merely a 360 degree scenescape. To be immersive to the point of treating pain, you would need some sort of guided entrainment. You need to find out what the source of your pain is. Im no doctor, so this isnt medical advice, but an opinion. Food allergies would be one of the first things Id look at. If theres something you eat on a very regular basis, especially if its processed, Id avoid it for a week to see if that has any effect. Artificial sweeteners and flavoring would be my prime suspects. Id look into healing your gut, as well. Just search on heal your gut. If this technology actually works, it will face stiff competition from other entrainment options, as well. You might want to search on free pain relief mp3′ if you want to try entrainment and you have an mp3 player and are willing to commit a half hour daily to listen without distraction. It will probably take a couple of weeks for you to get deeply immersed enough for this to work. Robert Graf says: As far as this being a field Mvidia will profit from immensely, I dont see that. If HTC makes a good show with their VR product, It might separate the field from Nvidia. The graphics market will probably be won by the strength of volume, and when the Chinese enter that market, it will be through the SOC technology, where Nvidia is entering the market with Tegra. So, theyll be going against the established ARM entry and the video processors that market uses. That will likely define the low end, and it will probably dominate the portable device market, although Nvidia will likely be going after the high end, which is inline with their PC market. With the Chinese flooding the market with their low cost portables of every type, I dont see a huge market, but Nvidia does need to maintain development presence as the market shakes out. Consoles come and go, and have died, but reincarnated in the past. Android (a Linux derivative) has made Linux a stealth threat to M$, and seems to have forced M$ into giving Windows 10 away for free, but the users seem to be resisting, or at least not interested, as also seen in the past, requiring M$ to extend support for XP, as demanded by the user base. After the initial bugs get worked ouit, only the gamers are keen to update, but they need to do so to take advantage of the hardware they constantly upgrade. M$ is also being forced to open up their development software, as well. The free version of Visual Studio keeps getting more capable, as M$ watches the Linux (esp. through Android) tide rise against mobile Windows, which got blindsided by iOS before Android was released. And the wildcard bis entries like RePhone, which appeals to the maker crowd. So, I dont see Nvidia making any big inroads, especially in this economy, but it should be a decent option play for those who want to keep a close eye on the portable computer market, and understand the dynamics. marina says: I read through the article and the comments still did not get how I can invest in neural imprinting Please advice give me a link Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, author of this article, says: You cant, not really. Sorry if it was unclear from the article, but Michael Robinson is using that possible application of virtual reality equipment/software to pitch a stock that may get significant business from virtual reality because of their expertise in visual processing chips Nvidia (NVDA is the ticker). Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, author of this article, says: LEAPs are just longer term options. Call LEAPs in this case give the right to buy a stock at a set strike price anytime before expiration in January 2018 (there are also 2017 leaps). That means if the stock is higher than (strike price plus what you paid for the option), you make money, most people sell back options to close the contract rather than exercising options to actually buy the shares. hockeyboy88 says: Will it provide a free college education, like Senator Bernard Sanders? Will it stop stupid people from driving slowly, in front of me on the interstate? MLTanner says: Interestingly, last week Nvidia ramped up their share repurchase program, allocating 500 million to buy back 12.1 million shares. Thats ~2.23% of shares outstanding. Im wondering why thats better value than putting it into their various product development activities. jeefu says: March 30, 2016 Robinson must be reading the Gumshoe comments, today his ad is offering a package of baloney including the pain relieving miracle for only $49.00. And whatever happened to the fortunes that were to be made from buying his inside information on bitcoins? Anybody? Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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