Mr. Foldnow Profile
Mr. Foldnow

@Foldnow1984

Followers
613
Following
257
Statuses
384

Materials Scientist by Education and Trade. PhD, MS, BS. With 35 years of experience in advanced manufacturing.

Phoenix, AZ
Joined October 2022
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
2 days
@elonmusk All I can say is.... OH, MY GOD, IS THIS PERSON BEING SERIOUS?.......... WOW!!!!!!!! How tone deaf can a person be.... I think we just found the answer.
0
0
2
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
3 days
@ModernityNews Darwin Award
0
0
2
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
3 days
@TheChiefNerd @DOGE Free speech is great, the more people like this open their mouths, the more they demonstrate their ignorance. The appropriate response is ridicule.
1
0
1
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
4 days
@EpochTimes They really should not have shot him. That was a bad play.
1
0
3
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
4 days
@elonmusk As I keep saying. These guys don't sleep and it has the dems completely befuddled. They just don't understand. The founding of this country was accomplished by such people. Too much passion to even sleep. Not lying.
0
0
5
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
4 days
@NEWSMAX @BobBrooks_NMX None of these guys sleep. Something the lazy dems just don't understand.
0
0
4
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
4 days
@CreightonLange @eenLien Yes. but it's too much to write about. Ask Chat GPT, it will give a very accurate and thorough explanation. Post it if you want.
1
0
0
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
4 days
@gerad_t0d Look out GoPro.
0
0
0
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
4 days
Here is a chart from 2 years ago before Raj joined. ENVX has always claimed to have a bigger advantage in ED for smaller form factor batteries. Before Raj, the cell phone batteries that ENVX was pitching did not have a high enough cycle life, were they amenable to fast charging. Raj directed the R&D teams to focus on a mobile version of the then EX-1 tech, and he called it EX-1M, which had increased cycle life and fast charge capability.
Tweet media one
1
0
1
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
4 days
Basically, this patent like many patents, contains a "laundry list" section surrounding the idea of re-lithiation, where the scientists and lawyers sat together for a long few meetings and tried to list every idea they could think of to accomplish re-lithiation, or re-lithiation monitoring, because it's hard to do. None or all of these ideas may work in a practical way, but when you put these patents together, you try to cover all the possible ways that you could think of to make something happen. You try to protect against someone else coming up with a clever way to accomplish what you are doing.
1
0
6
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
6 days
@DineshDSouza The wisdom of this Democrat slogan just can't be said enough..... "Elections have consequences" - Barry Husain Obama
0
0
4
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
6 days
$ENVX - Reposting this... It's a very large form-factor phone, so the battery is probably close to the largest battery currently made. I don't think that ENVX would be trying to compete with such a battery based on capacity alone. If ENVX wanted to try to compete in this form-factor, it would likely be on fast-charge and safety. I think an ENVX battery would have higher capacity, likely 60 hours or so, but I think the angle that they would pursue here would be, again, faster charging and safety. Remember, there are more than 1.2 billion mobile phones sold every year, with a wide variety of form factors. Foldable phones are becoming more popular, and these giant, thick, 200+ gram "mini=tablets" that they call phones, are going to be dinosaurs in a few years. ENVX will excel across many form-factors, and even if they were only able to capture say 20% of the mobile market focusing on form-factors where they are the most differentiated, that's still 240 million batteries per year, and a multi-billion dollar mobile battery business. They are highly differentiated in IOT, because as the battery size shrinks, they have even more of an advantage. They'll probably have some EV licensing, and likely expand into stationary storage and other markets as time goes by. The ENVX story is about having differentiated capabilities (density, charge time, safety). In applications where customers really need more of one of these, or all of these, ENVX will win business. We'll see. The Li ion battery market is very competitive, no doubt. But, the market is so huge, and there are so many applications and form-factors that differentiated products have plenty of space to carve out. That's a big part of why I think ENVX is going to be successful. Just my opinion
2
2
18
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
6 days
@BreannaMorello Idiots with guns and power. That's what this looks like.
0
0
0
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
6 days
@seantoh Not sure how to interpret the table on the Oppenheimer line? Seems like a big percentage increase but how are you getting 42M?
2
0
2
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
6 days
Someone was a little active this morning with the Feb 21 15s
1
0
7
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
6 days
It's a very large form-factor phone, so the battery is probably close to the largest battery currently made. I don't think that ENVX would be trying to compete with such a battery based on capacity alone. If ENVX wanted to try to compete in this form-factor, it would likely be on fast-charge and safety. I think an ENVX battery would have higher capacity, likely 60 hours or so, but I think the angle that they would pursue here would be, again, faster charging and safety. Remember, there are more than 1.2 billion mobile phones sold every year, with a wide variety of form factors. Foldable phones are becoming more popular, and these giant, thick, 200+ gram "mini=tablets" that they call phones, are going to be dinosaurs in a few years. ENVX will excel across many form-factors, and even if they were only able to capture say 20% of the mobile market focusing on form-factors where they are the most differentiated, that's still 240 million batteries per year, and a multi-billion dollar mobile battery business. They are highly differentiated in IOT, because as the battery size shrinks, they have even more of an advantage. They'll probably have some EV licensing, and likely expand into stationary storage and other markets as time goes by. The ENVX story is about having differentiated capabilities (density, charge time, safety). In applications where customers really need more of one of these, or all of these, ENVX will win business. We'll see. The Li ion battery market is very competitive, no doubt. But, the market is so huge, and there are so many applications and form-factors that differentiated products have plenty of space to carve out. That's a big part of why I think ENVX is going to be successful. Just my opinion.
2
0
8
@Foldnow1984
Mr. Foldnow
6 days
haha. I just re-read my post and... lol... "can't be understated" oops. I don't know what I was thinking, but that's funny. What I meant to say is "Can't be OVERSTATED" Sorry, but funny.
0
0
1