After a couple days at the San Francisco MoneyShow, where I
did a Webcast
event on nanotech investing, including my favorite hot stocks, I’m in lovely
San Diego for the next few days attending a SPIE Photonic and Optics Conference.
Sunday was the first day and here are my initial impressions. I’ll be blogging
on At These Levels while I’m here
if you want to read the day-to-day goings on.
But first, if you wonder who SPIE is--as I did--this is what Wikipedia has to
say:
I talk to my wife and she asks me if I’ve done anything fun, expecting me to
tell her about some Tequila bar I found, how I went to the beach or a ball
game. I tell her I saw a guy from
But you get it, right? You perked up when you heard the magic word “dendrimers,”
yes? You thought, "Aren’t dendrimers what that cool Australian company Starpharma (NSDQ: SPHRY) makes? And
now there’s dendrimer work going on beyond health applications. That’s so cool."
How right you are. The dendrimer work they’re doing is attempting to get to
dark blue phosphoresence. Right now, organic light-emitting diodes (OLED) can
only be built to about light blue on the spectrum, which doesn’t make them very
useful for lighting or screen technologies. Once you get to dark blue with a
simple reproducible process, you have opened up OLEDs as a mass-market
technology. All thanks to nanotech.
From Starpharma’s perspective, it’s an entirely new business line they can
exploit that doesn’t have to go through drug trials.
There’s days of presentations about nanotech, spintronics and solar. There’s
other really cool stuff too, but I’d miss some of the necessary stuff to see
it: hours devoted to Microbial Extremophiles and Chemical and Morphological
Biomarkers in Ancient Rocks and Astromaterials.
A presentation on carbon nanotubes (CNTs) was explaining how they’re using CNTs
as vias in integrated circuits, replacing copper and enabling further
miniturization with less energy loss. Another on CNTs was talking about how
strides in chemical vapor deposition technologies are making it easier to
manufacture single walled CNTs, which are the Maybachs of CNTs.
Once again, I’m sure you’re with me; you were thinking about that little
company I mentioned in Nanotech Investor
News a few issues back, CVD
Equipment (NSDQ: CVV). The company name is the acronym for “chemical
vapor deposition,” and it has a division dedicated to this kind of work.
Well, the solar plenary session is tomorrow, so I better get my rest. It’s
going to be all about thin films, direct conversion of solar energy to
hydrogen, the works.