Patented Intellectual Property Elemental to Virtually Every Microprocessor Design
Computers, servers, workstations, home theater systems, digital TVs, video games, DVD Recorders/Players, mobile handsets, automotive electronics and more...
Hub Controls
  • Demo Video
  • Upload Photo
  • Edit Company Profile
  • Add a Link
  • Update Fast Facts
  • Add Management Bios
  • Private Messages
  • Edit My Profile
  • View/Edit My Portfolio
AGORACOM News Flash

     

YouTube                      Small-Cap Podcast          iTunes

AGORACOM TV IS NOW ON DEMAND!

AGORACOM TV Is Available Anytime and Anywhere. Now, You Never Have To Miss It If Life Gets Too Busy @ 9:45 AM EST.

Watch Repeats on YouTube, Subscribe To Our RSS Feed On Our Very Own SmallCapPodcast Or Automatically Download OnTo Your iPod Via iTunes.

For Our Web 2.0 Super-Users, You Can Even Pick Up The Show By Following Us On Twitter.

If You Believe As We Do That We Are Entering The Buying Opportunity Of A Lifetime, Don't Miss An Episode Of AGORACOM TV !

 

Patriot Scientific > Message
Pantera1

Re: greeneyes / Re: SGE1 : LL:

Posted by: SGE1 on May 15, 2008 07:41PM

In response to: greeneyes / Re: SGE1 : LL: by lambertslunatics

You have obviously never worked in a classified environment. That's where I was coming from. There was a Confidentiality Clause in play. If that clause were violated, or perceived to be violated, the deal would have been dead, and Judge Ward would be very pissed at US. I've harped on this before, but apparently it fell on your deaf ears or pure ignorance of how the "world of secrecy" works.

In a classified environment, if you bid on a contract that is highly classified, and is for very big bucks (necessitating many management approvals all up the line), it is highly likely that some/many of the signing authorities do not have the proper clearance level or an effectively arguable "need to know" to see the full content of that contract. So they sign a cover sheet, depending on those fully cognizant to have effectively done their jobs. That's how it works.

And the same thing could have happened here. No wrongdoing or failure by anyone. The objective was to make the deal and comply with its terms.

But, in your ignorance of how the real world works in such matters, you jump to some hair-brain conclusion, and try to put words in my mouth. Then you go off suggesting that the company failed in this and that.

In the classified world, it's the "security of the nation" at stake.

In what I was suggesting, it would have been "the preservation of our biggest and most important deal to date - and our entire future" at stake. Would this not rise to similar importance?

Enough on this, it no longer matters, other than my ire at someone jumping to unintended wild conclusions and attaching my name to it, in jest or not.

SGE

Post a Reply

Please login to reply to this message.

President's D.D.
Key business initiatives at Patriot Scientific toward building a “New Patriot” with solid future growth and profitability. read more
Stock Quote