This brand-new battery charges in only five minutes and is about to flood the markets... This brand-new battery charges in only five minutes and is about to flood the markets...
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Jan 19, 2024 By Alexander Boulden for the Outsider Club Breaking: New Battery Could Dethrone Tesla Forever Dear Reader, For those of us who care about what happens to our family after we die, legacy is everything. Itâs such a driving force that it led one man to change his legacy before it was too late. When you hear the name Nobel, you no doubt associate it with the Nobel Prize. However, you probably donât think of dynamite. Ah, that is by design. Legend has it that when Alfred Nobelâs brother Ludvig died in 1888, a French newspaper mistakenly thought it was Alfred who died. (At the time, Alfred Nobel was best known for inventing dynamite.) The obituary reportedly led with, âLe marchand de la mort est mortâ ("The merchant of death is dead") and went on to say, "Dr. Alfred Nobel, who became rich by finding ways to kill more people faster than ever before, died yesterday." It wasnât until he saw the destructive force of his lifeâs work laid out in writing that he was able to clearly see himself. Thatâs when he decided to donate his wealth to create the Nobel Peace Prize. So now when anyone sees his name, they associate it with peace instead of death and destruction. Itâs ironic how great inventors tend to create such controversy. Just think about how Elon Musk is the poster boy for controversy these days. But back in the early 20th century, Thomas Edison held that title. Thomas Edison is best remembered for inventing the carbon filament lightbulb and the phonograph. While Edison was known for his grit, determination, and dogged work ethic, he was also known for breaking things. He put all his resources into his dreams to make them a reality. Google CEO Prepares to (Voluntarily) KILL Search Google Search is a moneymaking machine like no other. The platform turned free internet searches into $162 billion in cash last year. It dominates the industry, owning more than 90% of the market share (with 8.5 billion searches per day). Googleâs name is a synonym for looking up information. But now CEO Sundar Pichai is about to pull the plug on search. Google has developed a new technology said to be 1000x more powerful than search. Employees have been testing internally for two years, and now the company is ready to unleash it on the world. [You have to see this to believe it.]( He also drove a hard bargain and didnât treat his employees all that well. I know this because my great-grandfather worked at his factory in Menlo Park, New Jersey. As part of our family legacy, weâve kept a copy of a letter he sent to Thomas Edison dated May 31, 1921. He wasnât happy working seven days a week, so he humbly and politely asked Edison to be transferred to another sector of the factory that only required him to work six days a week. Hereâs a copy of the letter with Edison's reply in big black ink at the top: [letter] [URGENT: This Parcel of Land Could Gift You Half a Million Dollars]( [JMT Buried Under the Land Image](In a remote corner of North America, a team of geologists and explorers just found something truly amazing. Mining experts call it the last GREAT gold discovery on Earth. And if you invest in the tiny firm that owns this land â before Big Tech and Wall Street investors catch wind of it on March 31... You could turn $10,000 into over $500,000! [Get the lowdown on this urgent gold opportunity right now.]( Iâll spell it out in case you canât read it here: Mr. Thos. A. Edison Dear Sir, One monthâs work in the disc plating division has convinced me that I should never be satisfied to work permanently seven days a week. I have observed that the inspectors, superintendents, and even the department heads find it necessary to come in every day of the week.  Of the work itself I have no cause for complaint. I feel that I am giving my best for the Edison interests and am making a good start for my own future, but the fact that I live in Elizabeth and spend more than three hours daily in travel gives me practically no time either to myself or with my family. I request that you transfer me at your earliest convenience to another field where the work requires only six days a week actual presence at the factory. Respectfully, Leonard L. Bleeker Edison scribbled across the top (because he couldnât be bothered to waste another sheet of paper): âHave no place to transfer you to, as you are dissatisfied you better quit.â If youâre wondering what âdisc platingâ refers to, it was the new Edison Record label that was creating flat shellac records instead of the old-style cylinders. That business eventually went belly-up, as the competition was fierce. But Edison was willing to try anything until it failed. Toward the end of his career, Edison even worked on electric vehicles. Back then, employees recounted seeing Edison zipping around the old dusty roads in a prototype electric car, one that used a new battery made of nickel and iron. You see, Edison's EVs ran on lead-acid batteries, but they were slow to charge and often spewed out the toxic mixture. Not to mention, they werenât easily disposed of. So he decided to disrupt the EV battery industry and in 1901 founded the Edison Storage Battery Company. It was so revolutionary that even Henry Ford wanted the nickel-iron battery in his future EVs and made a deal with Edison in 1914 to release the âFord Electric,â which would sell for $900 and have a 100-mile range.  Shots Fired!!! A war is raging between Wall Street and Main Street, and weâre going to battle. Join our private community of like-minded investors every trading day at 9:00 a.m. for our "Opening Salvo." Weâll tell you which stocks weâre watching. Weâll catch you up on key market-driving events. And weâll be speaking our minds without any corporate sponsors or three-letter agencies peering over our shoulders. Participation is free for anyone with [this invitation.]( P.S. This is an exclusive, limited-time event. We rally at 9:00 a.m. until market open. Trading days only. You must be a member of our private Discord to participate. [Join here]( and check back in at the "Opening Salvo." But just as weâve seen with todayâs batteries, the Edison battery was big, heavy, and expensive and needed frequent charging. By the time Edisonâs project was completed, consumers preferred the cheaper fossil fuel-powered Ford Model T. Although Edisonâs batteries were used by railways for signal switches, Edison spent $1.5 million ($39 million in todayâs dollars) on the EV battery project and it was deemed a failure... Fast-forward to today and the Thomas Edison of our time, Elon Musk, is freaking out over a new kind of battery tech. Itâs a brand-new battery thatâs about to flood the markets... and Musk fears that it could dethrone Tesla forever. Thatâs because this battery is 10 times more powerful than Teslaâs famed lithium-ion battery... It can be fully charged in less than five minutes... And, get this, itâs insanely tiny â roughly the size of a drop of water. But most importantly, this new battery offers the same kind of ground-floor potential as Tesla did... Only much, much bigger. My colleague Jason Williams has been following the story from the start, and he expects this battery, which he calls "Electric Glass," to be rolled out en masse in just a few short months. But you have to act fast, because once it hits the market, the tiny company that designed it could become one of the most valuable companies in the world. So if you missed out on Tesla back in the day and have been kicking yourself ever since, this is [a rare second chance to take part in a world-shifting innovation.]( And for the lucky few who get in on time, [the rewards could be absolutely enormous.]( Stay frosty, Alexander Boulden
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