That's what makes this so interesting... You have a couple of brothers with apparently impressive CV's who have made billions for other companies (FlexPower, Quantum, etc) using their incredibly high IQs, yet can't seem to put together a demo unit to send to some independent labs, even though they have a product launch in less than 3 months. They spout mostly confusing ideas that are prime for debunking in their videos...
So is their campaign and videos all a cover to raise publicity? Have they really come up with an ingenius idea since not even Apple engineers knew how to make their iPhone charger smaller? Or have their careers fallen and they are looking for a rebound? Is it a purposeful sham?
This story is not just about electronics, although there is a lot to learn from the entire discussion... I'm really curious how this will play out, and the people behind it. This could make a good movie, it is getting dramatic! How do you reconcile those "massive" resumes and patents from the Roohparvar brothers with the farce that is Batteriser thus far? Or is this like the cold fusion labs, all deluded or missing something that should be obvious?
Why risk their "reputation" and teaching position? Has anyone done a real background investigation? I doubt that they are not the same people behind the patents and employed by who they claimed. Unless someone did an identity switch, which seems highly improbable given the attention given to this campaign. Then one has to keep asking, is Batteriser real and will it even be produced for a November release?
All this mystery and speculation and nail-biting suspense would go away if we just had 1 Batteriser to test. Much could be put to rest. I guess we just have to wait until November. They surely want to hit the shelves before Christmas peak shopping since these would be huge for battery-operated toys!