These AI Slop videos, from what I've observed so far are around 85% on point, with 15% +/- made up slop or blatant lies. Like the "alleged" ghey meeting they didn't actually have to "reprice silver" and bs like that.
Samsung didn't invent silver battery technology... They simply made it more efficient, rechargeable and more "consumer friendly" than the previous battery technology was .....
Weapons rely on silver for the batteries that power torpedoes, missiles and other "single use" applications. They were never designed to be used more than once because kaboom! 💥 Which is why #2
When Samsung started researching silver battery technology, the cost was WAY lower. If silver keeps climbing due to scarcity, then I'd imagine the technology would be moot.
Maybe batteries will become less common with advanced capacitor designs and fusion, now on the horizon.
...Naturally occurring silver (47Ag) is composed of the two stable isotopes 107Ag and 109Ag in almost equal proportions, with 107Ag being slightly more abundant (51.839% natural abundance). Notably, silver is the only element with multiple NMR-active isotopes all having spin 1/2. Thus both 107Ag and 109Ag nuclei produce narrow lines in nuclear magnetic resonance spectra.[4] - ' the only element with 1/2 spin isotopes '
There was what I considered a fairly reliable report last week that Samsung is paying to reopen the Silver Storm mine in Mexico along with the details on how they were going to pay for the silver mined. I have no idea whether it was true, but the details seemed legit.
Maybe, I'm not really saying it is or isn't but it's not like industrial use has just shot up this year. EV's and solar panels have been increasing in production the last several year or decade at least. So certainly there's been some foresight into physical shortages projecting demand vs supply.
So why would a company as large as Samsung look into developing such a major breakthrough designed around a material short in supply?
I'm just saying not all is as it would seem here, and Asian AI guy is saying Samsung is now looking at production in China as they have a deal for the silver with China if they setup shop there.
Samsung is not an expert in the silver market. Historically it's been very easy and cheep to source. That said,they have probably been looking at this issue a lot more than we know,they may very well own a lot of shiny.
Seems like they'd have to, and likely good long term. But short term from what I've heard is silver is typically more a byproduct from mining other material, and it's not very profitable with the price suppression.
Who knows though, we certainly don't know all that's going on.
It gets very juicy at the 21 minute mark.
A doom loop is being created.
The short sellers are digging their own graves.
If it's true that Samsung requested 50M ounces but Comex could only supply a little over 5 million…
If that's really the state of the supply/demand paradigm, the price of silver is going to the moon!
Looking like more than just the banks are going to go bust over silver, according to the video there'll be yuge industrial shortages.
Edit: I put battery hoax in the title being I can't see Samsung announcing such a battery w/o the means to put it into production. Seemingly ever. Maybe teaser would have been better lol
Edit II: I'll be curious to see how this works out, and that supplies haven't already run dry with all the demand. Also curious to see how consumer demand is met in the future, do we really need so many readily available products? From food to goods, how much stuff goes to waste?
Even if they started making these, how long will they be able to sustain it? There is limited silver on this planet. Industry won't be able to use it forever. Forevers a long time.
A few things....
These AI Slop videos, from what I've observed so far are around 85% on point, with 15% +/- made up slop or blatant lies. Like the "alleged" ghey meeting they didn't actually have to "reprice silver" and bs like that.
Samsung didn't invent silver battery technology... They simply made it more efficient, rechargeable and more "consumer friendly" than the previous battery technology was .....
Weapons rely on silver for the batteries that power torpedoes, missiles and other "single use" applications. They were never designed to be used more than once because kaboom! 💥 Which is why #2
When Samsung started researching silver battery technology, the cost was WAY lower. If silver keeps climbing due to scarcity, then I'd imagine the technology would be moot.
Maybe batteries will become less common with advanced capacitor designs and fusion, now on the horizon.
...Naturally occurring silver (47Ag) is composed of the two stable isotopes 107Ag and 109Ag in almost equal proportions, with 107Ag being slightly more abundant (51.839% natural abundance). Notably, silver is the only element with multiple NMR-active isotopes all having spin 1/2. Thus both 107Ag and 109Ag nuclei produce narrow lines in nuclear magnetic resonance spectra.[4] - ' the only element with 1/2 spin isotopes '
There was what I considered a fairly reliable report last week that Samsung is paying to reopen the Silver Storm mine in Mexico along with the details on how they were going to pay for the silver mined. I have no idea whether it was true, but the details seemed legit.
That's legit, I've been reading about the deal for months,and I've been reading about this new battery tech for over a year,on the silver boards. IIRC
Maybe, I'm not really saying it is or isn't but it's not like industrial use has just shot up this year. EV's and solar panels have been increasing in production the last several year or decade at least. So certainly there's been some foresight into physical shortages projecting demand vs supply.
So why would a company as large as Samsung look into developing such a major breakthrough designed around a material short in supply?
I'm just saying not all is as it would seem here, and Asian AI guy is saying Samsung is now looking at production in China as they have a deal for the silver with China if they setup shop there.
With all the narrative/s flying around, who knows
Samsung is not an expert in the silver market. Historically it's been very easy and cheep to source. That said,they have probably been looking at this issue a lot more than we know,they may very well own a lot of shiny.
Seems like they'd have to, and likely good long term. But short term from what I've heard is silver is typically more a byproduct from mining other material, and it's not very profitable with the price suppression.
Who knows though, we certainly don't know all that's going on.
It gets very juicy at the 21 minute mark.
A doom loop is being created.
The short sellers are digging their own graves.
If it's true that Samsung requested 50M ounces but Comex could only supply a little over 5 million…
If that's really the state of the supply/demand paradigm, the price of silver is going to the moon!
"The MOASS will be METAL."
Looking like more than just the banks are going to go bust over silver, according to the video there'll be yuge industrial shortages.
Edit: I put battery hoax in the title being I can't see Samsung announcing such a battery w/o the means to put it into production. Seemingly ever. Maybe teaser would have been better lol
Edit II: I'll be curious to see how this works out, and that supplies haven't already run dry with all the demand. Also curious to see how consumer demand is met in the future, do we really need so many readily available products? From food to goods, how much stuff goes to waste?
Is it merely Schadenfreude when you're making money at the same time the paper sellers are destroying themselves?
Kek Kek Kek
Even if they started making these, how long will they be able to sustain it? There is limited silver on this planet. Industry won't be able to use it forever. Forevers a long time.
Limited? Why, oil isn’t. Resources could very well increase daily.
Obviously you haven't heard of "fossil" silver...
😂😂