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This profile was automatically generated using 15 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 15 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 15 references Web References
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1. www.marsnews.com
www.marsnews.com/newswire/tech - [Cached]Published on: 4/25/2005 Last Visited: 12/22/2007
Wristwatches using flexible, unbreakable, plastic LCDs could be on the market by late summer this year, according to David Freeman, chief operating officer and co-founder of Viztec, Inc., Twinsburg, Ohio. And cell phone applications could soon follow. Freeman adds that, while monochrome versions of the displays will become available first, color versions are in the works and could become available by year's end. -
2. Ohio: Encouraging entrepreneurs
www.bizsites.com/2002/septembe - [Cached]Published on: 8/23/2002 Last Visited: 8/23/2002
"We came back because this is where the technology is, where the resources are," says David Freeman, Viztec's vice president. "We figured the best place to commercialize the technology is to be where it was developed and where there are advanced manufacturing centers. By reducing the labor to produce LCDs, we figure this will be a major disruptive breakthrough for the industry that allows you to take the labor component out of the process that in the past has often sent products to the Pacific Rim." -
3. cleveland.com:
www.cleveland.com/sun/twinsbur - [Cached]Published on: 3/6/2003 Last Visited: 3/14/2003
According to David Freeman, Viztec vice president, the company is in the process of selling its technology.
The market has changed quite a bit (since we started), Freeman said. There still seems to be a market for the technology - it's a very good technology. Unfortunately, we couldn't find any venture capital to maintain production and research.
The county didn't find out about the closing until after the company moved out, when Freeman called Chuck Wiedie, an official in the Summit County Department of Development.
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(Freeman) said they tried to secure venture capital in the state, out of state and out of the country, but they just ran out of money and closed their doors, Wiedie said.

