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Optomec Reports $2 Million in Orders from Leading Media and Technology OEM | Your Money

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ALBUQUERQUE, NM - (BUSINESS WIRE) - Nov 1, 2021-- Optomec Inc., the leading provider of 3D additive electronics manufacturing solutions, today announced it has received orders valued at approximately $ 2 million from a leading provider of digital connectivity solutions. Recent orders include the supply of three (3) Aerosol Jet electronic 3D printers along with associated software and digital products, as well as professional application development support services. The customer uses Optomec's patented aerosol jet process for the development and final production of a wide range of next-generation portable devices. This press release contains multimedia. View the full version here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211101005906/en/ The extreme in aerosol-jet-printed wearable devices: Left - Stretchable, skin-like electrode patch to demonstra

Optomec Reports $2 Million in Orders from Leading Media and Technology OEM | Your Money

Image
ALBUQUERQUE, NM - (BUSINESS WIRE) - Nov 1, 2021-- Optomec Inc., the leading provider of 3D additive electronics manufacturing solutions, today announced it has received orders valued at approximately $ 2 million from a leading provider of digital connectivity solutions. Recent orders include the supply of three (3) Aerosol Jet electronic 3D printers along with associated software and digital products, as well as professional application development support services. The customer uses Optomec's patented aerosol jet process for the development and final production of a wide range of next-generation portable devices. This press release contains multimedia. View the full version here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211101005906/en/ The extreme in aerosol-jet-printed wearable devices: Left - Stretchable, skin-like electrode patch to demonstra

TN school funding: Memphians want more money for special education, more

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Holding back the tears, Teresa Short described her struggles trying to help her son, a preschooler in need of special education, catch up after the school disruptions caused by COVID. Her school district, Fayette County Schools in Somerville, could only offer summer academic programs to children in K-12, she said. The reason, she was told, was the limited funding. "So I had to find private schools to try to get him to and pay out of my pocket to try and get him an education and get him where he needs to be," said Short. Given the opportunity to weigh how Tennessee should approach its first revision of the school funding formula in 30 years, Short advocated giving more money to schools overall and ensuring more money is allocated to special education students. She joined a crowded room with parents, students, educators, boards of directors, school board members and activists Thursday at the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis to visit the second of eight town ha