invest in cryonics, chance small but greater than in the graveI think you’re right. I’m anticipating intercytex the second. The next generation sure are lucky!
invest in cryonics, chance small but greater than in the graveI think you’re right. I’m anticipating intercytex the second. The next generation sure are lucky!
It's not that we're not willing to spend money on hair. But it's the fact that it's so ridiculously expensive that we can never afford it unless you want to live as a starving, homeless hobo for a decade to save upeveryone wants beauty for a few dollars, this is impossible, if his treatment works, baldness will be history
the time it would take to finish trials is the time it would take the average person here to save up if they worked instead of investing tbe time in moaning about how thsy cant afford itIt's not that we're not willing to spend money on hair. But it's the fact that it's so ridiculously expensive that we can never afford it unless you want to live as a starving, homeless hobo for a decade to save up
We have obligations, not all of us can save up half of our wages to spend it all on hair later when we have sh*t like bills, mortgages, payment plans, retirement plans, etcthe time it would take to finish trials is the time it would take the average person here to save up if they worked instead of investing tbe time in moaning about how thsy cant afford it
I expect this too because the demand will be just too much and people won't accept having a cure out there to regain their hair while not being able to afford itI am pretty sure the price will go down faster than you expect (if it works).
you have a choice of beauty or home, family etc, unless you are a millionaire, money is everything, it's health beauty youthWe have obligations, not all of us can save up half of our wages to spend it all on hair later when we have sh*t like bills, mortgages, payment plans, retirement plans, etc
Spending like 300k on hair even after saving up for 20 years is still too much for the average person
it would be greatI am pretty sure the price will go down faster than you expect (if it works).
Stemson and Yokohama are far from human trials, what are we talking about here? Tsuji is ready NOWIts basic economy. You will get 100 customers for 200k each procedure, but you will get millions of customers for lets say 10-20k.
Its only in their interest to scale the price down asap, else some other company will do it (and they know they have Yokohama, Stemson, etc. as competitors)
Actually no, they process of making it is way too long at the first stage.Its basic economy. You will get 100 customers for 200k each procedure, but you will get millions of customers for lets say 10-20k.
Its only in their interest to scale the price down asap, else some other company will do it (and they know they have Yokohama, Stemson, etc. as competitors)
You say NOW like there is date for the clinical trails , there isnt…Stemson and Yokohama are far from human trials, what are we talking about here? Tsuji is ready NOW
didnt they plan using robots just as stemson?Actually no, they process of making it is way too long at the first stage.
They WANT to reduce the demand.
If you think about it only for 1 person .
The process is :
1. Day extract the folliceles
2. 2 weeks for duplicate the cells and create the hair .
3. HUGE transplant(30-40k folicels?) which should take few days .(3-4 days).
in everything here is probbly the best case
Senrio.
and thats ONLY for 1 person !.
The transplant woul be in japan and probbly would be done by surgen that leanred to use their tools and those types of hairs(which mean NOT the typical surgen).
its would take ALOT of time to scale such thing compare to Stemson that only need your blood and the rest should be fully automated.
thats why the price is insane
They finished their preclinical work, Stemson didntYou say NOW like there is date for the clinical trails , there isnt…
Actually no, they process of making it is way too long at the first stage.
They WANT to reduce the demand.
If you think about it only for 1 person .
The process is :
1. Day extract the folliceles
2. 2 weeks for duplicate the cells and create the hair .
3. HUGE transplant(30-40k folicels?) which should take few days .(3-4 days).
in everything here is probbly the best case
Senrio.
and thats ONLY for 1 person !.
The transplant woul be in japan and probbly would be done by surgen that leanred to use their tools and those types of hairs(which mean NOT the typical surgen).
its would take ALOT of time to scale such thing compare to Stemson that only need your blood and the rest should be fully automated.
thats why the price is insane
Yeah its still good dont get me wrong.Even if you are right, its positive news.
If Tsuji can prove that his method works in humans we have a cure long-term.
You can get traditional hair transplants even with high Norwood knowing that you can get infinite hair later on when Tsujis price drops.
Plus we have other treatmens on the horizon like HMI-115, Kintor, etc.
all we need right now is a safe, effective and long-lasting cure, the price is not the problem at the momentOnly in bald land is a company working on a functional cure sh*t on due to the time it will take and the potential cost. You people are just here to complain, because you obviously don't give a sh*t about progress being made to actually help the condition.
It doesn't matter if you can personally afford this process or not. Once it works, you can't put that genie back on the bottle. The science gets validated and the industry moves towards finding similar approaches at lower costs.