OXIS is developing and glides to sell products of Nutraceutical and Cosmecuetical that offer the natural ingredients believed to have beneficial effects on human health. The products of first OXIS will include L-Ergothioneine (ERGO) like component key. ERGO is a very long-range, versatile antioxidant. The remarkable characteristics of ERGO are described in detail in the section of Ergothioneine of this Web site. OXIS has patented the process of the synthesis for L-Ergothioneine and has externalized the product that made to a company that can provide ERGO in the advertising announcement and produced amounts GMP to cover our needs with the product.
The strategy of products of OXIS consumption deals with very important preoccupations the health including the aging you disorder and them regarding the age that are increasing with tendencies in demographic data of the USA. These preoccupations include: * Health of the brain * Immunity against diseases * anti aging* Inflammation * Chemical decontamination * Regulation of the blood sugar. Their entrance of market and strategy of the extension highly includes potential alliances with - the respected, credible and iconic leaders of the thought in each product category. Typically, these individuals or companies have established followings of the consumer or the capacity to construct bases of significant and loyal clients. You can get more information in these following locations: http://www.oxis.com , or on these following locations: Oxis on Twitter and Oxis on facebook.
If the differences, as to type or kind, between two goods are to be responsible for differences in their value, it is necessary that they also have different capacities to satisfy human needs. Inother words, it is necessary that they have what we call, from an economic point of view, differences in quality. An examination of the influence that differences in quality exercise on the value of particular goods is therefore the subject of the following investigation.
From an economic standpoint, the qualitative differences between goods may be of two kinds. Human needs may be satisfied either in a quantitatively or in a qualitatively different manner by means of equal quantities of qualitatively different goods. With a given quantity of beech wood, for instance, the human need for warmth may be satisfied in a quantitatively more intensive manner than with the same quantity of fir. But two equal quantities of foodstuffs of equal food value may satisfy the need for food in qualitatively different fashions, since the consumption of one dish may, for example, provide enjoyment while the other may provide either no enjoyment or only an inferior one. With goods of the first category, the inferior quality can be fully compensated for by a larger quantity, but with goods of the second category this is not possible. Fir, alder, or pine can replace beech wood for heating purposes,and if coal of inferior carbon content, oak bark of inferior tannin content, and the ordinary labor services of tardy or less efficient
day-laborers are only available to economizing men in sufficiently large quantities, they can generally replace the more highly qualified goods perfectly. But even if unpalatable foods or beverages, dark and wet rooms, the services of mediocre physicians, etc., are available in the largest quantities, they can never satisfy our needs as well, qualitatively, as the corresponding more highly qualified goods. Read the rest of this entry »
Human needs can often be satisfied by goods of different types and still more frequently by goods that differ, not as to type, but as to kind. Where we deal with given complexes of human needs, on the one side, and with the quantities of goods available for their satisfaction, on the other side (p. 129), the needs do not, therefore, always stand opposite quantities of homogeneous goods, but often opposite goods of different types, and still more frequently opposite goods of different kinds.
For greater simplicity of exposition I have, until now, omitted consideration of the differences between goods, and have, in the preceding sections, considered only cases in which quantities of completely homogeneous goods stand opposite needs of a specific type (stressing particularly the way in which their importance decreases in accordance with the degree of completeness of the satisfaction already attained). In this way, I was able to give greater emphasis to the influence that differences in the available quantities
exercise on the value of goods. Read the rest of this entry »



