The quantum play is built around a technology called **AME — Additively Manufactured Electronics**, which is essentially a sophisticated form of 3D-printed electronics. Following its acquisition of the AME platform.
From what I understand Medical device engineering — especially for life support — demands extreme reliability, miniaturization, and precision manufacturing in harsh environments. Those same capabilities translate well to building wiring for quantum computers, which operate at temperatures near absolute zero and are equally unforgiving. The AME platform they acquired bridges both worlds.
They are in advanced discussions with one of the top five global quantum computing companies evaluating QTREX's AME-based interconnect components within the partner's cryogenic refrigerator architecture.
They also recently received approximately $1 million from Israel's Innovation Authority to develop a **native RF dielectric material** for superconducting quantum computing connectivity — focusing on high-density, low-loss RF signal routing inside cryogenic environments, targeting connectivity bottlenecks as quantum processors scale.
I don't know could be a pump and dump, but the 10 million investments they got at a 1.5$/share feel like a good floor considering the recent price action.