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There is little to differentiate the quality and prices of ZEUUS’ products and services. The company provides very little, vague, or generic information on its products and services and how they may differ from its competitors’ offerings.
Notably, ZEUUS aims to make its vertical axis wind turbines more compact and efficient than competitors’, and it plans to use them to power homes and data centers (presumably ZEUUS’ own). Unlike horizontal axis turbines, which look like pinwheels, vertical axis turbines have axes that are perpendicular to the ground. Because they often don’t perform as well as horizontal axis options, vertical axis turbines are less common. However, they’re more suited to narrow spaces and residential areas, so vertical axis turbines serve ZEUUS’ purposes better.
ZEUUS obtained its wind turbine technology through an acquisition and has two patents pending. Patents aren’t hard to apply for, though, so that alone doesn’t mean much. The company’s turbines were around 32.8 feet high and around 23 feet wide during initial tests. They can capture wind energy at speeds from about 8.9 miles per hour to 134.2 miles per hour, and power ranges from 25,000 watts to 600,000 watts.
Residential turbines are already available, although they’re generally much smaller than ZEUUS’ prototype. One of ZEUUS’ closest competitors is Flower Turbines, which offers vertical axis turbines in three different sizes. The largest size generates much less power at 3,000 to 5,000 watts. It reaches 16.4 feet high — exactly half the size of ZEUUS’ prototype — and starts moving at as low as 2.2 miles per hour. Flower Turbines’ model seems more suitable for narrow and less windy areas than ZEUUS’ prototype, but ZEUUS’ power generation seems much stronger.
The problem with ZEUUS’ prototype, however, is that the company provides little information about the wind turbine company it purchased to acquire its technology. While the company claims its technology is better, there’s no way for investors to verify such information. Lastly, while the technology may work well for residential homes (that is, if a homeowner wants a 32-foot-high wind turbine on their property, which is questionable), data centers can require between 28 million and 100 million watts of energy. At its current levels, the company’s prospective technology will not be able to power a data center by itself.
All in all, ZEUUS doesn’t offer much information on its various business divisions, though the company seemed to stuff its offering circular full of as many buzzwords as possible. While initial tests of its wind turbine technology look promising, ZEUUS’ claims are difficult to trust without any means of verification. There is no reason to believe ZEUUS’ diversified offerings will be better than any of its much stronger, more established competitors, which include the likes of Google, Amazon, and Microsoft.
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