GeckoSystems and Sprint Partner to Expand Elder Care Robot Trials

CONYERS, GA, Jul 22 (MARKET WIRE) —
GeckoSystems Intl. Corp. (PINKSHEETS: GCKO)
(http://www.geckosystems.com/) announced today that Sprint Nextel
Corporation, a major US telecommunications company, has extended
contractual terms and conditions accepted by GeckoSystems such that the
expansion of their world’s first elder care robot trials can be achieved
in a more timely fashion.

GeckoSystems is a dynamic leader in the emerging Mobile Service Robot
industry revolutionizing their development and usage with “Mobile Robot
Solutions for Safety, Security, and Service(tm).”

“A month ago we distributed a press release announcing our discussions
with this Fortune 500 corporation. Now we are very pleased to make known
our first contractual agreement with them. In it, amongst other important
benefits, they extend special pricing for our elder care robot trial
participants,” remarked Martin Spencer, President/CEO, GeckoSystems Intl.
Corp.

“Our Emerging Solutions team has reviewed your site and is very impressed
with your concept and solution. In addition to being a very cool product,
it truly serves a need for all families going though the aging process.
Congratulations on your accomplishments so far. The market is ready for
rapidly embracing and adopting this type of ‘human service’ solution,”
remarked Russell Mossburg, Director, Solutions Engineering, Emerging
Solutions Group, Sprint Nextel Corp.

Since late last year GeckoSystems has been involved in the world’s first
in home elder care robot trials to learn more about the realities of
providing families with more cost effective solutions to enable them to
take better care of their elderly parents with less worry, time and money.

Here’s what one of the GeckoSystems elder care robot trial participants
has said: “Initially I was concerned that my elderly mother would be a
little frightened by the CareBot(tm) and not want it in her room, but
that is not the case. She likes it and seems pleased to have this
‘companion’ in close proximity. When it speaks to her she answers back
and is delighted at having a conversation with the robot! And she takes
in what the CareBot says to her as being authoritative. When I tell her
it is time for her shower she does not want to do it and tries to
procrastinate. When the CareBot tells her it is time for her shower, she
gets ready. I never thought a robot would have more influence over my
mother than I do!”

“We are learning that valued family behaviors can be readily expressed to
the care receiver using a CareBot due to the robustness of its
functionality. We continue to look forward to further exploration and
understanding of the social interaction between the family, the CareBot,
and the care receiver in the coming weeks and months of these in home
assistive care robot trials. With our trials progressing nicely, we have
already learned a great deal as to the reality of beneficial social
interaction between human and robot in domestic settings as depicted in
the testimonial above. There seems to be a very important positive — and
unforeseen by some parties — beneficial impact of valued family
behaviors for all the family in using a CareBot to also communicate their
thoughts and feelings to their beloved family members,” commented Spencer.

The elderly frequently endure loneliness and/or loss of independence when
living in nursing homes or other assisted living facilities. This new
type of remote medical monitoring system, a CareBot, will postpone, if
not eliminate that trauma to them. Their families can now better manage
the difficult decisions regarding the independence they allow their now
dependent parent while holding the risk for the adult caregiver at an
acceptable, tolerable level.

“At this time we are negotiating additional key agreements that will
enable more insightful discussions with Sprint, et al. We work very hard
to continue to secure those strategic relationships that will enable us
to effectively address our forecasted pent up demand for cost effective,
utilitarian elder care capable personal assistant robots. Our elder care
robot trials continue to reveal to us unexpected benefits for the family
and heightened confidence that our 1300+ stockholders will enjoy the ROI
they deserve,” concluded Spencer.

About Sprint Nextel Corp.:

Sprint Nextel is working with many trusted partners on security,
healthcare and monitoring all within the context of machine-to-machine
(M2M) communications. M2M is about connecting people, devices and systems
in new and transforming ways. With M2M, intelligent devices ‘talk’ to
each other over primarily wireless connections and share data without
direct human intervention. In this way, devices as diverse as utility
meters, signboards, cameras, remote sensors, laptops, appliances and
other consumer device, such as personal assistant robots, can be
connected to support a variety of new uses and achieve increased
efficiencies.

Sprint Nextel offers a comprehensive range of wireless and wireline
communications services bringing the freedom of mobility to consumers,
businesses and government users. Sprint Nextel served more than 48
million customers at the end of the first quarter of 2010 and is widely
recognized for developing, engineering and deploying innovative
technologies, and was the first wireless 4G service from a national
carrier in the United States; offering industry-leading mobile data
services, leading prepaid brands including Virgin Mobile USA, Boost
Mobile, Common Cents Mobile and Assurance Wireless and instant national
and international push-to-talk capabilities; and a global Tier 1 Internet
backbone. With its customer-focused strategy, you can learn more and
visit Sprint at www.sprint.com or www.facebook.com/sprint and
www.twitter.com/sprint.

About GeckoSystems Intl. Corp.:

Since 1997, GeckoSystems has developed a comprehensive, coherent, and
sufficient suite of hardware and software inventions to enable a new type
of home appliance (a personal robot) the CareBot(tm), to be created for
the mass consumer marketplace. The suite of primary inventions includes:
GeckoNav(tm), GeckoChat(tm) and GeckoTrak(tm).

The primary market for this product is the family for use in eldercare,
care for the chronically ill, and childcare. The primary distribution
channel for this new home appliance is the thousands of independent
personal computer retailers in the U.S. The manufacturing infrastructure
for this new product category of mobile service robots is essentially the
same as the personal computer industry. Several outside contract
manufacturers have been identified and qualified their ability to produce
up to 1,000 CareBots per month within four to six months.

The Company is market driven. At the time of founding, over twelve years
ago, the Company did extensive primary market research to determine the
demographic profile of the early adopters of the then proposed product
line. Subsequent to, and based on that original market research, they
have assembled numerous focus groups to evaluate the fit of the CareBot
personal robot into the participant’s lives and their expected usage. The
Company has also frequently employed the Delphi market research
methodology by contacting and interviewing senior executives,
practitioners, and researchers knowledgeable in the area of elder care.
Using this factual basis of internally performed primary and secondary
market research, and third party research is the statistical substance
for the Company’s sales forecasts.

Not surprisingly the scientific statistical analyses applied revealed
that elderly over sixty-five living alone in metropolitan areas with
broadband Internet available and sufficient household incomes to support
the increased costs were identified as those most likely to adopt
initially. Due to the high cost of assisted living, nursing homes, etc.
the payback for a CareBot(tm) is expected to be only six to eight months
while keeping elderly care receivers independent, in their own long time
homes, and living longer due to the comfort and safety of more frequent
attention from their loved ones.

“We project the available market size in dollars for cost effective,
utilitarian, multitasking eldercare personal robots in 2011 to be $74.0B,
in 2012 to be $77B, in 2013 to be $80B, in 2014 to be $83.3B, and in 2015
to be $86.6B. With market penetrations of 0.03% in 2011, 0.06% in 2012,
0.22% in 2013, 0.53% in 2014, and 0.81% in 2015, we will anticipate
CareBot sales, from this consumer market segment, only, of $22.0M,
$44.0M, $176M, $440.2M, and $704.3M, respectively. We expect these sales
despite — and perhaps because of — the present recession due to pent up
demand for significant cost reduction in eldercare expenses,” opined
Spencer.

The foregoing forecasts do not include sales in non-metropolitan areas;
elderly couples over 65 (only elderly living alone are in these
forecasts); those chronically ill — regardless of age — or elderly
living with their adult children.

The Company’s “mobile robot solutions for safety, security and
service(tm)” are appropriate not only for the consumer, but also
professional healthcare, commercial security and defense markets.
Professional healthcare require cost effective, timely errand running,
portable telemedicine, etc. Homeland Security requires cost effective
mobile robots to patrol and monitor public venues for weapons and WMD
detection. Military users desire the elimination of the “man in the loop”
to enable unmanned ground and air vehicles to not require constant human
control and/or intervention.

The Company’s business model is very much like that of an automobile
manufacturer. Due to the final assembly, test, and shipping being done
based on geographic and logistic realities; strategic
business-to-business relationships can range from private labeling to
joint manufacturing and distribution to licensing only.

Several dozen patent opportunities exist for the Company due to the many
innovative and cost effective breakthroughs embodied not only in
GeckoNav, GeckoChat, and GeckoTrak, but also in additional, secondary
systems that include: GeckoOrient(tm), GeckoMotorController(tm), the
GeckoTactileShroud(tm), the CompoundedSensorArray(tm), and the
GeckoSPIO(tm).

The present senior management at GeckoSystems has over thirty-five years
experience in consumer electronics sales and marketing and product
development. Senior managers have been identified for the areas of
manufacturing, marketing, sales, and finance.

While GeckoSystems has been in the Development Stage, the Company has
accumulated losses to date in excess of six million dollars. In contrast,
the Japanese government has spent one hundred million dollars in grants
(to Sanyo, Toshiba, Hitachi, Fujitsu, NEC, etc.) over the same time
period to develop personal robots for their eldercare crisis, yet no
viable solutions have been developed.

GeckoSystems is the first mobile robot developer in the world to begin
actual in-home eldercare evaluation trials.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Giver?

The short answer is that it decreases the difficulty and stress for the
caregiver that needs to watch over Grandma, Mom, or other family members
most, if not much, of the time day in and day out due to concerns about
their well being, safety, and security.

But, first let’s look at some other labor saving, automatic home
appliances most of us use routinely. For example, needing to do two or
more necessary chores and/or activities at the same time, like laundering
clothes and preparing supper.

The automatic washing machine needs no human intervention after the dirty
clothes are placed in the washer, the laundry powder poured in, and the
desired wash cycle set. Then, this labor saving appliance runs
automatically until the washed clothes are ready to be placed in another
labor saving home appliance, the automatic clothes dryer. While the
clothes are being washed and/or dried, the caregiver prepares supper
using several time saving home appliances like the microwave oven,
“crock” pot, blender, and conventional stove, with possible convection
oven capabilities.

After supper, the dirty pots, pans, and dishes are placed in the
automatic dishwasher to be washed and dried while the family retires to
the den to watch TV, and/or the kids to do homework. Later, perhaps after
the kids have gone to bed, the caregiver may then have the time to fold,
sort, and put up the now freshly laundered clothes.

So what does a CareBot do for the caregiver? It is a new type of labor
saving, time management automatic home appliance.

For example, the care giver frequently feels time stress when they need
to go shopping for 2 or 3 hours, and are uncomfortable when they have to
be away for more than an hour or so. Time stress is much worse for the
caregiver with a frail elderly parent that must be reminded to take
medications at certain times of the day. How can the caregiver be away
for 3-4 hours when Grandma must take her prescribed medication every 2 or
3 hours? If the caregiver is trapped in traffic for an hour or two beyond
the 2 or 3 they expected to be gone, this “time stress” can be very
difficult for the caregiver to moderate.

Not infrequently, the primary caregiver has a 24 hour, 7 days a week
responsibility. After weeks and weeks of this sometimes tedious, if not
onerous routine, how does the caregiver get a “day off?” To bring in an
outsider is expensive (easily $75-125 per day for just 8 hours) and there
is the concern that medication will be missed or the care receiver have
an accident requiring immediate assistance by the caregiver, or someone
they must designate. And the care receiver may be very resistant to a
“stranger” coming in to her home and “running things.”

So what is it worth for a care receiver to have an automatic system to
help take care of Grandma? Just 3 or 4 days a month “off” on a daylong
shopping trip, a visit with friends, or just take in a movie would cost
$225-500 per month. And that scenario assumes that Grandma is willing to
be taken care of by a “stranger” during those needed and appropriate days
off.

So perhaps, an automatic caregiver, a CareBot, might be pretty handy, and
potentially very cost effective from the primary caregiver’s perspective.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Receiver?

It’s a new kind of companion that always stays close to them enabling
family and friends to care for them from afar. It tells them jokes,
retells family anecdotes, reminds them to take medication, reminds them
that family is coming over soon (or not at all), recites Bible verses,
plays favorite songs and/or other music. It alerts them when unexpected
visitors, or intruders are present. It notifies designated caregivers
when a potentially harmful event has occurred, such as a fall, fire in
the home, or simply been not found by the CareBot for too long. It
responds to calls for help and notifies those that the caregiver
determined should be immediately notified when any predetermined adverse
event occurs.

The family can customize the personality of the CareBot. The voice’s
cadence can be fast or slow. The intonation can be breathy, or abrupt.
The voice’s volume can range from very loud to very soft. The response
phrases from the CareBot for recognized words and phrases can be
colloquial and/or unique to the family’s own heritage. The personality
can range from brassy to timid depending on how the care giver, and
others appropriate, chooses it to be.

Generally, the care receiver is pleased at the prospect of family being
able to drop in for a “virtual visit” using the onboard webcam and video
monitor for at home “video conferencing.” The care receiver may feel much
more needed and appreciated when their far flung family and friends can
“look in” on them any where in the world where they can get broadband
internet access and simply chat for a bit.

Why is Grandma really interested in a CareBot? She wants to stay in her
home, or her family’s home, as long as she possibly can. What’s that
worth? Priceless. Or, an average nursing home is $5,000 per month for an
environment that is too often the beginning of a spiral downward in the
care receiver’s health. That’s probably $2-3K more per month for them to
be placed where they really don’t want to be. Financial payback on a
CareBot? Less than a year — Emotional payback for the family to have
this new automatic care giver? Nearly instantaneous-

Safe Harbor:

Statements regarding financial matters in this press release other than
historical facts are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of
Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 21E of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, and as that term is defined in the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company intends that such
statements about the Company’s future expectations, including future
revenues and earnings, technology efficacy and all other forward-looking
statements be subject to the Safe Harbors created thereby. The Company is
a development stage firm that continues to be dependent upon outside
capital to sustain its existence. Since these statements (future
operational results and sales) involve risks and uncertainties and are
subject to change at any time, the Company’s actual results may differ
materially from expected results.

Contact:
GeckoSystem Intl Corp.
www.GeckoSystems.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=140182685996116&v=wall
or
Main number: 1-866-227-3268
International: +1 678-413-9236

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

GeckoSystems’ Elder Care Robot Trial Caregiver Shares New Insights

CONYERS, GA, Jun 17 (MARKET WIRE) —
GeckoSystems Intl. Corp. (PINKSHEETS: GCKO)
(http://www.geckosystems.com/) announced today that one of their care
giver participants has noted some unexpected benefits resulting from her
usage of GeckoSystems’ first product, a personal assistant robot for
family care, the CareBot(TM). Her testimonial characterizes the some of
the benefits she is realizing from the CareBot and its new
GeckoScheduler(TM).

GeckoSystems is a dynamic leader in the emerging Mobile Service Robot
industry revolutionizing their development and usage with “Mobile Robot
Solutions for Safety, Security, and Service(TM).

The new GeckoScheduler was completely rewritten in the last few months as
a result of these ongoing, world’s first elder care robot trials. It
enables the primary caregiver to more easily set the date, time and
frequency of medication reminders, TV show reminders, repetition of
family anecdotes, etc.

“I am pleased to report on a number of insights regarding my involvement
with the in home evaluation trials of the GeckoSystems’s CareBot(TM).
First, I was concerned that my elderly mother would be a little
frightened by the robot and not want it in her room, but that is not the
case. She likes it and seems pleased to have this “companion” in close
proximity. When it speaks to her she answers back and is delighted at
having a conversation with the robot!

“Second, the robot has been able to reassure her and make her feel more
comfortable. At times she is disoriented and often thinks she is not in
her home. With the upgraded GeckoScheduler and GeckoChat(TM), I am now
able to have the CareBot remind her every hour that indeed she is at
home. She responds with much relief stating that she thought she was
‘far, far away.’

“Third, she takes in what the CareBot says to her as being authoritative.
When I tell her it is time for her shower she does not want to do it and
tries to procrastinate. When the robot tells her it is time for her
shower, she gets ready. I never thought a robot would have more influence
over my mother than I do! All three of these insights have been
surprising and helpful to me,” stated the caregiver.

GeckoSystems is protecting the privacy of its elder care robot trials’
participants with a sincere commitment to maintain their identities
confidential.

“While we have made, and expect to continue to make, numerous tuning
adjustments to the CareBot, none of them have required significant
changes in our suite of software and hardware technologies. These
incremental changes have not diminished the fundamental robustness of our
mobile robot solutions, nor will these changes impact our ability to
manufacture these new home appliances in the high volumes needed due to
our perception of pent up demand in family care — especially elder care.

“We are learning that valued family behaviors can be readily expressed to
the care receiver using a CareBot due to the robustness of its
functionality. We continue to look forward to further exploration and
understanding of the social interaction between the family, the CareBot,
and the care receiver in the coming weeks and months of these in home
assistive care robot trials. With our in home personal assistant robot
trials progressing nicely, we have already learned a great deal as to the
reality of beneficial social interaction between human and robot in
domestic settings as quoted in the testimonial above. There seems to be a
very important positive — and unforeseen by some parties — impact of
valued family behaviors for all members in using a CareBot to communicate
their thoughts and feelings to their beloved family members,” commented
Martin Spencer, President/CEO, GeckoSystems.

The elderly frequently endure loneliness and/or loss of independence when
living in nursing homes or other assisted living facilities. This new
type of remote medical monitoring system, a CareBot, will postpone, if
not eliminate that trauma to them. Their families can now better manage
the difficult decisions regarding the independence they allow their now
dependent parent while minimizing the risk the adult care giver is
willing to assume for a prudent level of independence for their now
reliant parent.

Some believe that the technology is approved and paid for through options
such as the Assistive Technology Act of 1998, which broadens the
definition, use, and funding of technology at home. Other sources include
long-term care insurance, Medicare and Medicaid, Medicaid waivers, and
(potentially) stimulus funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009, under the provisions for health information technology and
electronic medical records for acute care.

Like an automobile, mobile robots are made from steel, aluminum, plastic,
and electronics, but with ten to twenty times the amount of software
running. The CareBot has an aluminum frame, plastic shroud, two
independently driven wheels, multiple sensor systems, microprocessors and
several onboard computers connected in a local area network (LAN). The
microprocessors directly interact with the sensor systems and transmit
data to the onboard computers. The onboard computers each run
independent, highly specialized cooperative/subsumptive artificial
intelligence software programs, GeckoSavants(TM), which interact to
complete tasks in a timely, intelligent and common sense manner.

GeckoSuper(TM), GeckoNav(TM), GeckoChat(TM), GeckoScheduler(TM) and
GeckoTrak(TM) are primary GeckoSavants(TM). The GeckoSuper is the
GeckoSavant responsible for system-wide orchestrated “common sense.” For
example, given two or more inputs, GeckoSuper can determine the order in
which these inputs need to be addressed. GeckoNav is the AI software
guidance system for the CareBot that provides automatic self-navigation
without human intervention. GeckoNav is responsible for all fully
autonomous maneuvering, such as avoiding dynamic and/or static obstacles,
running errands and patrolling. GeckoChat is responsible for interaction
with the care-receiver such as answering questions, assisting with daily
routines and reminders, and responding to other verbal commands.
GeckoTrak is the AI software system using sensor fusion that delivers a
goal to GeckoNav by way of the GeckoSuper to seek.

“GeckoScheduler completes the suite of our fundamental GeckoSavants with
the dissimilar yet synergistic, functional benefits needed to cost
effectively provide utility to families for remote care taking of their
members and other loved ones. This type of beneficial artificial
intelligence (AI) makes the CareBot more personal and uniquely customized
for the particular person to be assisted. Not only does this capability
enable new forms of social interaction and community for families — even
when dispersed geographically, it will also increase ROI for our
investors as we address this pent up demand,” concluded Spencer.

About GeckoSystems International Corporation:

Since 1997, GeckoSystems has developed a comprehensive, coherent, and
sufficient suite of hardware and software inventions to enable a new type
of home appliance (a personal robot) the CareBot(TM), to be created for
the mass consumer marketplace. The suite of primary inventions includes:
GeckoNav(TM), GeckoChat(TM) and GeckoTrak(TM).

The primary market for this product is the family for use in eldercare,
care for the chronically ill, and childcare. The primary distribution
channel for this new home appliance is the thousands of independent
personal computer retailers in the U.S. The manufacturing infrastructure
for this new product category of mobile service robots is essentially the
same as the personal computer industry. Several outside contract
manufacturers have been identified and qualified their ability to produce
up to 1,000 CareBots per month within four to six months.

The Company is market driven. At the time of founding, over twelve years
ago, the Company did extensive primary market research to determine the
demographic profile of the early adopters of the then proposed product
line. Subsequent to, and based on that original market research, they
have assembled numerous focus groups to evaluate the fit of the CareBot
personal robot into the participant’s lives and their expected usage. The
Company has also frequently employed the Delphi market research
methodology by contacting and interviewing senior executives,
practitioners, and researchers knowledgeable in the area of elder care.
Using this factual basis of internally performed primary and secondary
market research, and third party research is the statistical substance
for the Company’s sales forecasts.

Not surprisingly the scientific statistical analyses applied revealed
that elderly over sixty-five living alone in metropolitan areas with
broadband Internet available and sufficient household incomes to support
the increased costs were identified as those most likely to adopt
initially. Due to the high cost of assisted living, nursing homes, etc.
the payback for a CareBot(TM) is expected to be only six to eight months
while keeping elderly care receivers independent, in their own long time
homes, and living longer due to the comfort and safety of more frequent
attention from their loved ones.

“We project the available market size in dollars for cost effective,
utilitarian, multitasking eldercare personal robots in 2011 to be $74.0B,
in 2012 to be $77B, in 2013 to be $80B, in 2014 to be $83.3B, and in 2015
to be $86.6B. With market penetrations of 0.03% in 2011, 0.06% in 2012,
0.22% in 2013, 0.53% in 2014, and 0.81% in 2015, we will anticipate
CareBot sales, from this consumer market segment, only, of $22.0M,
$44.0M, $176M, $440.2M, and $704.3M, respectively. We expect these sales
despite — and perhaps because of — the present recession due to pent up
demand for significant cost reduction in eldercare expenses,” opined
Spencer.

The foregoing forecasts do not include sales in non-metropolitan areas;
elderly couples over 65 (only elderly living alone are in these
forecasts); those chronically ill — regardless of age — or elderly
living with their adult children.

The Company’s “mobile robot solutions for safety, security and
service(TM)” are appropriate not only for the consumer, but also
professional healthcare, commercial security and defense markets.
Professional healthcare require cost effective, timely errand running,
portable telemedicine, etc. Homeland Security requires cost effective
mobile robots to patrol and monitor public venues for weapons and WMD
detection. Military users desire the elimination of the “man in the loop”
to enable unmanned ground and air vehicles to not require constant human
control and/or intervention.

The Company’s business model is very much like that of an automobile
manufacturer. Due to the final assembly, test, and shipping being done
based on geographic and logistic realities; strategic
business-to-business relationships can range from private labeling to
joint manufacturing and distribution to licensing only.

Several dozen patent opportunities exist for the Company due to the many
innovative and cost effective breakthroughs embodied not only in
GeckoNav, GeckoChat, and GeckoTrak, but also in additional, secondary
systems that include: GeckoOrient(TM), GeckoMotorController(TM), the
GeckoTactileShroud(TM), the CompoundedSensorArray(TM), and the
GeckoSPIO(TM).

The present senior management at GeckoSystems has over thirty-five years
experience in consumer electronics sales and marketing and product
development. Senior managers have been identified for the areas of
manufacturing, marketing, sales, and finance.

While GeckoSystems has been in the Development Stage, the Company has
accumulated losses to date in excess of six million dollars. In contrast,
the Japanese government has spent one hundred million dollars in grants
(to Sanyo, Toshiba, Hitachi, Fujitsu, NEC, etc.) over the same time
period to develop personal robots for their eldercare crisis, yet no
viable solutions have been developed.

GeckoSystems is the first mobile robot developer in the world to begin
actual in-home eldercare evaluation trials.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Giver?

The short answer is that it decreases the difficulty and stress for the
caregiver that needs to watch over Grandma, Mom, or other family members
most, if not much, of the time day in and day out due to concerns about
their well being, safety, and security.

But, first let’s look at some other labor saving, automatic home
appliances most of us use routinely. For example, needing to do two or
more necessary chores and/or activities at the same time, like laundering
clothes and preparing supper.

The automatic washing machine needs no human intervention after the dirty
clothes are placed in the washer, the laundry powder poured in, and the
desired wash cycle set. Then, this labor saving appliance runs
automatically until the washed clothes are ready to be placed in another
labor saving home appliance, the automatic clothes dryer. While the
clothes are being washed and/or dried, the caregiver prepares supper
using several time saving home appliances like the microwave oven,
“crock” pot, blender, and conventional stove, with possible convection
oven capabilities.

After supper, the dirty pots, pans, and dishes are placed in the
automatic dishwasher to be washed and dried while the family retires to
the den to watch TV, and/or the kids to do homework. Later, perhaps after
the kids have gone to bed, the caregiver may then have the time to fold,
sort, and put up the now freshly laundered clothes.

So what does a CareBot do for the caregiver? It is a new type of labor
saving, time management automatic home appliance.

For example, the care giver frequently feels time stress when they need
to go shopping for 2 or 3 hours, and are uncomfortable when they have to
be away for more than an hour or so. Time stress is much worse for the
caregiver with a frail elderly parent that must be reminded to take
medications at certain times of the day. How can the caregiver be away
for 3-4 hours when Grandma must take her prescribed medication every 2 or
3 hours? If the caregiver is trapped in traffic for an hour or two beyond
the 2 or 3 they expected to be gone, this “time stress” can be very
difficult for the caregiver to moderate.

Not infrequently, the primary caregiver has a 24 hour, 7 days a week
responsibility. After weeks and weeks of this sometimes tedious, if not
onerous routine, how does the caregiver get a “day off?” To bring in an
outsider is expensive (easily $75-125 per day for just 8 hours) and there
is the concern that medication will be missed or the care receiver have
an accident requiring immediate assistance by the caregiver, or someone
they must designate. And the care receiver may be very resistant to a
“stranger” coming in to her home and “running things.”

So what is it worth for a care receiver to have an automatic system to
help take care of Grandma? Just 3 or 4 days a month “off” on a daylong
shopping trip, a visit with friends, or just take in a movie would cost
$225-500 per month. And that scenario assumes that Grandma is willing to
be taken care of by a “stranger” during those needed and appropriate days
off.

So perhaps, an automatic caregiver, a CareBot, might be pretty handy, and
potentially very cost effective from the primary caregiver’s perspective.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Receiver?

It’s a new kind of companion that always stays close to them enabling
family and friends to care for them from afar. It tells them jokes,
retells family anecdotes, reminds them to take medication, reminds them
that family is coming over soon (or not at all), recites Bible verses,
plays favorite songs and/or other music. It alerts them when unexpected
visitors, or intruders are present. It notifies designated caregivers
when a potentially harmful event has occurred, such as a fall, fire in
the home, or simply been not found by the CareBot for too long. It
responds to calls for help and notifies those that the caregiver
determined should be immediately notified when any predetermined adverse
event occurs.

The family can customize the personality of the CareBot. The voice’s
cadence can be fast or slow. The intonation can be breathy, or abrupt.
The voice’s volume can range from very loud to very soft. The response
phrases from the CareBot for recognized words and phrases can be
colloquial and/or unique to the family’s own heritage. The personality
can range from brassy to timid depending on how the care giver, and
others appropriate, chooses it to be.

Generally, the care receiver is pleased at the prospect of family being
able to drop in for a “virtual visit” using the onboard webcam and video
monitor for at home “video conferencing.” The care receiver may feel much
more needed and appreciated when their far flung family and friends can
“look in” on them any where in the world where they can get broadband
internet access and simply chat for a bit.

Why is Grandma really interested in a CareBot? She wants to stay in her
home, or her family’s home, as long as she possibly can. What’s that
worth? Priceless. Or, an average nursing home is $5,000 per month for an
environment that is too often the beginning of a spiral downward in the
care receiver’s health. That’s probably $2-3K more per month for them to
be placed where they really don’t want to be. Financial payback on a
CareBot? Less than a year — Emotional payback for the family to have
this new automatic care giver? Nearly instantaneous.

Safe Harbor:
Statements regarding financial matters in this press
release other than historical facts are “forward-looking statements”
within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section
21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and as that term is defined
in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company
intends that such statements about the Company’s future expectations,
including future revenues and earnings, technology efficacy and all other
forward-looking statements be subject to the Safe Harbors created
thereby. The Company is a development stage firm that continues to be
dependent upon outside capital to sustain its existence. Since these
statements (future operational results and sales) involve risks and
uncertainties and are subject to change at any time, the Company’s actual
results may differ materially from expected results.

Contact:
GeckoSystems Intl. Corp.
www.GeckoSystems.com
or
Main number: 1-866-227-3268
International: +1 678-413-9236

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

GeckoSystems Securing Manufacturing for Expansion of Elder Care Robot Trials

CONYERS, GA, Apr 14 (MARKET WIRE) —
GeckoSystems Intl. Corp. (PINKSHEETS: GCKO)
(http://www.geckosystems.com/) — announced today that they will be
performing an on site visit of Sparton Corporation’s Electronic
Manufacturing Services (EMS) in Brooksfield, FL next week. GeckoSystems
is a dynamic leader in the emerging Mobile Service Robot industry
revolutionizing their development and usage with “Mobile Robot Solutions
for Safety, Security and Service(TM).”

Sparton EMS offers a new prototyping service for electronic assemblies
that provides customers several benefits, including time and cost
savings, with increased flexibility. Their service provides a
stand-alone, dedicated pilot line and engineering lab that offers a means
of manufacturing and testing multiple aspects of a customer’s existing or
newly designed electronic assemblies before it is mass produced.
Sparton’s new capabilities are compatible with Proof-of-Concept (PoC)
prototypes, where product design is still evolving, and Production-Ready
(PR) prototypes, where final testing or certifications are the last step
prior to full production.

“Sparton’s new rapid prototyping service offers our customers direct
access to production line equipment, manufacturing engineers, and
manufacturing assets during the design cycle,” said Gene Vigilante,
director, Engineering Services, Sparton Corp. “The prototyping service
doesn’t timeshare with other production lines, but rather allows our
customers access to a fully production-compatible line assembly,
dedicated to PoC and PR prototypes, which significantly increases
probability of first-time design success and shortens the product’s time
to market.”

“After returning from my visit to Sparton Medical in early February of
this year, we realized their focus was on high end medical diagnostic
equipment with relatively small batch sizes. Since we consider Sparton to
be a first tier contract manufacturer, we are now pleased to be visiting
their volume manufacturing facility in FL. Sparton EMS is highly
connected to its Pacific Rim manufacturing plant in Vietnam. With low
cost touch labor available to us in Asia by way of Sparton EMS, we are
very excited about our upcoming review of their facility,” reflected Mark
Peele, Vice President, R&D, GeckoSystems.

“We will be taking our key people on this upcoming trip and demonstrating
a couple of our advanced prototype personal companion robots, the
CareBot(TM) to them. It has been our experience that most electronic
contract manufacturers, after reviewing our bill of materials (BOM) and
seeing a physical prototype, believe they can ramp up to producing 1,000
CareBots per month within four to six months of inception.

“Our ongoing world’s first in home elder care robot trials have been
proceeding since early December with several expected confirmations of
genuine utility and some unexpected family benefits emerging. Given that
we are anticipating pent up demand in the elder care marketplace,
identifying manufacturers with this capability and confidence is of
considerable importance to us.

“We expect our focus on this kind of critical strategic business planning
and execution to increase ROI for our shareholders,” concluded Martin
Spencer, President/CEO, GeckoSystems.

About Sparton Corporation:

Sparton Corporation, now in its 110th year, is a provider of complex and
sophisticated electromechanical devices with capabilities that include
concept development, industrial design, design and manufacturing
engineering, production, distribution, and field service to
technology-driven companies in the medical device, defense & security
systems, and electronic manufacturing services markets. Headquartered in
Schaumburg, Ill., Sparton currently has four manufacturing locations
worldwide. The Company’s Web site may be accessed at

http://www.sparton.com.

About GeckoSystems International Corporation:

Since 1997, GeckoSystems has developed a comprehensive, coherent, and
sufficient suite of hardware and software inventions to enable a new type
of home appliance (a personal robot) the CareBot(TM), to be created for
the mass consumer marketplace. The suite of primary inventions includes:
GeckoNav(TM), GeckoChat(TM) and GeckoTrak(TM).

The primary market for this product is the family for use in eldercare,
care for the chronically ill, and childcare. The primary distribution
channel for this new home appliance is the thousands of independent
personal computer retailers in the U.S. The manufacturing infrastructure
for this new product category of mobile service robots is essentially the
same as the personal computer industry. Several outside contract
manufacturers have been identified and qualified their ability to produce
up to 1,000 CareBots per month within four to six months.

The Company is market driven. At the time of founding, nearly 12 years
ago, the Company did extensive primary market research to determine the
demographic profile of the early adopters of the then proposed product
line. Subsequent to, and based on that original market research, they
have assembled numerous focus groups to evaluate the fit of the CareBot
personal robot into the participant’s lives and their expected usage. The
Company has also frequently employed the Delphi market research
methodology by contacting and interviewing senior executives,
practitioners, and researchers knowledgeable in the area of elder care.
Using this factual basis of internally performed primary and secondary
market research, and third party research is the statistical substance
for the Company’s sales forecasts.

Not surprisingly the scientific statistical analyses applied revealed
that elderly over sixty-five living alone in metropolitan areas with
broadband Internet available and sufficient household incomes to support
the increased costs were identified as those most likely to adopt
initially. Due to the high cost of assisted living, nursing homes, etc.
the payback for a CareBot(TM) is expected to be only six to eight months
while keeping elderly care receivers independent, in their own long time
homes, and living longer due to the comfort and safety of more frequent
attention from their loved ones.

Using U.S. Census Bureau data and various predictive statistical
analyses, the Company projects the available market size in dollars for
cost effective, utilitarian, multitasking eldercare personal robots in
2011 to be $74.0B, in 2012 to be $77B, in 2013 to be $80B, in 2014 to be
$83.3B, and in 2015 to be $86.6B. With market penetrations of 0.03% in
2011, 0.06% in 2012, 0.22% in 2013, 0.53% in 2014, and 0.81% in 2015, we
will anticipate CareBot sales, from this consumer market segment, only,
of $22.0M, $44.0M, $176M, $440.2M, and $704.3M, respectively.

The foregoing forecasts do not include sales in non-metropolitan areas;
elderly couples over 65 (only elderly living alone are in these
forecasts); those chronically ill — regardless of age — or elderly
living with their adult children.

The Company’s “mobile robot solutions for safety, security and
service(TM)” are appropriate not only for the consumer, but also
professional healthcare, commercial security and defense markets.
Professional healthcare require cost effective, timely errand running,
portable telemedicine, etc. Homeland Security requires cost effective
mobile robots to patrol and monitor public venues for weapons and WMD
detection. Military users desire the elimination of the “man in the loop”
to enable unmanned ground and air vehicles to not require constant human
control and/or intervention.

The Company’s business model is very much like that of an automobile
manufacturer. Due to the final assembly, test, and shipping being done
based on geographic and logistic realities; strategic
business-to-business relationships can range from private labeling to
joint manufacturing and distribution to licensing only.

Several dozen patent opportunities exist for the Company due to the many
innovative and cost effective breakthroughs embodied not only in
GeckoNav, GeckoChat, and GeckoTrak, but also in additional, secondary
systems that include: GeckoOrient(TM), GeckoMotorController(TM), the
GeckoTactileShroud(TM), the CompoundedSensorArray(TM), and the
GeckoSPIO(TM).

The present senior management at GeckoSystems has over thirty-five years
experience in consumer electronics sales and marketing and product
development. Senior managers have been identified for the areas of
manufacturing, marketing, sales, and finance.

While GeckoSystems has been in the Development Stage, the Company has
accumulated losses to date in excess of six million dollars. In contrast,
the Japanese government has spent one hundred million dollars in grants
(to Sanyo, Toshiba, Hitachi, Fujitsu, NEC, etc.) over the same time
period to develop personal robots for their eldercare crisis, yet no
viable solutions have been developed.

By the end of this year, the Company plans to complete productization of
its CareBot offering with the introduction of its fourth generation
personal robot, the CareBot 4.0 MSR. The Company expects to be the first
personal robot developer and manufacturer in the world to begin in-home
eldercare evaluation trials.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Giver?

The short answer is that it decreases the difficulty and stress for the
caregiver that needs to watch over Grandma, Mom, or other family members
most, if not much, of the time day in and day out due to concerns about
their well being, safety, and security.

But, first let’s look at some other labor saving, automatic home
appliances most of us use routinely. For example, needing to do two or
more necessary chores and/or activities at the same time, like laundering
clothes and preparing supper.

The automatic washing machine needs no human intervention after the dirty
clothes are placed in the washer, the laundry powder poured in, and the
desired wash cycle set. Then, this labor saving appliance runs
automatically until the washed clothes are ready to be placed in another
labor saving home appliance, the automatic clothes dryer. While the
clothes are being washed and/or dried, the caregiver prepares supper
using several time saving home appliances like the microwave oven,
“crock” pot, blender, and conventional stove, with possible convection
oven capabilities.

After supper, the dirty pots, pans, and dishes are placed in the
automatic dishwasher to be washed and dried while the family retires to
the den to watch TV, and/or the kids to do homework. Later, perhaps after
the kids have gone to bed, the caregiver may then have the time to fold,
sort, and put up the now freshly laundered clothes.

So what does a CareBot do for the caregiver? It is a new type of labor
saving, time management automatic home appliance.

For example, the care giver frequently feels time stress when they need
to go shopping for 2 or 3 hours, and are uncomfortable when they have to
be away for more than an hour or so. Time stress is much worse for the
caregiver with a frail elderly parent that must be reminded to take
medications at certain times of the day. How can the caregiver be away
for 3-4 hours when Grandma must take her prescribed medication every 2 or
3 hours? If the caregiver is trapped in traffic for an hour or two beyond
the 2 or 3 they expected to be gone, this “time stress” can be very
difficult for the caregiver to moderate.

Not infrequently, the primary caregiver has a 24 hour, 7 days a week
responsibility. After weeks and weeks of this sometimes tedious, if not
onerous routine, how does the caregiver get a “day off?” To bring in an
outsider is expensive (easily $75-125 per day for just 8 hours) and there
is the concern that medication will be missed or the care receiver have
an accident requiring immediate assistance by the caregiver, or someone
they must designate. And the care receiver may be very resistant to a
“stranger” coming in to her home and “running things.”

So what is it worth for a care receiver to have an automatic system to
help take care of Grandma? Just 3 or 4 days a month “off” on a daylong
shopping trip, a visit with friends, or just take in a movie would cost
$225-500 per month. And that scenario assumes that Grandma is willing to
be taken care of by a “stranger” during those needed and appropriate days
off.

So perhaps, an automatic caregiver, a CareBot, might be pretty handy, and
potentially very cost effective from the primary caregiver’s perspective.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Receiver?

It’s a new kind of companion that always stays close to them enabling
family and friends to care for them from afar. It tells them jokes,
retells family anecdotes, reminds them to take medication, reminds them
that family is coming over soon (or not at all), recites Bible verses,
plays favorite songs and/or other music. It alerts them when unexpected
visitors, or intruders are present. It notifies designated caregivers
when a potentially harmful event has occurred, such as a fall, fire in
the home, or simply been not found by the CareBot for too long. It
responds to calls for help and notifies those that the caregiver
determined should be immediately notified when any predetermined adverse
event occurs.

The family can customize the personality of the CareBot. The voice’s
cadence can be fast or slow. The intonation can be breathy, or abrupt.
The voice’s volume can range from very loud to very soft. The response
phrases from the CareBot for recognized words and phrases can be
colloquial and/or unique to the family’s own heritage. The personality
can range from brassy to timid depending on how the care giver, and
others appropriate, chooses it to be.

Generally, the care receiver is pleased at the prospect of family being
able to drop in for a “virtual visit” using the onboard webcam and video
monitor for at home “video conferencing.” The care receiver may feel much
more needed and appreciated when their far flung family and friends can
“look in” on them any where in the world where they can get broadband
internet access and simply chat for a bit.

Why is Grandma really interested in a CareBot? She wants to stay in her
home, or her family’s home, as long as she possibly can. What’s that
worth? Priceless. Or, an average nursing home is $5,000 per month for an
environment that is too often the beginning of a spiral downward in the
care receiver’s health. That’s probably $2-3K more per month for them to
be placed where they really don’t want to be. Financial payback on a
CareBot? Less than a year- Emotional payback for the family to have this
new automatic care giver? Nearly instantaneous-

Safe Harbor:
Statements regarding financial matters in this press
release other than historical facts are “forward-looking statements”
within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section
21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and as that term is defined
in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company
intends that such statements about the Company’s future expectations,
including future revenues and earnings, technology efficacy and all other
forward-looking statements be subject to the Safe Harbors created
thereby. The Company is a development stage firm that continues to be
dependent upon outside capital to sustain its existence. Since these
statements (future operational results and sales) involve risks and
uncertainties and are subject to change at any time, the Company’s actual
results may differ materially from expected results.

Contact:
GeckoSystems

http://www.geckosystems.com/

or
Main number: 1-866-CAREBOT (227-3268)
International: +1 678-413-9236

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

GeckoSystems Applauds BUYINS.NET’s GCKO Naked Short Analyses

CONYERS, GA, Apr 12 (MARKET WIRE) —
GeckoSystems Intl. Corp. (PINKSHEETS: GCKO) reported today that they are
very pleased with the impact of the recent and ongoing GCKO naked short
analyses currently being performed by BUYINS.NET. GeckoSystems is a
dynamic leader in the emerging mobile robotics industry revolutionizing
their development and usage with “Mobile Robot Solutions for Safety,
Security and Service(TM).”

On Mar. 29 these press releases were distributed:
“GeckoSystems Retains
BUYINS.NET for Naked Short Analyses”
“BUYINS.NET Issues GeckoSystems
International SqueezeTrigger Report”

Results to date per BUYINS.NET’s analyses:
Mar. 29: 62,350 naked
shorts, 32.90% of the 189,520 sold.
Mar. 30: 460,950 naked shorts,
81.60% of the 564,900 sold.
Mar. 31: 97,500 naked shorts, 48.51% of the
201,000 sold.
Apr. 1: 617,575 naked shorts, 70.29% of the 878,575 sold.

Apr. 2: Good Friday
Apr. 5: 145,100 naked shorts, 33.95% of the
427,377 sold.
Apr. 6: 1,978,577 naked shorts, 26.33% of the 7,514,131
sold.
Apr. 7: 288,163 naked shorts, 23.99% of the 1,201,273 sold.

Apr. 8: 35,000 naked shorts, 8.22% of the 426,000 sold.

BUYINS.NET provides Regulation SHO compliance monitoring, short sale
trading statistics, and market integrity surveillance coverage. According
to BUYINS.NET initial report at the market close, March 26, 2010: The
total aggregate number of shares shorted since August 2009 is
approximately 108 million shares. The SqueezeTrigger price for GCKO
shares shorted is $0.024. 42.29 million shares (39%) of all shares
shorted since August 2009 are currently out-of-the-money and already
squeezing. 65.8 million (61%) of the shares shorted will begin squeezing
above $0.032. BUYINS.NET is currently monitoring GCKO market makers daily
for compliance with Fair Market-Making Requirements.

“We have worked very hard for many years to provide a high quality
investment vehicle with ready liquidity and transparency for our hundreds
of investors. We secured our trading symbol by satisfying FINRA’s 15c-211
requirements in September of 2007. We secured DTC eligibility for
electronic trading in January of 2008 and became a DRS participant in
July of 2009 to further ensure and enhance that liquidity. Now, we can
report initial results from this stock market analytic firm renowned for
its demonstrable success in routinely and reliably identifying, with
statistical substance, those firms engaged in the naked short selling of
stock contrary to the SEC’s Regulation SHO.

“We are very pleased to now be able to provide this heightened level of
transparency to our present GCKO stockholders and other prospective
investors. We have prepared a simple trend line analysis of the foregoing
data in a chart available for viewing and/or downloading on our website,”
stated Martin Spencer, President/CEO, GeckoSystems.

“As we continue to effectuate our corporate policy of providing
stockholders heightened liquidity and transparency, we are very pleased
to be able to offer our stockholders an enhanced view of the market’s
activity in GCKO trading and probable greater ease in their purchases and
sales of GCKO stock. We wish to communicate to our hundreds of
stockholders that this greater transparency and efficiency in the
marketplace for our stock as a BUYINS.NET subscriber may further enhance
the value of GCKO stock and increase ROI for them,” opined Spencer.

About BUYINS.NET

BUYINS.NET, http://www.buyins.net, monitors trading in all US stocks in
real time and maintains massive databases of short sale and naked short
sale time and sales data, short squeeze SqueezeTrigger prices, market
maker price movements, shareholder data, statistical data on earnings,
sector correlation, seasonality, hedge fund trading strategies,
comparable valuations. Reports include:

Regulatory & Compliance News

Friction Factor — market maker surveillance system tracking Level II
market makers in all stocks to determine Price Friction and compliance
with new “Fair Market Making Requirements.”

RegSHO Naked Shorts — tracks EVERY failure to deliver in all US stocks
and tracks all Threshold Security Lists daily for which stocks have naked
shorts that are not in compliance with Regulation SHO.

Investments & Trading

SqueezeTrigger — 25 billion cell database tracks EVERY short sale (not
just total short interest) in all US stocks and calculates volume
weighted price that a short squeeze will begin in each stock.

Earnings Edge — predicts probability, price move and length of move
before and after all US stock earnings reports.

Seasonality — predicts probability, price move and length of move based
on exact time of year for all US stocks.

Group Trader — tracks sector rotation and stock correlation to its
sector and predicts future moves in ALL sectors and industry groups.

Pattern Scan — automates tracking of every technical pattern and
predicts time and size of move in all stocks.

GATS (Global Automated Trading System) — tracks all known trading
strategies and qualifies and quantifies which are working best in real
time.

Disclaimer:

BUYINS.NET is not a registered investment advisor and nothing contained
in any materials should be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell
any securities. GeckoSystems has paid no stock, directly or indirectly,
but cash only, to purchase the foregoing analyses to provided in daily
and monthly reports. Please visit their web site, http://www.buyins.net,
for complete risks and disclosures.

Contact:

BUYINS.NET
800-715-9999

About GeckoSystems International Corporation:

Since 1997, GeckoSystems has developed a comprehensive, coherent, and
sufficient suite of hardware and software inventions to enable a new type
of home appliance (a personal robot) the CareBot(TM), to be created for
the mass consumer marketplace. The suite of primary inventions includes:
GeckoNav(TM), GeckoChat(TM) and GeckoTrak(TM).

The primary market for this product is the family for use in eldercare,
care for the chronically ill, and childcare. The primary distribution
channel for this new home appliance is the thousands of independent
personal computer retailers in the U.S. The manufacturing infrastructure
for this new product category of mobile service robots is essentially the
same as the personal computer industry. Several outside contract
manufacturers have been identified and qualified their ability to produce
up to 1,000 CareBots per month within four to six months.

The Company is market driven. At the time of founding, over twelve years
ago, the Company did extensive primary market research to determine the
demographic profile of the early adopters of the then proposed product
line. Subsequent to, and based on that original market research, they
have assembled numerous focus groups to evaluate the fit of the CareBot
personal robot into the participant’s lives and their expected usage. The
Company has also frequently employed the Delphi market research
methodology by contacting and interviewing senior executives,
practitioners, and researchers knowledgeable in the area of elder care.
Using this factual basis of internally performed primary and secondary
market research, and third party research is the statistical substance
for the Company’s sales forecasts.

Not surprisingly the scientific statistical analyses applied revealed
that elderly over sixty-five living alone in metropolitan areas with
broadband Internet available and sufficient household incomes to support
the increased costs were identified as those most likely to adopt
initially. Due to the high cost of assisted living, nursing homes, etc.
the payback for a CareBot(TM) is expected to be only six to eight months
while keeping elderly care receivers independent, in their own long time
homes, and living longer due to the comfort and safety of more frequent
attention from their loved ones.

“We project the available market size in dollars for cost effective,
utilitarian, multitasking eldercare personal robots in 2011 to be $74.0B,
in 2012 to be $77B, in 2013 to be $80B, in 2014 to be $83.3B, and in 2015
to be $86.6B. With market penetrations of 0.03% in 2011, 0.06% in 2012,
0.22% in 2013, 0.53% in 2014, and 0.81% in 2015, we will anticipate
CareBot sales, from this consumer market segment, only, of $22.0M,
$44.0M, $176M, $440.2M, and $704.3M, respectively. We expect these sales
despite — and perhaps because of — the present recession due to pent up
demand for significant cost reduction in eldercare expenses,” opined
Spencer.

The foregoing forecasts do not include sales in non-metropolitan areas;
elderly couples over 65 (only elderly living alone are in these
forecasts); those chronically ill — regardless of age — or elderly
living with their adult children.

The Company’s “mobile robot solutions for safety, security and
service(TM)” are appropriate not only for the consumer, but also
professional healthcare, commercial security and defense markets.
Professional healthcare require cost effective, timely errand running,
portable telemedicine, etc. Homeland Security requires cost effective
mobile robots to patrol and monitor public venues for weapons and WMD
detection. Military users desire the elimination of the “man in the loop”
to enable unmanned ground and air vehicles to not require constant human
control and/or intervention.

The Company’s business model is very much like that of an automobile
manufacturer. Due to the final assembly, test, and shipping being done
based on geographic and logistic realities; strategic
business-to-business relationships can range from private labeling to
joint manufacturing and distribution to licensing only.

Several dozen patent opportunities exist for the Company due to the many
innovative and cost effective breakthroughs embodied not only in
GeckoNav, GeckoChat, and GeckoTrak, but also in additional, secondary
systems that include: GeckoOrient(TM), GeckoMotorController(TM), the
GeckoTactileShroud(TM), the CompoundedSensorArray(TM), and the
GeckoSPIO(TM).

The present senior management at GeckoSystems has over thirty-five years
experience in consumer electronics sales and marketing and product
development. Senior managers have been identified for the areas of
manufacturing, marketing, sales, and finance.

While GeckoSystems has been in the Development Stage, the Company has
accumulated losses to date in excess of six million dollars. In contrast,
the Japanese government has spent one hundred million dollars in grants
(to Sanyo, Toshiba, Hitachi, Fujitsu, NEC, etc.) over the same time
period to develop personal robots for their eldercare crisis, yet no
viable solutions have been developed.

GeckoSystems is the first mobile robot developer in the world to begin
actual in-home eldercare evaluation trials.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Giver?

The short answer is that it decreases the difficulty and stress for the
caregiver that needs to watch over Grandma, Mom, or other family members
most, if not much, of the time day in and day out due to concerns about
their well being, safety, and security.

But, first let’s look at some other labor saving, automatic home
appliances most of us use routinely. For example, needing to do two or
more necessary chores and/or activities at the same time, like laundering
clothes and preparing supper.

The automatic washing machine needs no human intervention after the dirty
clothes are placed in the washer, the laundry powder poured in, and the
desired wash cycle set. Then, this labor saving appliance runs
automatically until the washed clothes are ready to be placed in another
labor saving home appliance, the automatic clothes dryer. While the
clothes are being washed and/or dried, the caregiver prepares supper
using several time saving home appliances like the microwave oven,
“crock” pot, blender, and conventional stove, with possible convection
oven capabilities.

After supper, the dirty pots, pans, and dishes are placed in the
automatic dishwasher to be washed and dried while the family retires to
the den to watch TV, and/or the kids to do homework. Later, perhaps after
the kids have gone to bed, the caregiver may then have the time to fold,
sort, and put up the now freshly laundered clothes.

So what does a CareBot do for the caregiver? It is a new type of labor
saving, time management automatic home appliance.

For example, the care giver frequently feels time stress when they need
to go shopping for 2 or 3 hours, and are uncomfortable when they have to
be away for more than an hour or so. Time stress is much worse for the
caregiver with a frail elderly parent that must be reminded to take
medications at certain times of the day. How can the caregiver be away
for 3-4 hours when Grandma must take her prescribed medication every 2 or
3 hours? If the caregiver is trapped in traffic for an hour or two beyond
the 2 or 3 they expected to be gone, this “time stress” can be very
difficult for the caregiver to moderate.

Not infrequently, the primary caregiver has a 24 hour, 7 days a week
responsibility. After weeks and weeks of this sometimes tedious, if not
onerous routine, how does the caregiver get a “day off?” To bring in an
outsider is expensive (easily $75-125 per day for just 8 hours) and there
is the concern that medication will be missed or the care receiver have
an accident requiring immediate assistance by the caregiver, or someone
they must designate. And the care receiver may be very resistant to a
“stranger” coming in to her home and “running things.”

So what is it worth for a care receiver to have an automatic system to
help take care of Grandma? Just 3 or 4 days a month “off” on a daylong
shopping trip, a visit with friends, or just take in a movie would cost
$225-500 per month. And that scenario assumes that Grandma is willing to
be taken care of by a “stranger” during those needed and appropriate days
off.

So perhaps, an automatic caregiver, a CareBot, might be pretty handy, and
potentially very cost effective from the primary caregiver’s perspective.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Receiver?

It’s a new kind of companion that always stays close to them enabling
family and friends to care for them from afar. It tells them jokes,
retells family anecdotes, reminds them to take medication, reminds them
that family is coming over soon (or not at all), recites Bible verses,
plays favorite songs and/or other music. It alerts them when unexpected
visitors, or intruders are present. It notifies designated caregivers
when a potentially harmful event has occurred, such as a fall, fire in
the home, or simply been not found by the CareBot for too long. It
responds to calls for help and notifies those that the caregiver
determined should be immediately notified when any predetermined adverse
event occurs.

The family can customize the personality of the CareBot. The voice’s
cadence can be fast or slow. The intonation can be breathy, or abrupt.
The voice’s volume can range from very loud to very soft. The response
phrases from the CareBot for recognized words and phrases can be
colloquial and/or unique to the family’s own heritage. The personality
can range from brassy to timid depending on how the care giver, and
others appropriate, chooses it to be.

Generally, the care receiver is pleased at the prospect of family being
able to drop in for a “virtual visit” using the onboard webcam and video
monitor for at home “video conferencing.” The care receiver may feel much
more needed and appreciated when their far flung family and friends can
“look in” on them anywhere in the world where they can get broadband
internet access and simply chat for a bit.

Why is Grandma really interested in a CareBot? She wants to stay in her
home, or her family’s home, as long as she possibly can. What’s that
worth? Priceless. Or, an average nursing home is $5,000 per month for an
environment that is too often the beginning of a spiral downward in the
care receiver’s health. That’s probably $2-3K more per month for them to
be placed where they really don’t want to be. Financial payback on a
CareBot? Less than a year- Emotional payback for the family to have this
new automatic care giver? Nearly instantaneous-

Safe Harbor:

Statements regarding financial matters in this press release other than
historical facts are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of
Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 21E of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, and as that term is defined in the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company intends that such
statements about the Company’s future expectations, including future
revenues and earnings, technology efficacy and all other forward-looking
statements be subject to the Safe Harbors created thereby. The Company is
a development stage firm that continues to be dependent upon outside
capital to sustain its existence. Since these statements (future
operational results and sales) involve risks and uncertainties and are
subject to change at any time, the Company’s actual results may differ
materially from expected results.

Contact:
www.GeckoSystems.com
or
Main number: 1-866-CAREBOT
International: +1 678-413-9236

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

GeckoSystems in Negotiations With Major Intl. Retailer to Sell Personal Robots

CONYERS, GA, Apr 09 (MARKET WIRE) —
GeckoSystems Intl. Corp. (PINKSHEETS: GCKO)
(http://www.geckosystems.com/) — reported today that a major
international consumer electronics retailer has expressed heightened
interest in purchasing, distributing and selling GeckoSystems’ first
product, the CareBot(TM). GeckoSystems is a dynamic leader in the
emerging mobile robotics industry revolutionizing their development and
usage with “Mobile Robot Solutions for Safety, Security and Service(TM).”

Martin Spencer, President/CEO of GeckoSystems stated, “As all of us here
at GeckoSystems are excited about this development, due to the nature of
the ongoing negotiations I feel it is in the best interest of all parties
involved to withhold the name of this international firm at this time.
The upcoming meetings, demonstrations, and potential outcome(s) of it is
something that has been in the works since our founding and is now coming
to what looks to be an extraordinarily profitable culmination. I believe
their interest in us is due to the reality that we have a new consumer
product, a complete multitasking personal robot, the CareBot(TM). We are
now in the world’s first in home elder care robot trials.”

This retailer has operations in the US, Canada, and Mexico. They are a
multinational retailer of technology and entertainment products and
services. Their family of companies collectively generates more than $40
billion in annual revenue. Over 100,000 employees apply their talents to
help bring the benefits of their product and service offerings to retail
customers.

The scope of the US consumer market for truly utilitarian, cost effective
personal robots is enormous. In the January 2007 issue of “Scientific
American,” Bill Gates, co-founder and chairman of Microsoft, the world’s
largest software company, authored “A Robot in Every Home” with
discussions as to why he expects that reality sooner than later. There
are 110+ million homes in the US.

“We project the available market size in dollars for cost effective,
utilitarian, multitasking eldercare personal robots in 2011 to be $74.0B,
in 2012 to be $77B, in 2013 to be $80B, in 2014 to be $83.3B, and in 2015
to be $86.6B. With market penetrations of 0.03% in 2011, 0.06% in 2012,
0.22% in 2013, 0.53% in 2014, and 0.81% in 2015, we will anticipate
CareBot sales, from this consumer market segment, only, of $22.0M,
$44.0M, $176M, $440.2M, and $704.3M, respectively. We expect these sales
despite — and perhaps because of — the present recession due to pent up
demand for significant cost reduction in eldercare expenses. This augurs
well for our stockholders,” opined Spencer.

About GeckoSystems International Corporation:

Since 1997, GeckoSystems has developed a comprehensive, coherent, and
sufficient suite of hardware and software inventions to enable a new type
of home appliance (a personal robot) the CareBot(TM), to be created for
the mass consumer marketplace. The suite of primary inventions includes:
GeckoNav(TM), GeckoChat(TM) and GeckoTrak(TM).

The primary market for their first product, the CareBot, is the family
for use in eldercare, care for the chronically ill, and childcare. The
primary distribution channel for this new home appliance is the thousands
of independent personal computer and service oriented “big box” retailers
in the U.S. The manufacturing infrastructure for this new product
category of mobile service robots is essentially the same as the personal
computer industry. Several outside contract manufacturers have been
identified and qualified their ability to produce up to 1,000 CareBots
per month within four to six months.

The Company is market driven. At the time of founding, over twelve years
ago, the Company did extensive primary market research to determine the
demographic profile of the early adopters of the then proposed product
line. Subsequent to, and based on that original market research, they
have assembled numerous focus groups to evaluate the fit of the CareBot
personal robot into the participant’s lives and their expected usage. The
Company has also frequently employed the Delphi market research
methodology by contacting and interviewing senior executives,
practitioners, and researchers knowledgeable in the area of elder care.
Using this factual basis of internally performed primary and secondary
market research, and third party research is the statistical substance
for the Company’s sales forecasts.

Not surprisingly the scientific statistical analyses applied revealed
that elderly over sixty-five living alone in metropolitan areas with
broadband Internet available and sufficient household incomes to support
the increased costs were identified as those most likely to adopt
initially. Due to the high cost of assisted living, nursing homes, etc.
the payback for a CareBot(TM) is expected to be only six to eight months
while keeping elderly care receivers independent, in their own long time
homes, and living longer due to the comfort and safety of more frequent
attention from their loved ones.

The Company’s “mobile robot solutions for safety, security and
service(TM)” are appropriate not only for the consumer, but also
professional healthcare, commercial security and defense markets.
Professional healthcare require cost effective, timely errand running,
portable telemedicine, etc. Homeland Security requires cost effective
mobile robots to patrol and monitor public venues for weapons and WMD
detection. Military users desire the elimination of the “man in the loop”
to enable unmanned ground and air vehicles to not require constant human
control and/or intervention.

Perhaps doing the breakeven analysis for a nursing home or assisted care
facility would be insightful. Let’s assume, for the sake of this
illustration, that the CareBot only checks blood pressure and heart rate
for the designated care receivers for 7 days a week, 16 hours per day, or
448 hours per month, automatically with only intermittent direct human
management.

A fully burdened cost of ten dollars ($10.00) an hour would be slightly
over thirty-eight percent (38%) minimum wage pay. This infers a total
minimum cost for a cost benefit of $4,480.00 per month for 448 hours of
utility. So if the CareBotPro(TM), a larger and more robust version of
the CareBot, sold for as much as $42,500, the “payback” could be as quick
as ten months. Electricity for recharging would be a few dollars a month
and maintenance needs would be only three to four hours per month for the
first two to three years depending on how much physical distance the
mobile robot has traveled.

The Company’s business model is very much like that of an automobile
manufacturer. Due to the final assembly, test, and shipping being done
based on geographic and logistic realities; strategic
business-to-business relationships can range from private labeling to
joint manufacturing and distribution to licensing only.

Several dozen patent opportunities exist for the Company due to the many
innovative and cost effective breakthroughs embodied not only in
GeckoNav, GeckoChat, and GeckoTrak, but also in additional, secondary
systems that include: GeckoOrient(TM), GeckoMotorController(TM), the
GeckoTactileShroud(TM), the CompoundedSensorArray(TM), and the
GeckoSPIO(TM).

The present senior management at GeckoSystems has over thirty-five years
experience in consumer electronics sales and marketing and product
development. Senior managers have been identified for the areas of
manufacturing, marketing, sales, and finance.

While GeckoSystems has been in the Development Stage, the Company has
accumulated losses to date in excess of six million dollars. In contrast,
the Japanese government has spent one hundred million dollars in grants
(to Sanyo, Toshiba, Hitachi, Fujitsu, NEC, etc.) over the same time
period to develop personal robots for their eldercare crisis, yet no
viable solutions have been developed.

GeckoSystems is the first mobile robot developer in the world to begin
actual in-home eldercare evaluation trials.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Giver?

The short answer is that it decreases the difficulty and stress for the
caregiver that needs to watch over Grandma, Mom, or other family members
most, if not much, of the time day in and day out due to concerns about
their well being, safety, and security.

But, first let’s look at some other labor saving, automatic home
appliances most of us use routinely. For example, needing to do two or
more necessary chores and/or activities at the same time, like laundering
clothes and preparing supper.

The automatic washing machine needs no human intervention after the dirty
clothes are placed in the washer, the laundry powder poured in, and the
desired wash cycle set. Then, this labor saving appliance runs
automatically until the washed clothes are ready to be placed in another
labor saving home appliance, the automatic clothes dryer. While the
clothes are being washed and/or dried, the caregiver prepares supper
using several time saving home appliances like the microwave oven,
“crock” pot, blender, and conventional stove, with possible convection
oven capabilities.

After supper, the dirty pots, pans, and dishes are placed in the
automatic dishwasher to be washed and dried while the family retires to
the den to watch TV, and/or the kids to do homework. Later, perhaps after
the kids have gone to bed, the caregiver may then have the time to fold,
sort, and put up the now freshly laundered clothes.

So what does a CareBot do for the caregiver? It is a new type of labor
saving, time management automatic home appliance.

For example, the care giver frequently feels time stress when they need
to go shopping for 2 or 3 hours, and are uncomfortable when they have to
be away for more than an hour or so. Time stress is much worse for the
caregiver with a frail elderly parent that must be reminded to take
medications at certain times of the day. How can the caregiver be away
for 3-4 hours when Grandma must take her prescribed medication every 2 or
3 hours? If the caregiver is trapped in traffic for an hour or two beyond
the 2 or 3 they expected to be gone, this “time stress” can be very
difficult for the caregiver to moderate.

Not infrequently, the primary caregiver has a 24 hour, 7 days a week
responsibility. After weeks and weeks of this sometimes tedious, if not
onerous routine, how does the caregiver get a “day off?” To bring in an
outsider is expensive (easily $75-125 per day for just 8 hours) and there
is the concern that medication will be missed or the care receiver have
an accident requiring immediate assistance by the caregiver, or someone
they must designate. And the care receiver may be very resistant to a
“stranger” coming in to her home and “running things.”

So what is it worth for a care receiver to have an automatic system to
help take care of Grandma? Just 3 or 4 days a month “off” on a daylong
shopping trip, a visit with friends, or just take in a movie would cost
$225-500 per month. And that scenario assumes that Grandma is willing to
be taken care of by a “stranger” during those needed and appropriate days
off.

So perhaps, an automatic caregiver, a CareBot, might be pretty handy, and
potentially very cost effective from the primary caregiver’s perspective.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Receiver?

It’s a new kind of companion that always stays close to them enabling
family and friends to care for them from afar. It tells them jokes,
retells family anecdotes, reminds them to take medication, reminds them
that family is coming over soon (or not at all), recites Bible verses,
plays favorite songs and/or other music. It alerts them when unexpected
visitors, or intruders are present. It notifies designated caregivers
when a potentially harmful event has occurred, such as a fall, fire in
the home, or simply been not found by the CareBot for too long. It
responds to calls for help and notifies those that the caregiver
determined should be immediately notified when any predetermined adverse
event occurs.

The family can customize the personality of the CareBot. The voice’s
cadence can be fast or slow. The intonation can be breathy, or abrupt.
The voice’s volume can range from very loud to very soft. The response
phrases from the CareBot for recognized words and phrases can be
colloquial and/or unique to the family’s own heritage. The personality
can range from brassy to timid depending on how the care giver, and
others appropriate, chooses it to be.

Generally, the care receiver is pleased at the prospect of family being
able to drop in for a “virtual visit” using the onboard webcam and video
monitor for at home “video conferencing.” The care receiver may feel much
more needed and appreciated when their far flung family and friends can
“look in” on them anywhere in the world where they can get broadband
internet access and simply chat for a bit.

Why is Grandma really interested in a CareBot? She wants to stay in her
home, or her family’s home, as long as she possibly can. What’s that
worth? Priceless. Or, an average nursing home is $5,000 per month for an
environment that is too often the beginning of a spiral downward in the
care receiver’s health. That’s probably $2-3K more per month for them to
be placed where they really don’t want to be. Financial payback on a
CareBot? Less than a year- Emotional payback for the family to have this
new automatic care giver? Nearly instantaneous-

Safe Harbor:

Statements regarding financial matters in this press release other than
historical facts are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of
Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 21E of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, and as that term is defined in the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company intends that such
statements about the Company’s future expectations, including future
revenues and earnings, technology efficacy and all other forward-looking
statements be subject to the Safe Harbors created thereby. The Company is
a development stage firm that continues to be dependent upon outside
capital to sustain its existence. Since these statements (future
operational results and sales) involve risks and uncertainties and are
subject to change at any time, the Company’s actual results may differ
materially from expected results.

Contact:
www.GeckoSystems.com
or
Main number: 1-866-CAREBOT
International: +1 678-413-9236

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

GeckoSystems Discusses Commercial Market Size for Their Mobile Robot Solutions

CONYERS, GA, Apr 08 (MARKET WIRE) —
GeckoSystems Intl. Corp. (PINKSHEETS: GCKO)
(http://www.geckosystems.com/) — reported today that while they consider
the business-to-business (B2B) market place to be more risk averse than
the consumer, but despite that reality, their significant B2B markets
indicate that very low market penetrations are needed to achieve those
revenue forecasts. GeckoSystems is a dynamic leader in the emerging
mobile robotics industry revolutionizing their development and usage with
“Mobile Robot Solutions for Safety, Security and Service(TM).”

The US professional healthcare sector includes more than 820,000
hospitals, doctor offices, emergency care units, nursing homes, and
social services providers with combined annual revenue of more than $1
trillion. These major companies include Kaiser Permanente, HCA, and
Ascension Health. When it comes to developing devices to help doctors
monitor patients’ health remotely, we’re talking multibillion dollar
potential. This professional telehealth market is predicted to grow from
$3 billion in 2009 to $7.7 billion by 2012. And with the 65-and-older
demographic estimated to be more than 71 million people by 2030,
telehealth, especially cost effectiveness in the home, promises to be
huge.

The security systems services industry in the US includes about 5,000
companies with combined annual revenue of around $14 billion. Major
companies include ADT Security Services (owned by Tyco International),
Protection One, and Broadview Security (formerly Brink’s Home Security).

US homeland defense markets were at $441 million in 2007 and are
anticipated to reach $43.7 billion by 2014. Market growth will come from
the US government, domestic law enforcement agencies, fire departments,
and first responders implementing automated processes that support
existing manual processes.

These three B2B markets, in aggregate, constitute over $50 billion per
year in market size in the near term.

“For example, GeckoSystems expects to enjoy a 50% gross margin on
consumer sales. Since R&D expenses will be charged to B2C sales, it is
possible, if not probable, that B2B sales would enjoy an 80% gross
margin. B2B revenue streams would be relatively unburdened except for
direct costs for sales, marketing, support, and administration. So if we
hold total B2B revenues to only one half of that of B2C (for the first
three years) and 33% in years 4 and 5, those forecasts would be, from
these B2B market segments only: $11.0M, $22.0M, $88M, $146.7M, and
$234.7M, respectively.

“In this scenario, our net profit after taxes could climb from our
projected 20% to over 30%. These additional B2B revenues could push our
gross revenues to over $900 million annually by June 31, 2016. While we
are not relying heavily on B2B revenues, recently we have started
soliciting in those marketplaces at RoboticsTrends.com and have had some
notable inquiries.

“As one may realize, given the scope of these B2B and B2C markets, we
have factual basis for our belief that our numerous B2B opportunities, in
tandem with our B2C sales revenues, will further increase ROI for our
investors in GCKO stock,” opined Martin Spencer, President/CEO,
GeckoSystems.

Please note:

The foregoing discussion does not include any international revenues
whatsoever. For example, the Japanese Robot Association predicts that by
2025, the personal robot industry will be worth more than $50 billion a
year worldwide, compared with about $5 billion in 2007.

In the January 2007 issue of “Scientific American,” Bill Gates,
co-founder and chairman of Microsoft, the world’s largest software
company, authored “A Robot in Every Home” with discussions as to why he
expects that reality sooner than later. There are 110 million homes in
this US consumer market.

About Robotics Trends:

Robotics Trends, a division of EH Publishing, Inc., is the world’s first
integrated media firm serving the burgeoning personal, service and mobile
robotics marketplace. They produce the “Robotics Trends” portal
(http://www.roboticstrends.com), an online news, information and analysis
portal focused on business and technology trends for people who build,
buy, invest in, and seek to understand the personal, service, mobile and
military robotics market.

About GeckoSystems International Corporation:

Since 1997, GeckoSystems has developed a comprehensive, coherent, and
sufficient suite of hardware and software inventions to enable a new type
of home appliance (a personal robot) the CareBot(TM), to be created for
the mass consumer marketplace. The suite of primary inventions includes:
GeckoNav(TM), GeckoChat(TM) and GeckoTrak(TM).

Business-to-Business Discussion:

“For the past three months we have been using our suite of mobile robot
solutions in our first business-to-consumer (B2C) product, the
CareBot(TM), in our elder care robot trials. During this real world
testing we have gained sufficient confidence to offer these proprietary
solutions to those firms and/or individuals interested in manufacturing
and distributing into the various business-to-business (B2B) markets such
as professional healthcare, commercial security, public safety, and
government. Demonstrably GeckoSystems has viable, cost effective
solutions for not only software navigation, verbal interaction, and event
scheduling; but also multiple, low cost sensor fusion solutions and
differential drive locomotion management,” remarked Spencer.

GeckoNav(TM) is the GeckoSavant(TM) developed by GeckoSystems that
enables their mobile robots to express reliable automatic self-navigation
and avoid unforeseen obstacles whether static and/or dynamic while
ambulating. This is achieved using a low clock, low power x86 CPU.
Sometimes this level of autonomy is referred to as “loose crowd capable”
due to its fully autonomous (hands off) ability to automatically path
find through a loose crowd of moving people.

Another GeckoSavant, GeckoChat(TM), uses voice recognition/synthesis and
a forward chaining expert system to enable verbal interaction and/or
command and control of the CareBot. GeckoScheduler(TM) is a date and time
aware database manager that provides the CareBot with event timing for
verbal reminders, errand running, patrolling, tracking, etc. Common sense
management and coordination between all GeckoSavants is accomplished
using the GeckoSuper(TM).

GeckoOrient(TM) fuses sensor data from three disparate orientation
subsystems to achieve better absolute accuracy than any single
orientation subsystem, without accumulative error, but at lower cost than
a single high accuracy device.

GeckoSystems’ CompoundedSensorArray(TM) displaces expensive and slow
machine vision solutions with sufficient situation awareness of the
environment to enable GeckoNav to avoid even unexpected obstacles while
patrolling, following, or errand running.

The GeckoSPIO(TM) is their robot controller board that orchestrates,
collects and disseminates hundreds of sensor data inputs per second.
Additionally it enables management of the locomotion system in near real
time using the GeckoMotorController(TM) which not only minimizes power
consumption by careful, adaptive management of the acceleration and
de-acceleration of the locomotion motors’ speeds, but also enables
differential drives to travel in a straight line when requested to do so.

The primary market for their first product is the family for use in
eldercare, care for the chronically ill, and childcare. The primary
distribution channel for this new home appliance is the thousands of
independent personal computer retailers in the U.S. The manufacturing
infrastructure for this new product category of mobile service robots is
essentially the same as the personal computer industry. Several outside
contract manufacturers have been identified and qualified their ability
to produce up to 1,000 CareBots per month within four to six months.

The Company is market driven. At the time of founding, over twelve years
ago, the Company did extensive primary market research to determine the
demographic profile of the early adopters of the then proposed product
line. Subsequent to, and based on that original market research, they
have assembled numerous focus groups to evaluate the fit of the CareBot
personal robot into the participant’s lives and their expected usage. The
Company has also frequently employed the Delphi market research
methodology by contacting and interviewing senior executives,
practitioners, and researchers knowledgeable in the area of elder care.
Using this factual basis of internally performed primary and secondary
market research, and third party research is the statistical substance
for the Company’s sales forecasts.

Not surprisingly the scientific statistical analyses applied revealed
that elderly over sixty-five living alone in metropolitan areas with
broadband Internet available and sufficient household incomes to support
the increased costs were identified as those most likely to adopt
initially. Due to the high cost of assisted living, nursing homes, etc.
the payback for a CareBot(TM) is expected to be only six to eight months
while keeping elderly care receivers independent, in their own long time
homes, and living longer due to the comfort and safety of more frequent
attention from their loved ones.

“We project the available market size in dollars for cost effective,
utilitarian, multitasking eldercare personal robots in 2011 to be $74.0B,
in 2012 to be $77B, in 2013 to be $80B, in 2014 to be $83.3B, and in 2015
to be $86.6B. With market penetrations of 0.03% in 2011, 0.06% in 2012,
0.22% in 2013, 0.53% in 2014, and 0.81% in 2015, we will anticipate
CareBot sales, from this consumer market segment, only, of $22.0M,
$44.0M, $176M, $440.2M, and $704.3M, respectively. We expect these sales
despite –and perhaps because of– the present recession due to pent up
demand for significant cost reduction in eldercare expenses,” opined
Spencer.

The foregoing forecasts do not include sales in non-metropolitan areas;
elderly couples over 65 (only elderly living alone are in these
forecasts); those chronically ill –regardless of age– or elderly living
with their adult children.

The Company’s “mobile robot solutions for safety, security and
service(TM)” are appropriate not only for the consumer, but also
professional healthcare, commercial security and defense markets.
Professional healthcare require cost effective, timely errand running,
portable telemedicine, etc. Homeland Security requires cost effective
mobile robots to patrol and monitor public venues for weapons and WMD
detection. Military users desire the elimination of the “man in the loop”
to enable unmanned ground and air vehicles to not require constant human
control and/or intervention.

Perhaps doing the breakeven analysis for a nursing home or assisted care
facility would be insightful. Let’s assume, for the sake of this
illustration, that the CareBot only checks blood pressure and heart rate
for the designated care receivers for 7 days a week, 16 hours per day, or
448 hours per month, automatically with only intermittent direct human
management.

A fully burdened cost of ten dollars ($10.00) an hour would be slightly
over thirty-eight percent (38%) minimum wage pay. This infers a total
minimum cost for a cost benefit of $4,480.00 per month for 448 hours of
utility. So if the CareBotPro(TM), a larger and more robust version of
the CareBot, sold for as much as $42,500, the “payback” could be as quick
as ten months. Electricity for recharging would be a few dollars a month
and maintenance needs would be only three to four hours per month for the
first two to three years depending on how much physical distance the
mobile robot has traveled.

The Company’s business model is very much like that of an automobile
manufacturer. Due to the final assembly, test, and shipping being done
based on geographic and logistic realities; strategic
business-to-business relationships can range from private labeling to
joint manufacturing and distribution to licensing only.

Several dozen patent opportunities exist for the Company due to the many
innovative and cost effective breakthroughs embodied not only in
GeckoNav, GeckoChat, and GeckoTrak, but also in additional, secondary
systems that include: GeckoOrient(TM), GeckoMotorController(TM), the
GeckoTactileShroud(TM), the CompoundedSensorArray(TM), and the
GeckoSPIO(TM).

The present senior management at GeckoSystems has over thirty-five years
experience in consumer electronics sales and marketing and product
development. Senior managers have been identified for the areas of
manufacturing, marketing, sales, and finance.

While GeckoSystems has been in the Development Stage, the Company has
accumulated losses to date in excess of six million dollars. In contrast,
the Japanese government has spent one hundred million dollars in grants
(to Sanyo, Toshiba, Hitachi, Fujitsu, NEC, etc.) over the same time
period to develop personal robots for their eldercare crisis, yet no
viable solutions have been developed.

GeckoSystems is the first mobile robot developer in the world to begin
actual in-home eldercare evaluation trials.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Giver?

The short answer is that it decreases the difficulty and stress for the
caregiver that needs to watch over Grandma, Mom, or other family members
most, if not much, of the time day in and day out due to concerns about
their well being, safety, and security.

But, first let’s look at some other labor saving, automatic home
appliances most of us use routinely. For example, needing to do two or
more necessary chores and/or activities at the same time, like laundering
clothes and preparing supper.

The automatic washing machine needs no human intervention after the dirty
clothes are placed in the washer, the laundry powder poured in, and the
desired wash cycle set. Then, this labor saving appliance runs
automatically until the washed clothes are ready to be placed in another
labor saving home appliance, the automatic clothes dryer. While the
clothes are being washed and/or dried, the caregiver prepares supper
using several time saving home appliances like the microwave oven,
“crock” pot, blender, and conventional stove, with possible convection
oven capabilities.

After supper, the dirty pots, pans, and dishes are placed in the
automatic dishwasher to be washed and dried while the family retires to
the den to watch TV, and/or the kids to do homework. Later, perhaps after
the kids have gone to bed, the caregiver may then have the time to fold,
sort, and put up the now freshly laundered clothes.

So what does a CareBot do for the caregiver? It is a new type of labor
saving, time management automatic home appliance.

For example, the care giver frequently feels time stress when they need
to go shopping for 2 or 3 hours, and are uncomfortable when they have to
be away for more than an hour or so. Time stress is much worse for the
caregiver with a frail elderly parent that must be reminded to take
medications at certain times of the day. How can the caregiver be away
for 3-4 hours when Grandma must take her prescribed medication every 2 or
3 hours? If the caregiver is trapped in traffic for an hour or two beyond
the 2 or 3 they expected to be gone, this “time stress” can be very
difficult for the caregiver to moderate.

Not infrequently, the primary caregiver has a 24 hour, 7 days a week
responsibility. After weeks and weeks of this sometimes tedious, if not
onerous routine, how does the caregiver get a “day off?” To bring in an
outsider is expensive (easily $75-125 per day for just 8 hours) and there
is the concern that medication will be missed or the care receiver have
an accident requiring immediate assistance by the caregiver, or someone
they must designate. And the care receiver may be very resistant to a
“stranger” coming in to her home and “running things.”

So what is it worth for a care receiver to have an automatic system to
help take care of Grandma? Just 3 or 4 days a month “off” on a daylong
shopping trip, a visit with friends, or just take in a movie would cost
$225-500 per month. And that scenario assumes that Grandma is willing to
be taken care of by a “stranger” during those needed and appropriate days
off.

So perhaps, an automatic caregiver, a CareBot, might be pretty handy, and
potentially very cost effective from the primary caregiver’s perspective.

What Does a CareBot Do for the Care Receiver?

It’s a new kind of companion that always stays close to them enabling
family and friends to care for them from afar. It tells them jokes,
retells family anecdotes, reminds them to take medication, reminds them
that family is coming over soon (or not at all), recites Bible verses,
plays favorite songs and/or other music. It alerts them when unexpected
visitors, or intruders are present. It notifies designated caregivers
when a potentially harmful event has occurred, such as a fall, fire in
the home, or simply been not found by the CareBot for too long. It
responds to calls for help and notifies those that the caregiver
determined should be immediately notified when any predetermined adverse
event occurs.

The family can customize the personality of the CareBot. The voice’s
cadence can be fast or slow. The intonation can be breathy, or abrupt.
The voice’s volume can range from very loud to very soft. The response
phrases from the CareBot for recognized words and phrases can be
colloquial and/or unique to the family’s own heritage. The personality
can range from brassy to timid depending on how the care giver, and
others appropriate, chooses it to be.

Generally, the care receiver is pleased at the prospect of family being
able to drop in for a “virtual visit” using the onboard webcam and video
monitor for at home “video conferencing.” The care receiver may feel much
more needed and appreciated when their far flung family and friends can
“look in” on them any where in the world where they can get broadband
internet access and simply chat for a bit.

Why is Grandma really interested in a CareBot? She wants to stay in her
home, or her family’s home, as long as she possibly can. What’s that
worth? Priceless. Or, an average nursing home is $5,000 per month for an
environment that is too often the beginning of a spiral downward in the
care receiver’s health. That’s probably $2-3K more per month for them to
be placed where they really don’t want to be. Financial payback on a
CareBot? Less than a year- Emotional payback for the family to have this
new automatic care giver? Nearly instantaneous-

Safe Harbor:

Statements regarding financial matters in this press release other than
historical facts are “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of
Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 21E of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, and as that term is defined in the Private
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The Company intends that such
statements about the Company’s future expectations, including future
revenues and earnings, technology efficacy and all other forward-looking
statements be subject to the Safe Harbors created thereby. The Company is
a development stage firm that continues to be dependent upon outside
capital to sustain its existence. Since these statements (future
operational results and sales) involve risks and uncertainties and are
subject to change at any time, the Company’s actual results may differ
materially from expected results.

Contact:
www.GeckoSystems.com
or
Main number: 1-866-CAREBOT
International: +1 678-413-9236

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