People love comparing Poet with stocks that go on runs like Keek. The big difference of course is that Keek has only 46 million shares outstanding, and just under half of that is held by the CEO. That's called having skin in the game. Keek's CEO has a highly vested direct financial interest in not diluting his fellow shareholders into the ground. And yeah he has sweat equity too, but he put his serious money where his mouth is.
Runs like Keek happen with small tighly held floats. And of course it's a cloud-based software social media play, a lot easier and cheaper to build than hardware production.
With Poet's constant dilution, the only way we get a run like Keek is serious sales of Poet (not DL) products, which of course we don't even have any yet.