UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549

                                   FORM 10-SB

                   GENERAL FORM FOR REGISTRATION OF SECURITIES
                            OF SMALL BUSINESS ISSUERS
        UNDER SECTION 12(b) OR (g) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934


                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                 (Name of small business issuer in its charter)

                DELAWARE                               20-1680252
    (State or other jurisdiction of        (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.)
     incorporation or organization)

                 530 WILSHIRE BLVD, #304 SANTA MONICA, CA 90401
               (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)

                     Issuer's telephone number: 310-451-7400

        Securities to be registered under Section 12(b) of the Act: NONE

           Securities to be registered under Section 12(g) of the Act:

                         COMMON STOCK, $0.001 PAR VALUE
                                (Title of class)






                                     PART I

ITEM 1.  DESCRIPTION OF BUSINESS.

INTRODUCTION

         HEARTSTAT  TECHNOLOGY,  Inc.,  ("HEARTSTAT"  or  the  "Company")  is  a
Delaware corporation originally incorporated on October 12, 1995, under the name
of "Hospital  Software of America,  Inc." The Company has undergone name changes
that are described in the history of the company below. Most recently  HEARTSTAT
was renamed from Tec Factory,  Inc.  pursuant to a March,  18, 2004 agreement by
which the  technology  assets of  HEARTSTAT,  INC. WERE ACQUIRED BY TEC FACTORY,
INC. Unless otherwise  specified,  the "Company",  "HEARTSTAT",  "we", "our" and
"us" refer to HEARTSTAT  TECHNOLOGY  INC. Our  principal  executive  offices are
located  at 530  Wilshire  Blvd,  Suite  304,  Santa  Monica,  CA 90401  and our
telephone number is 310-451-7400.

HISTORY OF THE COMPANY

         HEARTSTAT Technology,  Inc. was originally  incorporated on October 12,
1995, as Hospital  Software of America,  Inc. On November 29, 1995,  the Company
changed  its  name to "New  Health  Technologies,  Inc.,  and at the  same  time
effected at 10,000 to 1 reverse  stock split,  reducing the  outstanding  shares
from 300,000,000 to 30,000.

         On August 28, 1996, the Company  changed its name to "Pubbs  Worldwide,
Inc. and at the same time, effected a 35 to 1 reverse stock split,  reducing the
number of issued and outstanding shares from 14,000,000 to 400,000.  The Company
changed  its name to Pubbs  Worldwide,  Inc.  in order  to  better  reflect  its
acquisition of Hubbs  Development,  Inc., which was in the business of operating
restaurants and retail sales of food, beer, wine and beverages.

         On  April  5,  1999,   the  Company   changed  its  name  to  "Chasen's
International  Corporation".  The name change was affected in  anticipation of a
share exchange agreement between the Company and a group of shareholders,  which
owned a controlling  interest in Chasen's  Restaurant and Jockey Club in Beverly
Hills, California.  Management of the Company believed that changing the name of
the  Company to Chasen's  International  Corporation  would  provide the Company
instant name recognition. The Company affected a stock split of 100 to 1 at this
time.

         On  July  6,  1999,   the  Company   changed  it   corporate   name  to
"Tril-MediaNet.com"   after  the  anticipated   share  exchange   agreement  and
acquisition of Chasen's did not  materialize.  It was believed that the new name
would allow the Company to better continue its software business development and
technology  operations  and avoid any conflict with the trademarks and ownership
of the name Chasen's.

         On November 21, 2000, the Company changed its name to Tec Factory, Inc.
and was planning to purchase Tec Factory  Fort  Lauderdale,  LLC and Tec Factory
Los  Angeles,  LLC from Web Capital  Ventures,  Inc.  This  transaction  was not
concluded.  The Company had  negligible  operations  between  November  2000 and
February 6, 2004.

         On February 6, 2006 the Company  concluded an agreement to purchase the
technology  assets of  HEARTSTAT,  INC.  AND on  February  17,  2004 the Company
amended its corporate  name to HEARTSTAT  Technology,  Inc. in  anticipation  of
closing and  Agreement  for the Purchase of Assets based on the February 6, 2004
agreement.

         On March 18, 2004, the Company concluded a preliminary February 6, 2004
agreement  to  purchase  the  technology  referred  to herein as the  "HEARTSTAT
Technology".  The HEARTSTAT  Technology consists of patents and technology for a
non-invasive  monitoring of blood flow,  perfusion and other  cardiovascular and
heart measures. (See description of HEARTSTAT Technology below.)

                                       2



         There were no stock splits or other  changes to the Company  securities
effected  at the time of this  name  change  and  subsequent  Agreement  for the
Purchase of Assets.

         The  Company's  common  stock  is  currently  quoted  on  the  National
Association  of  Securities  Dealers'  Over the Counter Pink Sheets and has been
trading under the current symbol "HSTA"  effective  March 1, 2004. From November
28, 2000 the stock previously  traded under the symbols "TECF".  From August 10,
1999 till November 27, 2000 the stock traded under the symbol "TMDN".  From June
4,  1999  till  August 9, 1999 the stock  traded  under the  symbol  "CIIT"  and
previously from June 9, 1998 the stock traded under the symbol "HUBS".

         The  Agreement  for the  Purchase  of Assets,  dated  February  6, 2004
provided  for  the  issuance  of  38,000,000  shares  of  common  stock  and the
assumption of $370,000 of debt plus two royalty  agreements as consideration for
the purchase for a 100%  ownership of the HEARTSTAT  Technology.  At February 6,
2004, the Company's  board of directors and  shareholders  approved the terms of
the HeartSTAT Agreement for the Purchase of Assets. This agreement was accounted
for as an arms length transaction.

         The Company has also agreed with  Interest  Holders that they would not
have the  ability  to sell any of their  stock  under rule 144 or 144K until the
company delivers its first revenue to market.

         As per  the  terms  of  Asset  Acquisition  Agreement  there  were  two
royalties payable by the Company to SolutionMED  Ventures of 1.2% and CNPB, Inc.
(owned by the  inventor,  Ted  Russell  and his  spouse) of 2.2% on all  product
revenues  related to  HEARTSTAT  Technology.  Complete  royalty  agreements  are
attached hereto as an exhibit to the Agreement for the Purchase of Assets.

         Pursuant to the Asset Acquisition Agreement the Company agreed with the
interest holders that Ted W. Russell could exclusively license in perpetuity the
HEARTSTAT  Technology  for the  purpose  of  financing  and  concluding  product
commercialization activities if the Company (HEARTSTAT Technology, Inc.) were to
fail to raise at least  $2,500,000  of net proceeds for product  development  by
September 6, 2005 with an allowance that the Company has a 90-day period to cure
the financing  inadequacy to prevent the license from being effected.  The terms
of the license would include a provision  that Mr.  Russell,  or an  independent
entity will repay the Company for any actual investment  capital received at the
rate of 20% of any net income of Mr. Russell's independent commercial operations
of producing  derivative products using the HEARTSTAT  Technology.  In addition,
the Company would receive a royalty on net revenues of such derivative  products
as follows:

         1.   A royalty  equal to  3% of net revenues if at lest $1.3 million of
              investment capital was received
         2.   A royalty equal to 2% of net  revenues  if at least  $650,000  but
              less than $1.3 million of investment capital was received, or
         3.   A  royalty  equal to 1% of net  revenues if less than  $650,000 of
              investment capital was received.

         * Exhibit B disclosing  all terms and  conditions to of this  exclusive
license is attached to the Agreement for the Purchase of Assets.


THE COMPANY


         Commencing  March  18,  2004  HEARTSTAT  Technology,  Inc.  intends  to
complete development of and initiate manufacture and marketing of a product line
of hospital  devices for  monitoring  patient blood flow,  perfusion,  and other
cardiovascular  and heart  values.  Our  system is  completely  noninvasive  and
operates  continuously  on a heart  beat-by-beat  basis.  It works with a simple
disposable  single-patient-use  sensor that has several  advantages  for patient
safety. The system also monitors the patient's blood pressure (BP).

                                       3



         Along with its cardiovascular  measurement advancements,  our system is
uniquely "patient practical".  Instead of patient  complications that are caused
by present invasive and noninvasive  pump-up monitoring devices, we believe ours
is the only known comfortable monitor system.  These advantages and the system's
simplicity were created for providing unrestricted preventive monitoring for all
categories of patients.  Moreover,  the disposable patient sensor was created to
also reduce  hospital  sepsis,  a significant  problem of reused blood  pressure
cuffs in hospital care.

         Our mission involves well over a decade of product development that was
funded with  substantial  investment.  It started with a predecessor  continuous
noninvasive  blood pressure  (CNBP) monitor  product system that was invented by
our CEO;  cleared for marketing by the FDA in 1986:  and test marketed  (several
hundred  units,  by hospital  users) in the early  1990s;  which we believe this
confirmed  the  system's   practicality  and  acceptability  for  critical  care
monitoring.  Rather than proceed with marketing of that blood pressure  product,
our CEO  determined  that much greater need and market  opportunity  existed for
blood flow and  perfusion  monitoring,  whereupon  he  initiated a research  and
product development program, based in part on using as the sensing "platform" of
that CNBP system, that led to his inventing our present technology,  pursuant to
which he has performed and arranged  independent  assessment and has applied for
several patents that are pending.

         Please  read  the  information  under  the  heading  "FORWARD-  LOOKING
STATEMENTS AND ASSOCIATED  RISKS" below,  which  describes and refers to some of
the important risks and uncertainties.


FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS AND ASSOCIATED RISKS

         Some of the statements in this report or  incorporated by reference are
forward-looking, including, without limitation, the statements under the caption
"Management's  Discussion  and Analysis or Plan of  Operation".  Forward-looking
statements  include  those that  contain  words  like  "may,"  "will,"  "could,"
"should,"  "project,"  "believe,"  "anticipate,"  "expect," "plan,"  "estimate,"
"forecast,"  "potential,"  "intend,"  "maintain,"  "continue"  and variations of
these  words  or  comparable  words.  In  addition,  all of  the  non-historical
information  herein is  forward-looking,  including any statement or implication
about a future time, result or other  circumstance.  Forward-looking  statements
are not a guarantee of future  performance and involve risks and  uncertainties.
Actual   results   may  differ   substantially   from  the   results   that  the
forward-looking  statements suggest for various reasons.  These  forward-looking
statements  are made only as of the date of this report.  We do not undertake to
update or revise  the  forward-looking  statements,  whether  as a result of new
information, future events or otherwise.

         The  forward-looking  statements  included  herein are based on,  among
other items, assumptions that we will be able to meet our operating cash and any
debt service requirements, that we will be able to successfully resolve disputes
and other business matters as anticipated,  that  competitive and  technological
conditions  within the medical device and electronic  component  industries will
not affect us materially or adversely,  that we will retain key personnel,  that
our forecasts will  reasonably  anticipate  market demand for our products,  and
that there will be no significant unanticipated cost increases or other material
adverse change in our operations or business. Among the factors that could cause
actual results to differ materially are the following:

    o    the  effect  of  the  dramatic  changes taking  place in the healthcare
         environment;

    o    the impact of competitive procedures and products and their pricing;

    o    unforeseen difficulties and delays in the conduct of  clinical  trials,
         regulatory approvals for marketing and product development programs;

    o    medical  insurance  reimbursement  policies  and  actions of regulatory
         authorities and third-party payers in the United States and overseas;

    o    uncertainties about  the  acceptance of a novel therapeutic modality by
         the medical community;

    o    potential effects of inflation;


                                       4



    o    lack of earnings visibility;

    o    dependence upon certain customers or markets;

    o    dependence upon suppliers;

    o    unforeseen manufacturing problems;

    o    difficulties  in integrating any acquired businesses and realizing cost
         savings or productivity gains;

    o    dependence on key personnel;

    o    difficulties  regarding  hiring and  retaining qualified personnel in a
         competitive labor market; and

    o    Risks of doing business in international markets.

         Other factors that could cause results to vary  materially from current
expectations are referred to elsewhere in this report.

         Assumptions   regarding  the  foregoing   involve  judgments  that  are
difficult  to make and  future  circumstances  that  are  difficult  to  predict
correctly.  Forecasting  and other  management  decisions are subjective in many
respects and thus susceptible to interpretations and periodic revisions based on
actual experience and business developments, the impact of which may cause us to
alter our  internal  forecasts,  and which may in turn  affect  expectations  or
future  results.  We do not undertake to announce  publicly the changes that may
occur in our expectations.  Readers are cautioned against giving undue weight to
any  of  the  forward-looking   statements.  The  inclusion  of  forward-looking
information should not be regarded as a representation by us or any other person
that our  objectives  or plans will be achieved.  We are setting out some of the
more specific risk factors below in full for the convenience of the readers:

WE REQUIRE SUBSTANTIAL FUNDING.
    Our funding  requirements are significant and may exceed the proceeds of any
    new financing.  Unless we obtain sufficient funds,  either as a result of an
    offering of our securities or pursuant to a strategic alliance or license or
    sale of our  proposed  products or  technology,  we may fail in our business
    mission  and cease to  operate.  The  principal  cash  requirements  are for
    compensating our engineering and other technical  employees and consultants,
    equipment, working capital, and other expenses:
        o    Compensation to executive officers;
        o    Expenses relating to the product development of our system;
        o    Expenses relating  to  clinical testing  and our  submission to the
             FDA; 
        o    Patent   expenses  for   protecting  our  technology  in   multiple
             countries;  
        o    Expenses relating to the start of production and marketing; and
        o    General  and  administrative  expenses  relating  to  the   general
             operation of our business.


WE  HAVE NOT COMPLETELY  DEVELOPED OUR MONITORING  SYSTEM AND MAY NEVER COMPLETE
OUR  DEVELOPMENT  EFFORT OR  INTRODUCE  A  PRODUCT.  
    We  are  engaged  in the  development  of  products  using  our  hemodynamic
    monitoring  system that is based on what we believe is a new technology that
    we  invented.  We have  two  product  monitoring  models  that  use the same
    physical system under  development.  Our failure to commercialize  either or
    both product models, or any future models, or the lack of acceptance thereof
    by clinical  users could have a material  adverse  effect upon our business,
    financial condition and prospects.

    We cannot  predict  with any  certainty  the  amount  of money  that will be
    required for this development effort due to possible unforeseen  technologic
    complexities.  We may not have  anticipated  the  capital  requirements  for
    developing our system and products.  If we do not find raise adequate funds,
    we may have to  discontinue  our  development  efforts.  Even with  adequate
    funds,  we cannot  assure you that we will be able to  develop a  functional
    product.


                                       5


HOSPITALS AND THE MEDICAL PROFESSION MAY NOT ACCEPT OUR MONITORING SYSTEM.
    Hospitals  and the medical  profession  in general,  which  constitutes  the
    potential market for our product system, may never accept our products for a
    number of reasons, including:
        o    Reluctance or failure to accept the principles of our technology as
             valid;
        o    Reluctance  to  purchase  equipment with new technology that is not
             widely used  in other hospitals because of concerns about potential
             adverse consequences;
        o    Reluctance  to  purchase  equipment  from  a new,  undercapitalized
             company,  regardless  of the  validity of theoretical basis for the
             monitoring system; and
        o    Insufficient confidence in our ability to provide ongoing service.

WE HAVE NOT GENERATED ANY REVENUE  SINCE OUR  ORGANIZATION,  AND OUR INDEPENDENT
ACCOUNTANTS  HAVE  INCLUDED  AN  EXPLANATORY  PARAGRAPH  IN  THEIR REPORT ON OUR
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS.
    The  HEARTSTAT  system has not produced any revenue to date and our research
    and development efforts have been limited in 2004 while we have been raising
    final  funding and  completing  this merger  transaction.  The report of our
    independent  accountants includes an explanatory  paragraph stating that our
    continuing losses and accumulated  deficit raise substantial doubt as to our
    ability to continue as a going concern. We do not expect to generate revenue
    prior to obtaining  our final FDA  clearance.  We cannot  assure you that we
    will ever receive FDA approval or generate revenue.

WE MAY BE DEPENDENT UPON DEVELOPING RELATIONSHIPS WITH  STRATEGIC PARTNERS,  AND
CANNOT  ASSURE  YOU  WE   WILL  DERIVE  ANY  ANTICIPATED  BENEFITS  FROM  SUCH A
RELATIONSHIP.
    For market  acceptance of our new system,  we may  establish a  relationship
    with a company that  manufactures or markets medical  devices.  However,  we
    cannot give any assurance we will be able to enter into  agreements with one
    or more of such strategic partners. If we do not enter into such agreements,
    our cash resources may be inadequate and result in either an acceleration of
    our need for additional funding or a need to reduce our operations. Also, we
    would be dependent upon the ability and willingness of the strategic partner
    to perform its obligations under the agreement in a timely manner. We cannot
    predict the amount and timing of resources  that any  strategic  partner may
    devote to our  products;  this may be  affected  by  factors  not within our
    control. These factors include:

        o    A change in management or direction by the strategic partner;
        o    The introduction or development by the strategic  partner or one of
             its affiliates of products that may compete with our products; and
        o    The  strategic   partner's  ongoing   perception  of   the   market
             acceptability of our products, the fit of our  products within  the
             partner's product line and our patent protection.

    If any future  strategic  partner were to breach or terminate  its agreement
    with us or not perform its  obligations in the manner  contemplated by us or
    otherwise fails to conduct its collaborative  activities with us in a timely
    manner,  the   commercialization   of  our  products  could  be  delayed  or
    terminated.  Any such delay or  termination  could  have a material  adverse
    effect upon our business.

    If we enter into agreements with one or more strategic  partners,  conflicts
    of interest could arise between us and one or more strategic partners which,
    depending  upon the nature of the  conflict,  could have a material  adverse
    effect  upon  our  business,  prospects  and  financial  condition.  We must
    anticipate  that any of our strategic  partners may have other  interests in
    related  fields.  Our strategic  partners or their  affiliates  may develop,
    either  alone or with  others,  products in this field or in related  fields
    that are competitive or have  applications  which are competitive with those
    of our hemodynamic  monitoring  system.  The competing products could affect
    the  support  provided to our  products  and may result in a  withdrawal  of
    support for our products which could have a material adverse effect upon our
    business, prospects and financial condition.

WE  PRESENTLY  HAVE NO  MARKETING CAPABILITY, AND MAY HAVE TO RELY ON OTHERS FOR
THIS.
    If we develop and obtain FDA marketing  approval for our monitoring  system,
    we must  develop a marketing  capability.  We  presently  have no  marketing
    employees, and the proceeds from a future 


                                       6



    financing may not be sufficient to develop a satisfactory marketing program.
    An intensive  marketing  program must be implemented in order to educate the
    medical profession as to both our technology and our product system. In this
    connection,  we must  demonstrate to the medical  profession that our system
    will monitor  blood  pressure and flow  parameters at least as accurately as
    other  methods and will provide  other  clinical  advantages  not  currently
    available.  We  cannot  assure  you  that we  will  be  able  to  make  such
    demonstration.

WE  HAVE  NO MANUFACTURING CAPABILITY AND WILL RELY ON OTHERS TO PRODUCE PRODUCT
COMPONENTS.
    We as yet have no  manufacturing  facilities and we anticipate that, when we
    develop  our product  monitoring  system,  our  production  will  consist of
    assembly,  testing  and  quality  operations,  and will rely on vendors  and
    subcontractors  to provide  components  that we will use in  assembling  our
    products.  We cannot assure you that we will be able to produce nor have our
    products manufactured.

WE MUST COMMIT RESOURCES TO PRODUCTION PRIOR TO RECEIPT OF PURCHASE  COMMITMENTS
AND COULD LOSE SOME OR ALL OF THE ASSOCIATED INVESTMENT.
    Our product sales may  primarily be pursuant to purchase  orders for current
    delivery,  rather than pursuant to long-term supply contracts.  As a result,
    we must commit  resources  to the  production  of products  without  advance
    purchase  commitments  from customers.  Our inability to sell products could
    have a  material  adverse  effect on our  financial  condition,  results  of
    operations and cash flows.

WE  ARE  SUBJECT TO  GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS AND  HAVE NO ASSURANCE OF REGULATORY
APPROVAL.
    Medical  devices  are  subject  to  extensive   regulation  by  the  Federal
    government,  principally  the FDA,  as well as  regulatory  bodies  in other
    countries,   including  the  European  Community's  International  Standards
    Association.  We cannot  market  any  product in the  United  States  unless
    marketing is cleared by the FDA. The marketing of products which receive FDA
    clearance to market may be suspended,  and recall of products may be ordered
    if the FDA determines that we are not complying with  applicable  regulatory
    or  performance  standards.  We cannot  assure you that we will  receive any
    required  FDA or other  regulatory  approval.  The  failure  to  obtain  FDA
    approval  could result in a  termination  of our business.  Furthermore,  if
    additional  clinical testing is required,  we may not have adequate funds to
    have such tests performed.

    We also must  comply with the  manufacturing  quality  requirements  of FDA,
    whereby  quality  assurance  procedures are confirmed with FDA  inspections.
    Although FDA is known to provide  reasonable  opportunity for other firms to
    correct deficiencies relating to non-life-support  products like ours, there
    can be no  assurance  that the  manufacturing  of our products in the United
    States would be prohibited until any deficiencies were corrected.

    We are also  governed  by other  Federal,  state and local  laws of  general
    applicability.  These laws include, but are not limited to, those regulating
    conditions enforced by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and
    other  environmental  laws  enforced  by  the  United  States  Environmental
    Protection Agency. Various states and countries have comparable laws.

WITHOUT  INSURER  APPROVAL  FOR  REIMBURSEMENT  FOR  NON-HOSPITAL  USES  OF  OUR
PRODUCTS, PHYSICIANS  MAY BE RELUCTANT TO PURCHASE OUR SYSTEM.  
    Although  specific  reimbursement  approval is not known to be necessary for
    our  principal  hospital  market,  our  ability  to market our  products  in
    non-hospital markets may depend on our obtaining reimbursement approval from
    insurance  companies,  Medicare  and Medicaid  for use of our  products.  We
    cannot assure you that such reimbursement will be available.

BECAUSE  WE  ARE A  SMALL COMPANY  IN A  FIELD DOMINATED BY LARGE  INTERNATIONAL
MEDICAL PRODUCT  COMPANIES,  WE MAY NOT BE ABLE TO COMPETE  WITH THESE COMPANIES
EVEN IF WE ARE SUCCESSFUL IN DEVELOPING OUR PRODUCTS.
    The market for  hospital  patient  monitoring  devices is dominated by major
    international  companies like Philips  Medical,  General  Electric  Medical,
    Baxter (Edwards Life Sciences), Siemens, Tyco (Mallincrodt/Nellcor),  Abbott
    Laboratories,   Datascope,   and  Nihon  Kohden.   These  companies   supply


                                       7


    conventional   blood  pressure  and  pulse  oximeter  devices  and  sensors,
    multi-parameter  monitor  systems and  cardiac  output  computers  and heart
    catheterization  components.  In addition, small companies existing (MedWave
    and Tensys Medical) market continuous  noninvasive blood pressure  monitors.
    The large  companies  have the  financial  resources,  product  recognition,
    advertising  budgets,   distribution  arrangements  and  relationships  with
    hospitals that could prevent us from developing any meaningful  market share
    regardless of the capabilities of our products. They also have the financial
    ability to develop new competitive  products to respond  aggressively to any
    market success we may realize. As a result, we cannot assure that we will be
    able to compete  successfully  with these dominant  companies or develop any
    significant market share.

WE MAY NOT BE ABLE TO PROTECT OUR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS.
    We have applied for patents but have not perfected patent protection for our
    technology.  We cannot  assure you that any patents  will be granted or that
    any  patents  that are granted  will  adequately  protect  our  intellectual
    property  rights.  If we are  granted  patents,  they may not be  upheld  if
    challenged.  Any challenge to the validity of our patent rights,  regardless
    of whether we ultimately prevail, could be expensive and could require us to
    expend  significant  resources in any such litigation,  without assurance of
    success.  Litigation may be necessary to determine the scope and validity of
    our proprietary  rights. In instances in which we hold any patents or patent
    licenses,  any  patents  held  by  us  may  be  challenged,  invalidated  or
    circumvented,  or the rights  granted  under any  patents may not provide us
    with  competitive  advantages.  Furthermore,  others may  design  around our
    patents  and  other  proprietary   technologies.   We  presently  rely  upon
    non-disclosure agreements with our employees and consultants who are engaged
    in our development  effort.  Any breach of these  agreements by any of these
    employees or  consultants  could have a material and adverse effect upon our
    business.

WE ARE SUBJECT TO COMPETITIVE CHANGES IN TECHNOLOGY.
    The health  care field is subject  to  changes in  technology.  Advances  in
    health care  sciences  create  markets for new products  while  reducing the
    market for other  products.  Accordingly,  unless we have access to the most
    current  technology,  we may not be able  start or  continue  to market  our
    products.  We  cannot  assure  you that we will have  access  to the  latest
    technological  developments,  which may  impair  our  ability  to market our
    products.

WE  HAVE POTENTIAL  EXPOSURE FOR PRODUCT  LIABILITY AND PRODUCT RECALL,  AND THE
AVAILABILITY OF INSURANCE HAS NOT BEEN CONFIRMED.   
    Clinical  trials,  manufacturing,  marketing  and  sales  of  our  potential
    products by us or any  strategic  partner may expose us to liability  claims
    resulting  from the use of the  products.  We  currently  do not  carry  any
    product  liability  insurance.  Despite  experience  of a  five-year  record
    without  claims or  complaints  for a predecessor  prototype  system that is
    similar to that of our product system, it is possible that we will be unable
    to obtain such insurance or, if it can be obtained, that it will not provide
    sufficient coverage at a reasonable cost. The inability to obtain sufficient
    coverage at an  acceptable  cost or otherwise to obtain  protection  against
    potential  liability could prevent or inhibit the  commercialization  of our
    proposed products.  A successful product liability claim or a product recall
    may  have a  material  adverse  effect  upon  our  business,  prospects  and
    financial condition.

WE  ARE  DEPENDENT ON OUR PRESIDENT AND CHIEF  TECHNOLOGY  OFFICER,  (TECHNOLOGY
INVENTOR), AND WE NEED ADDITIONAL PERSONNEL.  
    We are  dependent  upon the services of Ted W.  Russell,  our  president and
    chief  technology  officer and a principal  stockholder.  Mr. Russell is the
    inventor and principally  responsible for the development of our technology.
    Prior  to  our  organization,  he  was  chief  executive  officer  of  other
    companies,  including  companies  engaged in developing and marketing  blood
    pressure monitoring products.  In 1995 in relation to an accident injury and
    rehabilitation  requirements,  Mr.  Russell  took  advantage  of  protection
    afforded by the federal bankruptcy act.

    The  Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer,  James  Hudson,  is serving on an
    interim basis during the Company's  research and  development  phase until a
    full time CEO is hired assume the full time  


                                       8


    position..  We will  require  the  services  of other  qualified  executive,
    technical  and  marketing  personnel.  In seeking  such  personnel,  we will
    compete with many other companies,  largely in the health care field,  which
    are major  companies that are better known and  capitalized  than we are. To
    the extent  that we are not  successful  in our  efforts  to hire  qualified
    individuals,  these work  requirements may be performed by Mr. Russell,  Mr.
    Hudson,  or other employees and  consultants.  Our failure to hire qualified
    executive  personnel could have a material  adverse effect upon our business
    and financial condition.

THE VOLATILITY OF OUR STOCK PRICE COULD AFFECT THE VALUE OF AN INVESTMENT IN OUR
STOCK AND OUR FUTURE FINANCIAL  POSITION.  
    The market price of our stock has fluctuated pursuant to the acquisition and
    our  preparations  for  developing  and marketing  our products,  and can be
    affected by economic  and  political  uncertainties.  Declines in the market
    price of our stock could  adversely  affect our ability to retain  personnel
    with  higher-priced  stock  incentives,  to acquire  businesses or assets in
    exchange for stock and/or to conduct future  financing  activities  with the
    sale of stock.


HOSPITAL NEED

         Our  technology  was  created  to  address  what we  believe  are vital
shortcomings of cardiovascular measurement in hospital care, described below:

         Invasive  monitoring is costly and inherently  risky,  and  noninvasive
flow  monitoring  has been  impractical.  Instead,  noninvasive  blood  pressure
("BP"), pulse oximeter and ECG monitoring are used, parameters that inadequately
specify patient condition.  ECG ignores  hemodynamics and lacks practicality for
preventive monitoring. Pulse oximeter devices measure relative hemoglobin oxygen
content in the blood,  but this is often misleading  without knowing  perfusion,
which is the amount of oxygen being  delivered  to cell tissue for  sustainment.
Noninvasive  pump-up BP devices  operate every 5 to 15 minutes;  an estimated 12
billion BP  measurements  are taken  yearly  despite  their  lacking  consistent
accuracy,  continuous  surveillance,  and  practicality  while  causing  patient
problems due to pressure cuff inflations.

         Patient  critical  care  is  hampered  by  not  monitoring  blood  flow
perfusion  and heart load (flow  resistance)  which are both largely  controlled
with  arterial  elasticity  (stiffness  and stress).  These are earlier and more
relevant  markers of patient  condition  than BP,  because blood flow depends on
artery  condition and control  mechanisms that alter flow in order to keep blood
pressure  constant for as long as possible,  e.g., until shock occurs.  Thus, BP
does not warn of a deteriorating condition,  such as blood infection or internal
bleeding until late in the progression  when  intervention is costly or too late
to save a patient.

         Pulse oximeters are often relied on as an indicator of perfusion;  this
is  misleading  because  these  devices give no indication of reduced blood flow
transport,  they continue to display normal  measurements even when flow becomes
effectively  shut down.  Moreover,  during periods of reduced blood flow,  pulse
oximeter  values can be many minutes  latent  without being  recognized as being
potentially   erroneous  by  the   anesthesiologist,   thus  also  giving  false
indications of respiratory condition.

         Although blood flow is generally well accepted as being more clinically
relevant for patient  safety,  BP and pulse  oximeter  monitoring  are used as a
proxy  for  measuring  flow and  cardiovascular  disease  because  flow has been
impractical to measure.  Along with delaying  intervention,  BP is significantly
inaccurate when blood flow is reduced,  which is common with disease, as well as
when flow is  elevated  for real life  activity  and  anxiety.  Our  hemodynamic
technology  enables  identifying  and  correcting BP  measurement  error that is
related to flow variations.  Moreover even when measured  accurately,  BP yields
little  information  about its  companion  blood flow  because the  relationship
between flow and pressure is unpredictable with cardiovascular disease and other
conditions.

         In hospital care, the focus often is moment-to-moment  sustainment. The
brain requires uninterrupted "perfusion",  or blood flow transport of oxygen and
other nutrients. The body's total blood flow, the "cardiac output", is measured,
but this is  ineffective  to assess brain flow safety and is performed

                                       9


only on a  NON-PREVENTIVE  basis for a small  percentage of patients  because of
heart  catheterization  and  other  risks  and  complexities.  With  blood  flow
measurement being impractical, perfusion has been referred to as a "HOLY GRAIL";
being of highest concern by doctors and nurses, but impractical to measure.

         The aforementioned problems in part explain why an estimated quarter of
the population are said to be untreated or treated inappropriately. Exemplifying
effects of monitoring  inadequacy in hospital care,  authorities  "have produced
very  convincing  evidence that the  so-called  vital signs of every day medical
care have little to do with the survival of the  critically  ill  patient."  (C.
BRYAN-BROWN,  BLOOD FLOW TO ORGANS: PARAMETERS FOR SURVIVAL IN CRITICAL ILLNESS,
CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE  16:170,  1988).  This  recognition is a hint of the high
priority  and  substantial  expenditures  that are at stake in  achieving  early
intervention in preventive monitoring. These are the greatest controllable costs
and  patient  risks in  hospital  care,  and the need  for  improvement  is well
recognized.  A survey by General Electric  Medical  indicated that most critical
care providers believe "non-invasive  hemodynamic monitoring is their number one
unmet need."


THE PRODUCT SYSTEM

         Our system was created to improve  patient safety and longevity;  it is
needed because  physicians  and other care providers are regularly  misled about
abnormal  blood  flow  conditions  and  cardiovascular  diseases.  With a simple
noninvasive  disposable  sensor and  science-based  technology,  we believe  our
preventive  monitoring will enable earlier  intervention in surgery and critical
care.  Because of how the body works,  blood pressure and pulse oximeter devices
cannot  provide  critical  early warning of patient  complications  that are the
greatest  controllable costs and risks of hospital  healthcare.  We believe that
our system can be the basis of multiple  product models of expanded  measurement
capacity because the system measures and computes several parameters,  generally
categorized as follows:

BLOOD FLOW ...the  basic cardiovascular function; provides early & more specific
warning of problems;

PERFUSION ... for indicating  when the brain  is at risk of inadequate oxygen in
surgery;

POX LATENCY ... for  avoiding  false  pulse oximeter  indications of respiratory
function in surgery;

CONTINUOUS  BLOOD  PRESSURE (CNBP) ... uniquely  price-competitive,  simple,   &
unlimited practical use;

CARDIAC OUTPUT ... for  hemodynamic  determinations of  heart disease & reducing
heart catheterizations;

HEART LOAD ...for more effective safety in management of anesthesia and coronary
care;

BIOPHYSICAL  STRESS ... for  quantifying  cardiovascular  disease and warning of
impending heart attacks.

         Our system's blood flow  perfusion  monitoring is intended for avoiding
brain   impairment  that  occurs  for  up  to  50%  of  surgery   patients  with
cardiovascular disease, and for reducing mortality and costly drugs and extended
care  related  to  septic  shock,  drug  interactions  and  pulmonary   catheter
complications.  These  conditions  cause  approximately  300,000  patient deaths
annually  in U.S.  hospitals  and great  legal  malpractice  risks.  Our  system
technology  can  also be  significant  for  managing  the most  costly  hospital
treatment modality,  congestive heart failure ("CHF").  The specific application
needs are:

  o   BRAIN FUNCTION  IMPAIRMENT IN SURGERY.  A basic function of anesthesiology
      is to "prop-up" the  patient's BP, which occurs with drugs that  constrict
      blood flow in body regions and organs that include a patient's limbs. This
      is the variable,  high  resistance part of the body's total cardiac output
      blood  flow;  in  healthy  patients  before  surgery  it is  approximately
      two-thirds of the cardiac  output.  The high  resistance flow is the Blood
      Flow Safety  Reserve (BFSR) that is critical for  maintaining  brain flow.
      Separate from the reduced flow of anesthesiology,  cardiovascular  disease
      reduces  resting  BFSR by as much as 60% (SAFAR,  CIRC 63:2 1981).  Mostly
      because  of  this,  up to half of  surgery  patients  with  cardiovascular
      disease  incur  "BND"  or  "Brain  Neuropsychiatric  Dysfunction"  (J.  E.
      COTTRELL,  CHF ANESTH  SUNY-BRKLYN,  ANESTH  NEWS FEB.  1997;  S.  NEWMAN,
      PERFUSION 4:93, 1989; M. NEWMAN, CHIEF THOR ANESTH OF DUKE UNIV PER R.

                                       10


      WINSLOW,  WSJ  12/8/01;  T. MONK,  ANESTHESIOLOGY  NEWS  4/01;  PLC SMITH,
      LANCET,  4/86). Pulse oximeter monitoring provides no warning of flow shut
      down to less than 5% of normal flow (LAWSON, ANESTH, 10/87). Also, neither
      cardiac output (when  measured) nor BP is a marker for monitoring the BFSR
      that  our  system  measures  in  a  patient's   limb.   Thus,  we  believe
      anesthesiologists  will be able to identify  high risk patients and reduce
      surgery  morbidity and potential  malpractice  risk by using our system in
      pre-surgery assessments and during surgery and recovery.

  o   SEPTIC  SHOCK.  Septic shock  (systemic  inflammatory  response  syndrome)
      afflicts 751,000 and kills 215,000 hospitalized patients annually.  (STUDY
      OF 1995 HOSPITAL DISCHARGE RECORDS, CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, REPORTED BY TM
      BURTON, WSJ, 9/11/01) Although BP hides this condition until the dangerous
      late-stage,  we believe  that  elevated  blood  flow of this  toxic  blood
      condition  can be  monitored  for  early  intervention.  An  authoritative
      physician  consultant  of  Siemens  Medical  estimated  our  system  could
      facilitate the  prevention of 40% of septic shock cases (M. IMHOFF,  PHD.,
      STADISCHE KLINIKEN DORTMUND, GERMANY, 7/98).

  o   DRUG  THERAPY  COMPLICATIONS.  Because  blood flow varies more greatly and
      earlier than BP, WE anticipate  practical flow  monitoring can help reduce
      the  reported  U.S.  hospital  annual death rates of 90,000 due to adverse
      drug reactions and drug administration errors that result from 2.1 million
      incidents.  (B. H.  POMERANTZ,  PROF.  NEUROSCIENCE,  UNIV TORONTO,  A. P.
      4/98).

  o   CATHETERIZATION  GUIDANCE. By continuously  monitoring blood flow, BP, and
      heart  loads,  we believe our system can provide  screening  and safety by
      supplementing and/or reducing costly and risky  echocardiography and heart
      catheterization  studies. (A. F. CONNORS, UVA JAMA 275:889, 1997 AND J. E.
      DALEN, JAMA 276:11, 1996)

  o   EMERGENCY USE. We believe  continuous blood flow and BP monitoring  should
      be vital  for  early  intervention  to  prevent  cardiogenic  shock due to
      internal bleeding in ER and emergency transport.

  o   SEPSIS  MANAGEMENT.  A surgically clean or sterile packaged BICS sensor is
      intended to improve an  important  hospital  sepsis  issue.  According  to
      studies,   reusable   BP  cuffs  are  a  major   medium  for   in-hospital
      cross-contaminating   infections   e.g.,   (staphylococci)   that   extend
      hospitalization  and costs.  (MA BEARD,  SPHYGMOMANOMETERS  - RESERVOIR OF
      PATHOGENIC BACTERIA, MED J OF AUSTR, 10/69; ALSO A.J. BERRY, PREVENTION OF
      BLOOD-BORNE INFECTIONS (HEPATITIS B & AIDS), ASA NEWSLETTER 7/88.

  o   THERAPEUTIC  MANAGEMENT.  In  coronary  intensive  care,  we  believe  the
      monitoring of blood flow, heart load and arterial biophysical stresses can
      improve the management of heart attack  recuperation  and congestive heart
      failure patients ("CHF").  Because of reduced heart attack mortality,  CHF
      has  become  the most  costly  hospital  therapy  in at least one  leading
      hospital,  involving  numerous and lengthy  hospitalizations  for many CHF
      patients.  More effective treatment is needed,  especially because the NIH
      has  estimated  the CHF patient  population of 4.8 million will grow to 20
      million in five years.  After  assessment with cardiac output studies,  we
      believe our system can allow early  discharge  of CHF  patients for remote
      continuous home monitoring over the internet.

  o   DISEASE   MANAGEMENT.   Blood  pressure  is  not  a  specific  measure  of
      cardiovascular  disease.  It does not  measure  the forces  that alter and
      damage the structure of vessel walls.  Instead,  scientists  indicate that
      dynamic (higher frequency) biophysical elastic forces are relevant.  (D.A.
      MCDONALD,  BLOOD FLOW IN ARTERIES,  ARNOLD,  1974,  P268-82.)  Physiologic
      simulations  with our system  technology  indicate that the progression of
      cardiovascular  disease depends upon ongoing  worsening  stresses that are
      produced by heart rate, flow resistance and artery elasticity (stiffness).
      For very brief  instants  during heart beats,  artery forces can exceed by
      many times the known  limits of artery  structure.  We believe this can be
      the underlying  impetus of the coronary artery  inflammation and end-stage
      rupture that triggers 75% of heart  attacks.  (AS  PROMULGATED  BY LEADING
      RESEARCHERS  SUCH AS DR.  ERIC TOPOL AND DR.  STEVEN  NISSEN OF  CLEVELAND
      CLINIC; SEE NEW STUDIES QUESTION VALUE OF OPENING ARTERIES,  G. KOLATA, NY
      TIMES,  3/21/04).  These biophysical phenomena also reduce blood flow, and
      increase  flow  resistance  and heart work.  Thus, we believe our system's
      practical  monitoring  of this science  based  measure can be the means of
      valid  motivational  compliance for insurers and meaningful  management by
      physicians.

                                       11


TECHNOLOGY

         We believe  our system  technology  overcomes  obstacles  for  hospital
preventive  monitoring.  We  believe  it is  the  only  system,  noninvasive  or
invasive,  capable of measuring  artery blood flow and resistance,  heart loads,
perfusion,  BP and  biophysics.  Also, we believe it is the only system known to
avoid invasive and  intolerable  noninvasive  BP measurement  methods by lightly
applying a sensor to a  patient's  limb.  Along with  noninvasive  comfort;  the
system design includes reducing inaccuracy caused by patient movement and sensor
misplacement; and its simplicity averts new operator training.

         The system uses a disposable  noninvasive  single-patient  sensor cuff,
the "BICS"  (biophysic  interval cuff sensor).  This enables measuring more than
one physiologic variable  simultaneously  ("multivariate"  sensing).  The system
also performs a breakthrough  solutioning of flow,  pressure and elasticity on a
continuous  heart  beat-by-beat  basis. It computes these  parameters  using FFT
(fast  Fourier  transform)   frequency   mathematics  that  adjust  for  complex
flow-pressure waveform phasic timing at each physiologic waveform frequency.

         These  innovations   enable  the  first  practical   application  of  a
scientifically  famous `WM'  technology that determines the pressure forces that
propel  the  blood  flow and  derive  the  flow  waveform.  Although  previously
impractical  because the original  `WM'  application  involved two difficult and
risk-prone heart  catheterization  sensors, it produced  unprecedented  clinical
accuracy,  including for extreme pharmacologically induced vasoactive conditions
in which all other methods are very unreliable.  Our system concurrently employs
two independent `WM' applications; one of which enables our system's improved BP
monitoring   accuracy  and  monitoring  of  cardiac  output,   heart  loads  and
biophysics.


COMPETITION
         The market leaders are GE,  Philips,  Datascope,  Tyco-Nellcor,  Baxter
(Edwards Life Sciences), Siemens and Nihon-Kohden. We believe patient monitoring
systems of these and other smaller  companies  lack means of early  intervention
because they lack blood flow and perfusion monitoring.  The only flow monitoring
is  by   specialized   cardiac   output   systems  that  mostly   involve  heart
catheterization  and are  restricted to use in only  approximately  five percent
(5%) of the patient  population due to risks,  costs and  complexities.  Cardiac
output systems are impractical for preventive  monitoring.  Cardiac output blood
flow  measurement  is usually  limited to heart  procedures and for making fluid
volume  adjustments on the sickest  patients,  whereas we believe our blood flow
monitoring  system is  specific  to vital  complications  that occur  widely and
unpredictably in the critical care patient population,  as well as practical for
preventive monitoring of all hospital patients.

         FLOW  PERFUSION  AND  BIOPHYSICS:  Present  cardiac  output  monitoring
involves heart catheterization and A-line componentry, esophageal ultrasound and
multi-electrode  impedance  devices.  Cardiac  output is not cost  effective  or
otherwise  practical for preventive  monitoring of approximately  95% of surgery
and critical care patients.  We believe that no practical  system for monitoring
blood  flow,  perfusion  or  biophysic  hemodynamics  is known of or to be under
development.  We expect to prevent  competition with strong patents and with our
proprietary  sensing  system that would involve a complicated  long-lead time to
duplicate.

         CNBP:  For BP  monitoring,  approximately  12% of patients are measured
continuously with risk-prone direct INVASIVE intra-arterial catheterization that
involves artery  cut-down,  tubing  insertion,  infusions,  and transducer kits.
Otherwise, monitoring is with NONINVASIVE PUMP-UP CUFF monitors that can measure
intermittently  only every 5-15 minutes so as to avoid arm pump-up  trauma.  The
avoidance of treatment  delay and arm nerve palsy are  rationale  for  replacing
these devices with CNBP monitors; however, experience shows these issues are not
so significant as to justify high prices  relative to intermittent  models.  Two
small companies market a CNBP device.  We believe these and earlier devices have
suffered from:
  o   High  purchase  prices  that are twice that of  intermittent  devices  and
      sensor replacement costs that are unacceptable.  We believe a large market
      exists only for a price-competitive CNBP.


                                       12


  o   Systems  suffer from  constrictive  sensors that impair blood flow and are
      not tolerated long by conscious patients,  as well as motion insensitivity
      and ineffective waveform signal processing compensation.  Sensor fragility
      and positioning complexity are also impracticalities.

         We believe our  proprietary  sensing (which  provides a low cost design
with  patient  comfort  and  user  simplicity)  and  our  flow-compensated  CNBP
monitoring,  as our "platform" model; can be a basis for volume sales. Moreover,
we believe that any  competitors  would not be able to offer an upgrade to blood
flow  monitoring,  which we  believe  will be the  principal  part of our market
success.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY / PATENTS

         U.S. and  worldwide  PCT patents were filed in 2001 and 2003 by Mr. Ted
Russell with patent  counsel,  Dr. David Garrod,  J.D.,  PhD, Esq. at Patterson,
Belknap, Webb & Tyler LLP. These cover the first known practical applications of
the `WM'  technology and our invented  flow-based  elasticity  relationship  and
solutioning  process,  as  well  as  our  sensor,   calibration  processes,  and
measurement  algorithms for blood flow,  perfusion,  cardiac output, heart loads
and biophysic stress.  They also cover multivariate  blood pressure  monitoring,
waveform   display   algorithms  and  expert  system   artificial   intelligence
applications.  Based  on a  comprehensive  search,  the  filed  225  claims  (50
independent)  are  believed  novel,  patentable  and  likely  to  result in many
patents.  In June of 2004 the Company has also  engaged the services of the firm
Jones Day in connection with its European  Patent Office  prosecution of most of
its patent applications in various countries.

PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT AND STATUS

         The Company is the beneficiary of over $6 million of  expenditures  for
research  and  development,  clinical  studies,  FDA  clearance  and a marketing
introduction  that  confirmed  user  acceptability  with prior  generation  CNBP
revenues. During 1980-1993 as Chief Executive Officer and President of Cortronic
Corporation and Cortronic Medical Corporation,  Mr. Russell invented and managed
development; testing, FDA clearance and marketing of a CNBP monitor for which no
other claims of ownership  exist or is believed  could exist.  During the period
1994-96 he initially  developed  various  blood flow related  technologies  that
employ  some  of the  features  of  the  CNBP  system.  Our  cost  re-engineered
preproduction  unit  is in  clinical  engineering.  R&D  expenditures  continued
through March 18, 2004 by various Interest holders.  We plan to finalize product
development within a year when we will complete  software,  clinical testing and
final  product  design  work.  Thereafter,  we plan to start  manufacturing  and
commence  marketing  of two  product  models  after an  additional  six  months,
depending on timing for FDA clearance (SEE "GOVERNMENT REGULATION").

MARKET FOR OUR PRODUCTS

         We estimate from various market information  sources that the available
hospital  market  for our  products  initially  is $1  billion  compared  to our
estimate of the present market of $2.1 billion of patient monitoring devices and
sensors.  We expect that our principal  products will be flow perfusion monitors
for surgery and flow models for surgery and critical  care; and that a projected
15%-20% of our  shipments  will be CNBP  monitors and 15%-20% of our longer term
shipments will be models with cardiac output and biophysic stress monitoring.

         It is estimated that preventive  monitoring  systems exist at more than
276,000 critical care beds, which is approximately  30% of all US hospital beds.
The first  applications for our systems are expected to be surgery and recovery,
followed by  relatively  near-simultaneous  adoption  for uses in ICU,  coronary
care,  catheterization  labs, and ER, as well as somewhat later use in dialysis,
electrophysiology  (pacemakers),  MRI,  radiology and  congestive  heart failure
(CHF) management.

                                       13


STRATEGIES

         Our marketing is to emphasize patient safety benefits of
  o  PERFUSION MONITORING for brain safety and for more reliable  pulse oximeter
     monitoring in surgery;  
  o  FLOW AND HEART LOAD MONITORING to avoid  septic and  cardiogenic  shock and
     manage heart failure; and 
  o  BIOPHYSIC AND HEART LOAD MONITORING  to  avoid and manage recuperation from
     heart attacks.

         We believe our system  addresses  the greatest  controllable  costs and
risks of  hospital  healthcare.  Adverse  complications  of septic  shock,  drug
problems  and  cardiac   output   heart   catheterization   (excluding   surgery
complications and CHF management) are estimated by us from studies to cause over
60 unexpected patient deaths and $6 million of costs annually in average 200-bed
hospitals and up to three-times this for large hospitals,  excluding malpractice
costs (D.W. BATES, JAMA 277:307, 1997).

         Our principal business strategies are:

  o   GROWTH  FACTOR #1:  Hospital  contract-based  sensor  purchases  (for flow
      perfusion systems) that can avoid the delay of hospital capital budgeting.
      We plan to also sell a  competitively  priced  CNBP  "platform"  model and
      modules (no sensor required) that can capture existing capital budgets and
      also allow users to upgrade to flow monitoring with sensor  purchases from
      operating funds.

  o   GROWTH FACTOR #2: We believe a major impetus for market acceptance will be
      malpractice risk avoidance when a practical flow perfusion monitor exists,
      as was true for the  pulse  oximeter  market.  We plan to  employ  tactics
      similar to those that were  reportedly  employed to accelerate  acceptance
      and  standardization  of the Nellcor pulse oximeter system (CONVEYED TO TW
      RUSSELL BY LJ LLOYD, PRESIDENT, NELLCOR INC., 1987).

  o   CAPITAL  EFFICIENT  MARKETING:   We  believe  the  foolproof   operational
      simplicity  of our  system is ideal for  cost-effective  dealer  marketing
      start up, and for a subsequent transition to direct selling.

  o   ATTRACTIVE  OPERATING  MARGINS:  We plan to achieve market  leadership and
      large profit margins.  Our third generation design  engineering  estimates
      portend a low-cost,  price competitive system unit. Most models are to use
      a single system for commonality efficiencies.

  o   SPECIAL  OPPORTUNITIES:  We  plan  to  pursue  a  private-label  marketing
      partnership with a major supplier, and/or other special opportunities,  to
      expand our market and benefit our shareholders.

GOVERNMENT REGULATION

         The  testing,  manufacture  and sale of our  products  are  subject  to
regulation  by  various  governmental  authorities,   principally  the  FDA  and
corresponding  state and foreign  agencies.  Pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act and related  regulations,  the FDA  regulates  preclinical  and
clinical testing, manufacture,  labeling,  distribution and promotion of medical
devices. If we do not comply with applicable requirements, we can be subject to,
among other things: fines;  injunctions;  civil penalties;  recall or seizure of
products;  total or partial suspension of production;  failure of the government
to grant pre-market  clearance or approval for devices;  withdrawal of marketing
clearances or approvals; and criminal prosecution.

         A medical  device may be marketed in the United  States only if the FDA
gives prior authorization, unless it is subject to a specific exemption. Devices
classified by the FDA as posing less risk than class III devices are categorized
as class I or II and are eligible to seek "510(k)  clearance."  510(k) clearance
generally  is granted when  submitted  information  establishes  that a proposed
device is "substantially  equivalent" in intended use and other factors, such as
technological characteristics,  to a class I or II device already legally on the
market or to a "pre-amendment"  class III device,  which is one that has been in
commercial  distribution  since before May 28,  1976,  for which the FDA has not
called for PMA  applications  which are defined below.  For any devices that are
cleared through the 510(k)  process,  modifications  or enhancements  that could
significantly  affect safety or  effectiveness,  or constitute a major change in
the intended use of the device, will require new 510(k) submissions.  We believe
that  presently


                                       14



a  minimum  of  three months are required from the date of submission  to obtain
510(k)  clearance, but the  clearance can take up to six months or substantially
longer.  We cannot  assure you that  any of our devices or device  modifications
will receive 510(k) clearance in a timely fashion, or at all.

         Our  FDA-cleared  predecessor  CNBP system was classified as a class II
device  pursuant to our  submission of clinical  study data.  Outwardly and with
respect to patient safety, our present system operates  identically,  so that we
believe our clearance will be straightforward.  Blood flow and perfusion are not
complex or foreign  concepts;  substantially  different new proposed  devices of
other companies, such as a Cerebral Oximeter of Somanetics Corporation, relative
to compared to preexisting  "substantially equivalent" devices, receive class II
clearance.  We have every  reason to believe  that our future  products  will be
categorized as a class II device;  although no assurances exist this will be the
case.

         A device requiring prior marketing  authorization that does not qualify
for 510(k)  clearance is categorized as class III, which is reserved for devices
classified  by the FDA as posing the  greatest  risk,  such as  life-sustaining,
life-supporting  or implantable  devices,  or devices that are not substantially
equivalent to a legally  marketed class I or class II device.  Class III devices
generally  must  receive  approval  pursuant to a pre-market  approval,  or PMA,
application,  which requires proving the safety and  effectiveness of the device
to the  FDA.  The  process  of  obtaining  PMA  approval  can be  expensive  and
uncertain.  This can require from one to three or more years after  filing,  and
some are never approved.

         If human clinical trials of a device are required, whether for a 510(k)
or a PMA application,  and the device presents a "significant risk," the sponsor
of the trial,  which is  usually  the  manufacturer  or the  distributor  of the
device,  will  have  to  file  an  investigational  device  exemption,  or  IDE,
application  before beginning human clinical trials. The IDE application must be
supported  by data,  typically  including  the results of animal and  laboratory
testing.  If the  IDE  application  is  approved  by the  FDA  and  one or  more
appropriate  Institutional  Review Boards,  or IRBs,  human clinical  trials may
begin at a specific  number of  investigational  sites with a specific number of
patients, as approved by the FDA. If the device presents a "nonsignificant risk"
to the patient,  a sponsor may begin the clinical trial after obtaining approval
for  the  study  by the IRB at each  clinical  site  without  the  need  for FDA
approval.

         In  1986,  our  predecessor   "platform"  CNBP  model  received  510(k)
clearance  from the FDA for use on adults and  pediatrics.  Approximately  1,000
monitors were  supplied to dealers and users in Japan,  Europe and the US during
1989-92.  We may rely on this FDA clearance to market a CNBP monitor if we judge
that  the  functionality  of  our  CNBP  "platform"   product  is  substantially
unchanged.  Alternately,  we may submit for a new  clearance for our CNBP model,
whereby we will submit results of a new clinical study if our system  monitoring
algorithms of this initial CNBP "platform" are changed significantly. We believe
that this would involve a comparative hospital clinical accuracy study for 20-30
patients similar to what was submitted for the predecessor system. Such studies,
especially for a comfortable  noninvasive device like our system, do not involve
a PMA or IDE  and are  generally  relatively  easy to  arrange  a  hospital  IRB
approval for (see below) and conduct. We will complete clinical accuracy studies
and submit for a 510(k)  clearance  for our products  that  measure  blood flow,
perfusion, cardiac output, heart loads and biophysics.

         We believe "Grandfathering" advantages are likely to apply. Pursuant to
its evaluation and lacking a CNBP class, the FDA requested a clinical study that
specifically assessed the patient safety of our low pressure cuff sensing; class
II  clearance  was  granted  by FDA after  such study  results  were  submitted.
Grandfathering provisions enable invoking prior clinical results and experience.
The sensing  operation of our system  technology is identical to the predecessor
CNBP, so that patient safety aspects are proven because of our predecessor CNBP.
Because the  history of use of the cuff sensor  system was devoid of any patient
concerns  or FDA  "incident"  reports,  we  believe  expedited  "Grandfathering"
criteria  will apply for all our monitor  system  product  clearances  regarding
safety of our sensing  system.  Also,  after each FDA  clearance of each product
model parameter (BP, flow, stress), grandfathering provisions regarding accuracy
for such parameter is expected to should apply to subsequent models that include
same  parameters.  However,  there  can  be no  assurances  that  grandfathering
advantages will be allowed for us.

                                       15



         The Company  maintains a  relationship  with and plans to retain an FDA
consultant,  a past FDA director, who is a proven expediter of the FDA clearance
process.

         Any devices we manufacture or distribute  pursuant to FDA clearances or
approvals  are subject to pervasive  and  continuing  regulation by FDA and some
state agencies.  Manufacturers  of medical devices marketed in the United States
must comply with detailed Quality System Regulation, or QSR, requirements, which
include testing, control,  documentation and other quality assurance procedures.
Manufacturers must also comply with Medical Device Reporting requirements. These
requirements  require a manufacturer  to report to FDA any incident in which its
product may have caused or contributed to a death or serious injury, or in which
its product  malfunctioned  and, if the malfunction were to recur,  would likely
cause or  contribute  to a death or serious  injury.  Labeling  and  promotional
activities  are subject to scrutiny  by FDA and, in some  circumstances,  by the
Federal Trade Commission.  FDA enforcement  policy prohibits  promoting approved
medical devices for unapproved uses.

         We are subject to routine inspection by the FDA and some state agencies
for compliance with QSR  requirements  and other  applicable  regulations.  From
experience,  we  believe  our  initial  FDA QSR  inspection  will  occur  within
approximately one year of our initial product  shipment.  We are also subject to
numerous federal,  state and local laws relating to such matters as safe working
conditions,  manufacturing  practices,  environmental  protection,  fire  hazard
control and disposal of hazardous or potentially hazardous substances.

        If any of  our  current  or  future  FDA  clearances  or  approvals  are
rescinded or denied,  sale of our applicable products in the United States would
be prohibited during the period we do not have such clearances or approvals.  In
such  cases  we would  consider  shipping  the  product  internationally  and/or
assembling  it overseas if  permissible  and if we determine  such product to be
ready for commercial shipment. The FDA's current policy is that a medical device
that is not in commercial  distribution  in the United  States,  but which needs
510(k)  clearance to be  commercially  distributed in the United States,  can be
exported without  submitting an export request and prior FDA clearance  provided
that

  o   the  company  believes  the  device  can  be  found  to  be  substantially
      equivalent through a 510(k) submission,  
  o   the device is labeled and intended for export only,
  o   the device meets the specifications of the foreign purchaser, and 
  o   other conditions  of the export  provisions  of the  Federal  Food,  Drug,
      and Cosmetic Act and the Export Reform Act are satisfied.

         Congress has enacted the Medical Device User Fee  Modernization  Act of
2002. Among other things,  this law has provisions that affect the assessment of
user fees for product  approvals and clearances.  Given the recent  enactment of
this law, the effect of the law on us is unknown.

EMPLOYEES:

The  company  currently  has only  one  full  time  employee  and one part  time
executive  employee.  The  company  has a  number  of  contractors  in  its  R&D
operations.







                                       16



ITEM 2.  MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OR PLAN OF OPERATION

OVERVIEW

         On February 6, 2004, an agreement was reached whereby Tec Factory, Inc.
would acquire from the various Interest holders HEARTSTAT  Technology assets for
use in continuing the HEARTSTAT  operations for completing the  development  and
commercialization  of the first known practical system for monitoring blood flow
perfusion  (oxygen  transport)  and other  cardiovascular  and  heart  measures.
Effective February 17, 2004 we changed our name to HEARTSTAT  Technology,  Inc.,
in an effort to reflect  changes in our business  focus to  incorporate  the new
acquisition.  The  Company is  proceeding  forward  with its new  business  plan
focusing on the HEARTSTAT technology.

         This  acquisition  was  accounted  for as an  acquisition  of assets as
opposed to a reverse  merger  due to the fact that there was no current  company
that owned or operated this business or technology in the past 2 years (FOR MORE
INFORMATION  ON THE  ACCOUNTING  POLICIES  USED PLEASE  CONSULT THE NOTES TO THE
FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS).  The technology  assets had a number of interest holders
besides Mr. Ted Russell the  inventor  and all  interest  holders have agreed to
exchange  their  interest  in  the  technology  and  future   operations  for  a
proportionate share of restricted 144 stock in the HEARTSTAT Technology, Inc. as
per the  provisions of the  Agreement for the Purchase of Assets  attached as an
exhibit hereto.

CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND ESTIMATES

         Our discussion  and analysis of our financial  condition and results of
operations are based upon our condensed consolidated financial statements, which
have been prepared in accordance with accounting  principles  generally accepted
in the United States. The preparation of these financial  statements requires us
to make  estimates  and  judgments  that affect the reported  amounts of assets,
liabilities, revenues and expenses, and related disclosures of contingent assets
and liabilities. On an ongoing basis, we evaluate our estimates, including those
related to impairment of long-lived  assets. We base our estimates on historical
experience  and on various  other  assumptions  that we believe to be reasonable
under  the  circumstances,  the  results  of which  form the  basis  for  making
judgments  about the  carrying  value of  assets  and  liabilities  that are not
readily  apparent  from other  sources.  Actual  results  may differ  from these
estimates under different  assumptions or conditions;  however,  we believe that
our estimates, including those for the above-described items, are reasonable.

IMPAIRMENT OF LONG-LIVED ASSETS.

         Our long-lived  assets  include  property,  equipment and goodwill.  We
assess  impairment of long-lived assets whenever changes or events indicate that
the carrying value may not be recoverable.  In performing our assessment we must
make  assumptions  regarding  estimated  future cash flows and other  factors to
determine the fair value of the respective  assets. If these estimates change in
the  future  we may be  required  to record  impairment  charges  against  these
respective assets.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

FISCAL YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2003 AND 2002.

         HEARTSTAT Technology operated as Tec Factory,  Inc. for fiscal 2003 and
fiscal 2002 in which the  company had  negligible  operations  during  these two
years as it looked for an acquisition and business direction.

         Operating  expenses  consisted  of payroll  and  related  expenses  for
executive, finance and administrative personnel,  recruiting,  professional fees
and other general corporate expenses as well as payroll and related expenses for
development personnel and consultants.  Operating expenses were $21,000 for each
of the years ended December 31, 2003 and 2002 respectively.

         Net loss was $21,000 or ($0.002 per share) for the years ended December
31, 2003 and 2002.


                                       17


         On December  31,  2003,  the Company had a working  capital  deficit of
$42,000  compared to a working  capital deficit of $21,000 on December 31, 2002.
The Company had no cash balance as of December 31, 2003.

         The Company has incurred  operating losses and negative cash flows from
its minimal operations for fiscal years ending December 31, 2002 and 2003.

FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30, 2004

         Company  operations  increased somewhat in the first and second quarter
of 2004 and, as reflected in the interim  statements,  in the first  quarter the
Company completed its acquisition of the HEARTSTAT  technology system and assets
which  affected  our  financial  statement  assets by  $408,000  pursuant to the
assumption of $370,000 of debt and issuance  $38,000 of capital stock reflecting
38,000,000 shares issued to the interest holders at $0.001 per share.

         On March 18, 2004 the Company  completed the  acquisition and began its
monthly  operations to  commercialize  and bring to market products based on the
HEARTSTAT Technology.

         Operating   expenses  consist  of  payroll  and  related  expenses  for
executive, finance and administrative personnel,  recruiting,  professional fees
and other general corporate expenses as well as payroll and related expenses for
development  personnel and consultants.  Operating expenses were $46,829 for the
six months ended June 30, 2004.

         Net loss was $46,829  ($0.0033 per share) for the six months ended June
30, 2004.

         On June  30,  2004,  the  Company  had a  working  capital  deficit  of
$458,829,  as compared to a working  capital  deficit of $42,000 on December 31,
2003.  The  Company had no cash  balance as of June 30,  2004,  but  maintains a
agreement with Diamond WorldWide, Inc. a related company, to continue to finance
operations by issuing short term debt.

         The Company has continued to incur operating  losses for the six months
ended June 30, 2004, mostly due to its expanding  operations  related to ramping
up the  commercialization  of the  HEARTSTAT  technology.  Continued  losses are
anticipated  to occur  through the remainder of 2004 and 2005 because of product
development and  administrative  operating expenses that will be required by the
Company before  initial  product  shipments  that are  anticipated by the second
quarter of 2006.

         The  Company  has been  funded  and  continues  to be funded by Diamond
WorldWide,  Inc. which under an arrangement  will continue to fund the operating
and  development  expenses of the company.  All monies  advanced to HEARTSTAT by
Diamond WorldWide will be accruing interest at 8% per annum.  Diamond WorldWide,
Inc. is a related company. (Discuss and disclose)


PLAN OF OPERATION

         HEARTSTAT   Technology,   Inc.  has  refocused  its  operations   after
completing  its  acquisition  of the  technology.  Upon  the  completion  of the
acquisition  with the  interest  holders,  the  Company  began  the  process  of
completing  a financing  and  implementing  the final  commercialization  of the
HEARTSTAT  Technology.  The Company plans a private  placement capital financing
approximately of $5,000,000 which will be used for development,  clinical trials
for FDA  clearance,  as well as the launch of  manufacturing  and  marketing and
distribution of products using the HEARTSTAT Technology.

         The Company  concluded an  employment  contract  with its President and
Chief  Technology  Officer,  Ted Russell,  who is  preparing  to hire  necessary
product  development  personnel to begin the final phase of the  development and
commercialization  of this  technology.  The Company plans to lease and commence
operations of its R&D offices near Huntington,  NY in the fourth quarter of 2004
and anticipates being fully operational by January of 2005.

                                       18



ITEM 3.  DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY

         HEARTSTAT  Technology,  Inc.  currently  has  its  principal  executive
offices located at 530 Wilshire Blvd,  Suite 304, Santa Monica,  CA 90401.  This
space  represents  a  portion  of the 670  square  feet of  office  space and is
subleased from Diamond WorldWide, Inc. The Company plans to lease a new research
and development center in Long Island, New York, by the end of January 2005.


ITEM 4.  SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

         The following table provides certain information as to the officers and
directors  individually  and as a group,  and the holders of more than 5% of the
Common Stock of the Company, as of September 30, 2004:



-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                               AMOUNT AND NATURE OF
  NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER (1)                 BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP         PERCENT OF CLASS (2)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                              
Ted W Russell
44 Middle Beach Rd West
Madison, CT 06443                                                 19,599,997 (3)                40.5%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
James Hudson
13674 South Talbot Trail,
Ridgetown, Ontario  N0P 2C0                                        1,000,000 (6)                 2.1%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
eAngels Syndicate
c/o G.K. Krause
1521 Alton Road, #352                                         15,000,000 (3)(4)(5)      31.1%
Miami Beach, FL 33139
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patrick A. Maley
15 Codman Drive                                                     50,000 (7)                   0.1%
Sudbury, MA 01776
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SolutionMed Ventures
C/O G.K. Krause
1521 Alton Road, #352                                          4,000,000 (3)(4)(5)       8.3%
Miami Beach, FL  33139
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FutureVest MicroCap Fund
C/O G.K. Krause
1521 Alton Road, #352                                          4,000,000 (3)(4)(5)       8.3%
Miami Beach, FL  33139
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
eAngels Technology Fund
C/O G.K. Krause
1521 Alton Road, #352                                          3,000,000 (3)(4)(5)       6.2%
Miami Beach, FL  33139
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Diamond Ventures
C/O G.K. Krause
1521 Alton Road, #352                                          4,000,000 (3)(4)(5)       8.3%
Miami Beach, FL  33139
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All officers and directors as a group  (4 persons)
                                                                    20,674,997                      42.6%
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                       19


(1)  To our  knowledge,  except as set forth in the  footnotes to this table
         and subject to applicable community property laws, each person named in
         the table has sole  voting and  investment  power  with  respect to the
         shares set forth opposite such person's name.

(2)  This table is based on 48,402,887 shares of Common Stock outstanding as
         of September  30, 2004.  If a person listed on this table has the right
         to obtain additional shares of Common Stock within sixty (60) days from
         September 30, 2004, the additional  shares are deemed to be outstanding
         for the  purpose of  computing  the  percentage  of class owned by such
         person,  but are not  deemed  to be  outstanding  for  the  purpose  of
         computing the percentage of any other person.

(3)  Mr. Ted W. Russell and Mr. G.K. Krause  through  the  eAngels Syndicate
         may be deemed to be the "parents" of our company  within the meaning of
         the rules and  regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

(4)  Includes 4,000,000 shares owned of record by FutureVest MicroCap  Fund;
         3,000,000  shares owned by eAngels  Technology  Fund;  4,000,000 shares
         owned by  SolutionMed  Ventures and  4,000,000  shares owned by Diamond
         Ventures.

(5)  G. K. Krause is an  investment  manager that manages equity investments
         and partnerships for eAngels Syndicate. Mr. G. K. Krause is deemed  the
         beneficial owner of a total of 15  million shares or 31.0% of the total
         outstanding common stock pursuant to note (4).

(6)  Mr.  James  Hudson  is  the  Chief  Executive  Officer   of   HeartSTAT
         Technology, Inc.

(7)  Represents a total of 50,000  shares issuable  upon  exercise  of stock
         options. 50,000 Immediately exercisable by Mr. Maley.



CHANGES IN CONTROL

         There are no agreements known to management that may result in a change
of control of our company.



















                                       20




ITEM 5.  DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, PROMOTERS AND CONTROL PERSONS

     Our executive officers and directors are:

     NAME                      AGE     POSITION
     James R. Hudson            65     Chief Executive Officer
     Ted W. Russell             62     President and Chief Technology Officer
     Patrick A. Maley           55     Director

         Our directors are elected annually by our shareholders and our officers
are appointed annually by our board of directors.  Any vacancies in our board to
be are filled by the board itself. Set forth below are brief descriptions of the
recent  employment  and  business  experience  of  our  executive  officers  and
directors.

JAMES R. HUDSON, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER & DIRECTOR

         JAMES R. HUDSON has been  promoted to Interim Chief  Executive  Officer
since October 15, 2004.  Prior to this Mr.  Hudson  served as interim  President
since March 18,  2004.  Since  November  1986,  he has been the chief  executive
officer  of Hudson  Medical  Systems  Limited,  Ridgetown,  Ontario,  Canada,  a
specialty products distribution company he founded in 1986 that supplies medical
device  products to acute care hospitals  throughout  Canada.  He has over forty
years of experience in the health care industry. He served as distributor of the
Company's  predecessor  CNBP blood pressure  monitor.  From 1983 to 1986, he was
general manager of the Cardiovascular Division of Gould Electronics,  Canada. In
1978 he founded and was chief executive  officer of Northern Medical  Industries
Limited,  Mississauga,  Ontario,  Canada, a company that went public in 1979. In
1970 he became  chief  executive  officer and took public  Medicraft  Limited in
Rexdale,  Ontario.  Both  Northern  Medical and  Medicraft  were  engaged in the
manufacture and sale of intubation products. Previously, he was regional manager
responsible  for sales  development at C.R. Bard Inc., and was salesman for Ames
Diagnostics, a division of Miles Laboratories.



TED W. RUSSELL, PRESIDENT

         TED W. RUSSELL was a member of the Board of Directors  until October 8,
2004 and became the President on October 15, 2004. Mr. Russell held the position
of Chief Executive Officer, since July 27, 2004 and employed by the Company as a
consultant from April 1, 2004. Mr. Russell invented the HEARTSTAT technology and
for over twenty years has been managing the  development of its system and other
related  medical  technologies.  He has over fifteen years  experience as CEO of
computer and medical device  companies with corporate  governance  experience as
board  chairman  and CFO.  Mr.  Russell has been  working  independently  on the
technology  over  the past  three  years  during  which he  applied  for  patent
protection for the HEARTSTAT  technology and has been  completing the technology
platform and coordinating  business activities.  Mr. Russell was Chief Executive
Officer and President of  Rmw/Corlogic,  Inc.,  Madison,  CT, since its founding
December 1996 until July 2001.  In 1994 through 1996 he conducted  research that
involved creating various blood flow related  technologies that also employ some
of the technology he previously  invented.  He was Chief  Executive  Officer and
President of Cortronic Medical Corporation, Northport, NY, since its founding in
August 1990 until February 1993 (see below), and was Chief Executive Officer and
President  of a  predecessor  Cortronic  Corporation,  Ronkonkoma  NY since  its
startup in May 1993.  Through these two  companies he invented,  was an investor
in,  and  managed  development,  testing,  FDA  clearance  and  marketing  of  a
continuous  noninvasive  blood pressure monitor until operations were terminated
pursuant to a February 1993 personal injury and  rehabilitation,  which resulted
in his having to use the  protection of the federal  bankruptcy  laws in October
1995.  From 1981 to 1982, he was Director of Corporate  Development  of National
Medical  Care Inc,  Boston,  MA; from 1978 to 1980 he was CEO and  President  of
Medtek Corp,  Forest Hills,  NY; and from 1977 to 1978 he was Vice  President in
Corporate  Finance,  Venture Capital,  Smith Barney Harris Upham, Inc, New York,
NY. From 1975 to 1977, he was a senior general


                                       21


management  consultant  for Booz,  Allen & Hamilton,  New York, NY, for which he
conducted major engagements for General Electric,  Federal Express and WT Grant.
Earlier,  he was CEO of a  minority-owned  Memorex  Corporation  affiliate,  ILC
Peripherals  Corp.,  New York,  NY and before  that he  directed a new  computer
product  marketing  rollout for Memorex in Santa  Clara,  CA.  Earlier,  he held
financial  controllership  and  engineering  positions at Eastman Kodak Company,
Rochester,  NY. He received and has pending several patents for medical devices.
He received a BSE degree from University of Michigan in 1965 and MBA degree from
Columbia University in 1974.


PATRICK A. MALEY, DIRECTOR

         PATRICK A. MALEY has been a director of HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY INC. since
September 8, 2004 and  previously,  of HEARTSTAT  INC.  since it's founding July
2002. He has been Chief Operating  Officer of Biowave,  Inc.,  Norwalk CT, since
September  2002,  and previously he served as consultant to other medical device
companies  since January 2002.  From January 1999 to December  2001, he held the
positions of Vice  President of Marketing and Sales and Business  Development at
Maritech,  Inc.  Newton MA. He was Vice President of Sales and Marketing of Zoll
Medical,  Burlington, MA, a supplier of heart defibrillator devices between 1995
and 1998, was Vice President of Marketing  during 1992-95 at Boston  Scientific.
Mr. Maley received his BA and MBA degrees at the  University of  California.  He
has interest in assuming a senior operating or marketing  management position in
the company.


CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

         Members of our management are associated with other firms involved in a
range  of  business  activities.  Consequently,  there  are  potential  inherent
conflicts of interest in their acting as officers and  directors of our company.
Insofar as the officers and directors are engaged in other business  activities,
we anticipate they will devote only a minor amount of time to our affairs.

         Our  officers  and  directors  are  now and  may in the  future  become
shareholders,  officers or directors of other companies, which may be formed for
the  purpose of  engaging in  business  activities  similar to us.  Accordingly,
additional  direct conflicts of interest may arise in the future with respect to
such individuals acting on behalf of us or other entities. Moreover,  additional
conflicts of interest may arise with respect to opportunities  which come to the
attention of such  individuals in the  performance of their duties or otherwise.
Currently,  we do not have a right of first refusal  pertaining to opportunities
that come to their attention and may relate to our business operations.

         Our  officers  and  directors  are, so long as they are our officers or
directors, subject to the restriction that all opportunities contemplated by our
plan of operation  which come to their  attention,  either in the performance of
their duties or in any other manner, will be considered opportunities of, and be
made available to us and the companies that they are affiliated with on an equal
basis. A breach of this  requirement will be a breach of the fiduciary duties of
the officer or  director.  If we or the  companies  with which the  officers and
directors are affiliated both desire to take advantage of an  opportunity,  then
said officers and directors  would abstain from  negotiating and voting upon the
opportunity.  However,  all directors may still  individually  take advantage of
opportunities  if we should decline to do so. Except as set forth above, we have
not  adopted  any  other  conflict  of  interest  policy  with  respect  to such
transactions.





                                       22




ITEM 6.  EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION.

         The following  table sets forth  information  the  remuneration  of our
chief executive officers for the last three completed fiscal years.



                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                          LONG TERM COMPENSATION
                                                                   --------------------------------------
                                ANNUAL COMPENSATION                         AWARDS             PAYOUTS
                   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         OTHER     RESTRICTED   SECURITIES
    NAME AND                                            ANNUAL        STOCK     UNDERLYING      LTIP       ALL OTHER
    PRINCIPAL                                         COMPENSA-     AWARD(S)     OPTIONS/      PAYOUTS     COMPENSA-
    POSITION        YEAR    SALARY ($)    BONUS ($)     TION($)        ($)       SARS (#)        ($)        TION($)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                      
    Robert G.       2003        -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-
     Taylor         2002        -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-
  President (1) 2001        -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-          -0-
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1)  Mr. Taylor  was  the  President from  January 2001 through February 27,
         2004.  He had no compensation from the company.





                      OPTION/SAR GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                  INDIVIDUAL GRANTS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             NUMBER OF SECURITIES      PERCENT OF TOTAL
                                  UNDERLYING         OPTIONS/SARS GRANTED      EXERCISE OR BASE
     NAME                    OPTIONS/SARS GRANTED      TO EMPLOYEES IN           PRICE ($/SH)         EXPIRATION DATE
                                     (#)                  FISCAL YEAR
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                               
     Robert G. Taylor                -0-                      --                      --                   --
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------






                           AGGREGATED OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR AND FY-END OPTION/SAR VALUES

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        NUMBER OF SECURITIES
                                                                             UNDERLYING         VALUE OF UNEXERCISED
                                                                            UNEXERCISED             IN-THE-MONEY
                                                                          OPTIONS/SARS AT         OPTIONS/SARS AT
                                                                        FISCAL YEAR END (#)     FISCAL YEAR END ($)
                                                                       -----------------------------------------------
                          SHARES ACQUIRED ON                                EXERCISABLE/            EXERCISABLE/
         NAME                EXERCISE (#)        VALUE REALIZED ($)        UNEXERCISABLE           UNEXERCISABLE
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                          
   Robert G. Taylor               -0-                    -0-                  -0-/-0-                 -0-/-0-
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


         We will  reimburse our officers and directors for  reasonable  expenses
incurred during the course of their performance.

         Ted W. Russell has been under a consulting contract since April 1, 2004
and served as CEO,  Chief  Technology  Officer,  Treasurer and interim CFO since
July 27, 2004; under a corporate  executive  restructure he became President and
Chief  Technology  Officer October 15, 2004.  James Hudson has served as interim
President  since March 18, 2004 and will continue as interim CEO and Secretary /
Treasurer  from August  15th  forward.  Hudson  will not receive any  additional
compensation  from  the  Company  for his  services  with the  exception  of his
participation  in the Stock  Option  Plan.  Mr.  Russell  has signed a five-year
employment  agreement which will start upon  commencement of full R&D operations
and he has  received  a monthly  compensation  of $5,000  from  April 1, 2004 to
September 1, 2004 which will  increase to $7,500  monthly  beginning  October 1,
2004 until the full employment  contract provisions begin. The contract provides
that the employment can terminate  upon:  death or  disability,  for cause:  for
failure to comply with the terms of the agreement,  or at any time by company or
employee upon 30 days written notice.  This employment  agreement is attached as
an exhibit hereto.

The  Company is  currently  in  negotiations  with Mr. Ted Russell to revise his
current employment contract to represent his new focus as President and CTO. The
Company is  considering  replacing  the  current  stock  option  plan with a new
Special  Inventor  Warrant,  which would  provide Mr.  Russell with  warrants to
purchase  4,000,000  shares  of stock  exercisable  at $1.00  per  share.  These
warrants  will  immediately  100% vest upon  final  delivery  of an FDA  cleared
(approved) product including CNBP and Blood Flow Technologies.


                                       23



STOCK OPTION PLANS

         On September 30, 2004,  our  shareholders  adopted a stock option plan,
under which an aggregate  of  5,000,000  shares of common stock are reserved for
issuance pursuant to the exercise of stock options. These options may be granted
to our employees,  officers, directors, and consultants. We may also make awards
of  restricted  stock  under  this  plan.  Shares  issued  under  this  plan are
"restricted"  in the sense  that they are  subject to  repurchase  by us at cost
during the vesting period.

         The  plan  is  designed  to (i)  induce  qualified  persons  to  become
employees,  officers,  or  directors  of us; (ii)  reward such  persons for past
services  to us;  (iii)  encourage  such  persons  to  remain  in our  employ or
associated  with us; and (iv) provide  additional  incentive for such persons to
put forth maximum  efforts for the success of our business.  Transactions  under
the plan are  intended  to  comply  with all  applicable  provisions  under  the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. This plan will remain in effect until September
30, 2014, unless soon terminated by the Board of Directors.

         Our board of directors administers the plan and determines:

    o    who will be granted options or awards;
    o    when options or awards will be granted;
    o    the number of options or shares to be granted;
    o    which  options may be intended to qualify as  incentive  stock  options
         under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, versus  non-qualified  options
         which are not intended to so qualify;
    o    the time or times when each option becomes exercisable;
    o    the duration of the exercise period for options;
    o    the  form  or forms of the  instruments  evidencing  options  or awards
         granted under the plan; 
    o    the purchase price of the shares issued under the plan; 
    o    the  period  or periods  of  time during  which we will have a right to
         repurchase the shares; and 
    o    the terms and conditions of such repurchase.

         The board may adopt,  amend,  and rescind such rules and regulations as
in its opinion may be advisable for the administration of the plan. It may amend
the plan without  shareholder  approval  where such  approval is not required to
satisfy any  statutory or regulatory  requirements.  The board also may construe
the plan and the provisions in the instruments  evidencing options granted under
the plan to employee and officer  participants.  The board has the power to make
all other determinations deemed necessary or advisable for the administration of
the plan.  The board may not  adversely  affect  the  rights of any  participant
without the consent of such participant.

         The plan contains provisions for proportionate adjustment of the number
of shares for outstanding options and the option price per share in the event of
stock dividends,  recapitalizations resulting in stock splits or combinations or
exchanges of shares.

         The board  may  select  participants  in the plan  from  employees  and
officers of us and our subsidiaries and consultants to us and our  subsidiaries.
In  determining  the persons to whom  options and awards will be granted and the
number of shares to be covered by each option,  the board will take into account
the duties of the respective persons, their present and potential  contributions
to our success, and such other factors as the board deems relevant to accomplish
the purposes of the plan.

         STOCK OPTIONS.  Only employees of us and our subsidiaries,  as the term
"employee"  is defined for the  purposes of the  Internal  Revenue  Code will be
entitled to receive  incentive stock options.  The option price of any incentive
stock option may be not less than 100% of the fair market value per share on the
date of grant of the option; provided,  however, that any incentive stock option
granted  under the plan to a person  owning  more than ten  percent of the total
combined  voting power of the common stock will have an option price of not less
than  110% of the  fair  market  value  per  share  on the  date of grant of the
incentive  stock option.  The exercise  period of options granted under the plan
may not exceed ten years from the date of grant thereof. Incentive stock options
granted to a person  owning more than ten percent 



                                       24




of the total combined  voting power of our common stock will be for no more than
five years. Except in the case of options granted to disinterested directors who
administer  the plan,  the board will have the authority to accelerate or extend
the  exercisability  of any  outstanding  option  at such  time and  under  such
circumstances  as it, in its sole discretion,  deems  appropriate.  However,  no
exercise  period may be extended to increase  the term of the option  beyond ten
years from the date of the grant.

         An option may not be exercised unless the optionee then is an employee,
officer,  or consultant of us or our  subsidiaries,  and unless the optionee has
remained  continuously as an employee,  officer, or consultant since the date of
grant of the option.  If the  optionee  ceases to be an  employee,  officer,  or
consultant other than by reason of death, disability,  or for cause, all options
granted to such  optionee,  fully vested to such optionee but not yet exercised,
will  terminate  three  months  after  the date  the  optionee  ceases  to be an
employee, officer or consultant. All options that are not vested to an optionee,
under the conditions stated in this paragraph for which employment ceases,  will
immediately terminate on the date the optionee ceases employment or association.

         If an optionee dies while an employee, officer or consultant, or if the
optionee's  employment,  officer,  or consultant  status terminates by reason of
disability,  all options  theretofore  granted to such optionee,  whether or not
otherwise exercisable, unless earlier terminated in accordance with their terms,
may be  exercised  at any  time  within  one  year  after  the  date of death or
disability of said optionee, by the optionee or by the optionee's estate or by a
person who acquired the right to exercise such options by bequest or inheritance
or otherwise by reason of the death or disability of the optionee.

         Options granted under the plan are not transferable  other than by will
or by the laws of descent and  distribution or pursuant to a qualified  domestic
relations order. Options may be exercised,  during the lifetime of the optionee,
only by the  optionee  and  thereafter  only  by his  legal  representative.  An
optionee has no rights as a shareholder with respect to any shares covered by an
option until the option has been exercised.

         Unless otherwise specified in an optionee's agreement,  options granted
under the plan will  become  vested  with the  optionee  over the course of four
years  from  date of grant  under  the  following  schedule:  25% upon the first
anniversary of the option grant and the remaining 75% monthly over the following
36 months.

         RESTRICTED STOCK AWARDS. Shares issued under the plan will be evidenced
by a written restricted stock purchase agreement between us and the participant.
Shares issued under the plan are transferable  only if the transferee  agrees to
be bound by all of the terms of the plan,  including our right to repurchase the
shares,  and only if such  transfer  is  permissible  under  federal  and  state
securities  laws. To facilitate the enforcement of the restrictions on transfer,
the board may require the holder of the shares to deliver the certificate(s) for
such shares to be held in escrow during the period of restriction.

         OUTSTANDING  OPTIONS.  As  of  September 30, 2004  there  were  200,000
options granted under this plan.









                                       25




ITEM 7.  CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS.

         Other than as disclosed below, none of our present directors,  officers
or principal shareholders,  nor any family member of the foregoing,  nor, to the
best of our information and belief, any of our former directors, senior officers
or  principal  shareholders,  nor any family  member of such  former  directors,
officers or principal shareholders,  has or had any material interest, direct or
indirect,  in  any  transaction,  or  in  any  proposed  transaction  which  has
materially affected or will materially affect us.

         The company currently has its headquarters  operations in Santa Monica,
California by subleasing office space from Diamond  WorldWide,  Inc. Term of the
lease is month to month and the rent is $250 per month  and  started  on July 1,
2004. Diamond WorldWide,  Inc. holds the long term debt notes for $350,000 along
with other short term  advances to the Company.  As of June 30, 2004, a total of
$405,800  was owed to Diamond  WorldWide,  Inc. in both long term and short term
debt.

         As per the terms of Agreement for the Purchase of Assets there were two
royalties payable by the Company to SolutionMED  Ventures of 1.2% and CNPB, Inc.
(owned by the  inventor,  Ted  Russell  and his  spouse) of 2.2% on all  product
revenues  related to  HEARTSTAT  Technology.  SolutionMED  Ventures is a related
company.

         G.K.  Krause through the eAngels  Syndicate is the beneficial  owner of
15,000,000 shares through the investment funds; SolutionMed Ventures, FutureVest
MicroCap Fund, eAngels Technology Fund and Diamond Ventures.

          As of June 30, 2004,  accounts  payable of $49,741 of which $40,000 is
due to a Diamond  Services a  division  of Diamond  WorldWide,  Inc.  for audit,
consulting and legal fees. This amount is described on Note G in the year ending
financial  statements.  G.K.  Krause from 2002 to August 2004 was an officer and
director of Diamond WorldWide, Inc.

         Concurrent with the Companies  acquisition of the HeartSTAT technology,
the Company  entered into a  Commercialization  Partnership  agreement  with Ted
Russell where Mr. Russell could exclusively  license in perpetuity the HEARTSTAT
Technology for the purpose of financing and concluding product commercialization
activities if the Company (HEARTSTAT Technology,  Inc.) were to fail to raise at
least  $2,500,000 of net proceeds for product  development  by September 6, 2005
with an  allowance  that the Company has a 90-day  period to cure the  financing
inadequacy to prevent the license from being effected.  The terms of the license
would include a provision that Mr. Russell,  or an independent entity will repay
the Company for any actual investment capital received at the rate of 20% of any
net income of Mr.  Russell's  independent  commercial  operations  of  producing
derivative  products using the HEARTSTAT  Technology.  In addition,  the Company
would receive a royalty on net revenues of such derivative products as follows:

         1.   A  royalty  equal to 3% of net revenues if at lest $1.3 million of
              investment capital was received
         2.   A royalty equal to 2% of net  revenues  if at least  $650,000  but
              less than $1.3 million of investment capital was received, or
         3.   A royalty equal to 1% of  net  revenues if  less than  $650,000 of
              investment capital was received.

         * Exhibit B disclosing  all terms and  conditions to of this  exclusive
license is attached as part of the Agreement for the Purchase of Assets.


ITEM 8.           DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES

         The company currently has the following stock structure:

         1.   80,000,000 common voting shares authorized.
         2.   5,000,000  preferred  convertible  shares with the conversion rate
              left to be determined by the board of directors upon issuance.  To
              date there are no preferred shares issued in the corporation.


                                       26



                                     PART II

ITEM 1.  MARKET  PRICE  OF  AND  DIVIDENDS ON THE REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND
         RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS.

         Our common  stock has been trading on the  over-the-counter  pink sheet
("Pink  Sheets")  under the symbol "HSTA"  effective  March 1, 2004.  The common
stock was first listed on June 9, 1998 under the symbol  "PUBS" and traded under
that symbol until April 5, 1999. From April 6, 1999 to August 9, 1999, the stock
traded  under the symbol  "CIIT".  From August 10, 1999 to November 27, 2000 the
stock traded under the symbol  "TMDN" and from November 28, 2000 to February 29,
2004 the stock traded under the symbol of "TECF". The following table sets forth
the range of high and low bid  quotations  for each fiscal  quarter for the last
two fiscal years.  These quotations reflect  inter-dealer  prices without retail
mark-up,  mark-down,  or commissions  and may not necessarily  represent  actual
transactions.


         FISCAL QUARTER ENDING                      HIGH BID          LOW BID

         March 31, 2002.........................    $   0.01         $   0.01
         June 30, 2002..........................    $   0.03         $   0.03
         September 30, 2002.....................    $   0.005        $   0.005
         December 31, 2002......................    $   0.005        $   0.005
         March 31, 2003.........................    $   0.01         $   0.01
         June 30, 2003..........................    $   0.01         $   0.01
         September 30, 2003.....................    $   0.01         $   0.01
         December 31, 2003......................    $   0.01         $   0.01
         March 31, 2004.........................    $   0.60         $   0.60
         June 30, 2004..........................    $   0.70         $   0.70
         September, 2004........................    $   0.80         $   0.80

         On  October 15, 2004, the closing price for the common stock was $0.60

         As of October  15,  2004,  there were 939 record  holders of our common
stock.  Since our inception,  no cash dividends have been declared on our common
stock.


ITEM 2.  LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.

         HEARTSTAT  is not a party to, and its  property  is not the subject of,
any pending legal proceedings.


ITEM 3.  CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS

         Bongiovanni & Associates was appointed as our principal  accountants as
of March 15,  2004.  On August 10,  2004,  our Board of  Directors  approved the
engagement of Bongiovanni & Associates to audit the financial statements for the
fiscal year ended  December 31, 2002 and December 31, 2003.  During the two most
recent fiscal years and the subsequent interim period,  neither we nor anyone on
our behalf  consulted  Bongiovanni  & Associates  regarding the  application  of
accounting  principles to a specific completed or contemplated  transaction,  or
the type of audit opinion that might be rendered on our financial statements.

         On August 10, 2004 the new board of directors authorized  Bongiovanni &
Associates  to continue to  represent  HEARTSTAT  Technology,  Inc. for 2004 and
review the six month statements ending June 30, 2004.

         Prior to the engagement of  Bongiovanni  and Associates the company did
not have an independent auditor of record.

                                       27


ITEM 4.  RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES

         On March 18, 2004, we issued  38,000,000  shares of our common stock to
acquire the HEARTSTAT  Technology which included the patents and assets intended
for launching a product line of hospital  devices for  monitoring  patient blood
flow,  perfusion,  and other  cardiovascular  and heart values.  The  technology
system is noninvasive and operates  continuously on a heart beat-by-beat  basis.
It works with a simple disposable  single-patient-use sensor that has advantages
for patient safety.  The system also monitors the patient's blood pressure (BP).
We relied upon the exemption from registration  contained in Section 4(2) of the
Securities  Act of 1933.  The interest  holders were deemed to be  sophisticated
with  respect  to the  investment  in the  securities  due  to  their  financial
wherewithal and involvement in the Company's business.  Restrictive legends were
placed  on  the  stock   certificates   evidencing  the  securities  issued.  No
underwriters were involved in the transaction.


ITEM 5.  INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

         Section 145 of the Delaware General  Corporation Law, Article VI of the
our corporate bylaws and certificate of incorporation permit us to indemnify our
officers and directors and certain other persons against  expenses in defense of
a suit to which  they are  parties  by  reason  of such  office,  so long as the
persons conducted  themselves in good faith and the persons reasonably  believed
that  their  conduct  was in our  best  interests  or not  opposed  to our  best
interests,  and with  respect  to any  criminal  action  or  proceeding,  had no
reasonable cause to believe their conduct was unlawful.  Indemnification  is not
permitted in connection  with a proceeding by or in the right of the corporation
in which the officer or director was adjudged  liable to the  corporation  or in
connection  with any other  proceeding  charging  that the  officer or  director
derived an improper  personal  benefit,  whether or not  involving  action in an
official capacity.



                                    PART F/S

See Audited Financial  Statements for 2 years ending December 31, 2003 beginning
with page F-1.

See UnAudited Financial Statements for six months ending June 30, 2004 beginning
with page FF-1

















                                       28


                                    PART III

ITEM 1.           INDEX TO EXHIBITS.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    REGULATION
    S-B NUMBER                       EXHIBIT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       2.1          Certificate of Incorporation, as amended
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       2.2          Bylaws
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       6.1          Agreement for the Purchase of Assets with the Interest
                    holders of the HEARTSTAT Technology
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       6.2          Employment Agreement of Ted Russell
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       6.3          2004 Stock Option Plan
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       6.4          SolutionMed Ventures Royalty Agreement
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
       6.5          CNBP, Inc. Royalty Agreement
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




                                   SIGNATURES

         Pursuant to the  requirements of Section 12 of the Securities  Exchange
Act of 1934, the registrant  has duly caused this  registration  statement to be
signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

                                       HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.



Date:  October 18, 2004                By:  /s/ JAMES R. HUDSON
     ---------------------                --------------------------------------
                                                James R. Hudson, CEO










                                       29
















                                  ------------

                          AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)

                                DECEMBER 31, 2003

                                  ------------























                                           BONGIOVANNI & ASSOCIATES
                                           CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

                                      F-1


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS


                                                                        PAGE(S)

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS                        F-3

AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS:

        Balance Sheet                                                     F-4

        Statements of Operations                                          F-5

        Statement of Stockholders' Deficit                                F-6

        Statements of Cash Flows                                          F-7

        Notes to Audited Financial Statements                           F-8-F-15














                                      F-2




BONGIOVANNI & ASSOCIATES
CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
                                                17111 Kenton Drive - Suite 204-B
                                                 Cornelius, North Carolina 28031
================================================================================

To the Board of Directors and Stockholders:
HeartSTAT Technology, Inc.
FKA Tec Factory, Inc.
3753 Howard Hughes Parkway
Suite 200
Las Vegas, Nevada 89109

We have audited the  accompanying  balance sheet of HeartSTAT  Technology,  Inc.
(FKA Tec Factory, Inc.) (a Delaware corporation) as of December 31, 2003 and the
related statements of operations,  stockholders' deficit, and cash flows for the
years ended  December  31, 2003 and 2002.  These  financial  statements  are the
responsibility of the Company's management.  Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance  with the standards of the Public  Company
Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan
and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free from material misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on
a test basis,  evidence  supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial
statements.  An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and
significant  estimates  made by  management,  as well as evaluating  the overall
financial  statement  presentation.   We  believe  that  our  audits  provide  a
reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion,  the balance sheet  referred to above  presents  fairly,  in all
material respects, the financial position of HeartSTAT Technology, Inc. (FKA Tec
Factory, Inc.) as of December 31, 2003 and the results of its operations and its
cash  flows for the year  ended  December  31,  2003,  in  conformity  with U.S.
generally accepted accounting principles.

The accompanying  financial  statements have been prepared  assuming the Company
will continue as a going concern.  The Company has suffered recurring losses and
has yet to generate an internal  cash flow that raises  substantial  doubt about
its  ability to  continue as a going  concern.  Management's  plans in regard to
these matters are  described in Note D. The financial  statements do not include
any adjustments that might result from the outcome of this uncertainty.


March 15, 2004


                                     /s/ BONGIOVANNI & ASSOCIATES



                                       F-3

                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                            (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                                  BALANCE SHEET
                               AT DECEMBER 31,2003
================================================================================


                                     ASSETS



                                                                                

CURRENT ASSETS
   Cash                                                                         $          -
                                                                                ---------------
        TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS                                                               -
                                                                                ---------------

        TOTAL ASSETS                                                            $          -
                                                                                ===============

                      LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT

CURRENT LIABILITIES
   Accounts Payable and Accrued Expenses                                        $       42,000
                                                                                ---------------
        TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES                                                       42,000
                                                                                ---------------

STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
   Common Stock (80,000,000 shares authorized, 10,402,887
     shares issued and outstanding, par value $.001)                                    10,403
   Convertible Preferred Stock (5,000,000 shares authorized, no
     shares issued and outstanding, par value $.001)                                       -
   Retained Deficit                                                                    (52,403)
                                                                                ---------------
        TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT                                                    (42,000)
                                                                                ---------------

        TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT                             $          -
                                                                                ================









         See notes to audited financial statements and auditors' report

                                      F-4


                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                            STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                  FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,2003 AND 2002






                                                            2003               2002
                                                        ------------       ------------
                                                                     
REVENUES: 
Sales                                                   $       -          $       -
Cost of sales                                                   -                  -
                                                        ------------       ------------
            GROSS PROFIT                                        -                  -

OPERATING EXPENSES:
    General and Administrative                               21,000             21,000
                                                        ------------       ------------
                TOTAL EXPENSES                               21,000             21,000
                                                        ------------       ------------

                  OPERATING LOSS                            (21,000)           (21,000)
                                                        ------------       ------------

                  NET LOSS                              $   (21,000)       $   (21,000)
                                                        ============       ============

Basic and Fully Diluted Loss per Share                  $    (0.002)       $    (0.002)
                                                        ============       ============

Weighted Average Shares Outstanding                      10,402,887         10,402,887
                                                        ============       ============













         See notes to audited financial statements and auditors' report

                                      F-5



                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                       STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
                  FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,2003 AND 2002






                                                                Additional
                                     Common         Common        Paid in       Retained
                                      Stock         Shares        Capital        Deficit
                                   ------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          
Balance, January 1, 2002            $ 10,403      10,402,887   $        -      $ (10,403)

Net loss for year                        -               -              -        (21,000)
                                   ------------------------------------------------------

Balances, December 31, 2002           10,403      10,402,887            -        (31,403)

Net loss for year                        -               -              -        (21,000)
                                   ------------------------------------------------------

Balances, December 31, 2003         $ 10,403      10,402,887   $        -      $ (52,403)
                                   ======================================================




         See notes to audited financial statements and auditors' report

                                      F-6




                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                            STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31,2003 AND 2002
================================================================================




                                                                    2003            2002
                                                                ------------     ------------
                                                                           
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES:
   Net loss                                                     $   (21,000)     $   (21,000)
   Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net
     cash used in operating activities: 
        Increase in operating liabilities:
           Accounts payable and accrued expenses                     21,000           21,000
                                                                ------------     ------------
           NET CASH USED IN OPERATING ACTIVITIES                        -                -
                                                                ------------     ------------

           NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH AND 
           CASH EQUIVALENTS                                             -                -
                                                                ------------     ------------
CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS: 
           Beginning of year                                            -                -
                                                                ------------     ------------
           End of year                                          $       -        $       -
                                                                ============     ============













         See notes to audited financial statements and auditors' report

                                      F-7



                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                      NOTES TO AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2003 AND 2002
================================================================================

NOTE A - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

BACKGROUND - HeartSTAT  Technology,  Inc. (FKA Tec Factory,  Inc.) (the Company)
was  organized  under the laws of the State of Delaware on October 12, 1995 as a
corporation.  The original name of the Company was Hospital Software of America,
Inc. On February 13,  2004,  the Company  legally  changed its name to HeartSTAT
Technology,  Inc. via a Certificate of Amendment of Certificate of Incorporation
as filed with the State of Delaware.  On February 6, 2004,  the Company  entered
into an  Agreement  for the  Purchase of Assets with the  interest  holders of a
medical  technology for the non invasive  monitoring of blood pressure and blood
flow and related  assets.  Pursuant to the agreement,  38,000,000  shares of the
Company's  common  stock were issued in  exchange  for 100%  ownership  of these
assets and  technology.  The  objective  of the  purchase was for the Company to
enter into the field of  non-invasive  monitoring  of blood  pressure  and blood
flow.

The Company has previously operated as a blank check company with no revenues.

BASIS OF  PRESENTATION - The financial  statements  included  herein include the
accounts of HeartSTAT  Technology,  Inc. (FKA Tec Factory,  Inc.) prepared under
the accrual basis of accounting.

MANAGEMENT'S  USE OF  ESTIMATES - The  preparation  of financial  statements  in
conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of
America  requires  management to make estimates and assumptions  that effect the
reported amounts of assets and liabilities, disclosures of contingent assets and
liabilities at the date of the financial  statements and the reported amounts of
revenues and expenses during the reporting  period.  Actual results could differ
from those estimates.

CASH AND CASH  EQUIVALENTS - For purposes of the  Statements of Cash Flows,  the
Company  considers liquid  investments with an original maturity of three months
or less to be cash equivalents.

FAIR  VALUE  OF  FINANCIAL  INSTRUMENTS  - The  carrying  amounts  of  financial
instruments  including  accounts payable and accrued expenses  approximated fair
value because of the immediate short-term maturity of these instruments.






                                      F-8


                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                      NOTES TO AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2003 AND 2002
================================================================================

NOTE A - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONT')

INCOME TAXES - Income  taxes are  provided  for the tax effects of  transactions
reported in the  financial  statements  and consist of  deferred  taxes  related
primarily to differences between the basis of certain assets and liabilities for
financial  and tax reporting and net  operating  loss-carry  forwards.  Deferred
taxes represent the future tax return  consequences of those differences,  which
will  either be  taxable or  deductible  when the  assets  and  liabilities  are
recovered or settled.

The  income  tax  benefit  consists  of taxes  currently  refundable  due to net
operating loss carry back provisions for federal and state governments. Deferred
tax  assets  are  reduced  by a  valuation  allowance  when,  in the  opinion of
management,  it is more likely than not that some portion or the entire deferred
tax asset will not be realized. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are adjusted
for the effect of changes in tax laws and rates on the date of enactment.

LOSS PER SHARE - The Company  reports  earnings  (loss) per share in  accordance
with Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standard (SFAS) No.128.  This statement
requires  dual  presentation  of  basic  and  diluted  earnings  (loss)  with  a
reconciliation   of  the  numerator  and  denominator  of  the  loss  per  share
computations. Basic earnings per share amounts are based on the weighted average
shares of common  outstanding.  If applicable,  diluted earnings per share would
assume the  conversion,  exercise  or  issuance of all  potential  common  stock
instruments  such as options,  warrants and convertible  securities,  unless the
effect is to reduce a loss or increase  earnings  per share.  Accordingly,  this
presentation  has  been  adopted  for  the  period  presented.   There  were  no
adjustments  required to net loss for the period presented in the computation of
diluted earnings per share.

COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS) - The Company adopted Financial Accounting Standards
Board  Statement  of  Financial   Accounting   Standards  No.  130,   "REPORTING
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME", which establishes standards for the reporting and display
of comprehensive  income and its components in the financial  statements.  There
were no items of  comprehensive  income (loss)  applicable to the Company during
the years covered in the financial statements.






                                      F-9


                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                      NOTES TO AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2003 AND 2002
================================================================================

NOTE A - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONT')

RECENT  ACCOUNTING  PRONOUNCEMENTS  - In June 2001,  the Financial  Board issued
Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards ("SFAS") No. 143,  "Accounting for
Asset Retirement  Obligations"  which addresses the accounting and reporting for
obligations associated with the retirement of tangible long-lived assets and the
associated  retirement  costs.  SFAS No. 143  requires  that the fair value of a
liability  for an asset  retirement  obligation  be  recognized in the period in
which it is incurred if a reasonable estimate of fair value cannot be made. SFAS
No. 143 is effective for financial  statements issued for fiscal years beginning
after June 15, 2002. The Company does not expect SFAS No. 143 to have a material
effect on its financial condition or cash flows.

In April of 2002,  Statement of Financial  Accounting Standards ("SFAS") No. 145
was issued which  rescinded SFAS Statements No. 4, 44 and 64, amended No. 13 and
contained technical  corrections.  As a result of SFAS No. 145, gains and losses
from  extinguishments of debt will be classified as extraordinary  items only if
they  meet the  criteria  in APB  Opinion  No.  30,  that they are  unusual  and
infrequent and not part of an entity's  recurring  operations.  The Company does
not expect SFAS No. 145 to have a material effect on its financial  condition or
cash flows. The Company will adopt SFAS 145 on January 1, 2004.

In July 2002,  the FASB  issued SFAS 146,  which  addresses  significant  issues
regarding  the  recognition,  measurement,  and  reporting  of  costs  that  are
associated with exit and disposal activities, including restructuring activities
that are  currently  accounted  for pursuant to the  guidance  that the Emerging
Issues  Task Force  ("EITF")  has set forth in EITF Issue No.  94-3,  "Liability
Recognition for Certain Employee Termination Benefits and Other Costs to Exit an
Activity  (Including  Certain  Costs  Incurred  in a  Restructuring)".  SFAS 146
revises  the  accounting  for  certain  lease  termination  costs  and  employee
termination  benefits,   which  are  generally  recognized  in  connection  with
restructuring  charges.  The  provisions  of SFAS 146 are  effective for exit or
disposal activities that are initiated after December 31, 2002. The Company does
not expect SFAS 146 to have an impact its financial  statements  once adopted on
January 1, 2004.








                                      F-10


                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                      NOTES TO AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2003 AND 2002
================================================================================

NOTE A - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONT')

RECENT  ACCOUNTING  PRONOUNCEMENTS  (CONT.) - In November  2002, the FASB issued
Interpretation  No.  45  ("FIN  45"),  "Guarantor's  Accounting  and  Disclosure
Requirements  for Guarantee,  Including  Indirect  Guarantees or Indebtedness of
Others",  which  addresses  the  disclosures  to be made by a  guarantor  in its
interim and annual financial  statements about its obligations under guarantees.
FIN 45 also  requires  the  recognition  of a liability  by a  guarantor  at the
inception of certain guarantees that are entered into or modified after December
31, 2002.

In December  2002,  the FASB issued SFAS No. 148,  "Accounting  for  Stock-Based
Compensation  - Transition and Disclosure - an amendment to SFAS No. 123" ("SFAS
No.  148"),  which  provides  alternative  methods of  transition  for companies
voluntarily  planning on implementing the fair value  recognition  provisions of
SFAS No. 123.  SFAS No. 148 also revises the  disclosure  provisions of SFAS No.
123 to  require  more  promineI1t  disclosure  of the method of  accounting  for
stock-based  compensation,  and requiring disclosure of pro forma net income and
earnings per share as if the fair value  recognition  provisions of SFAS No. 123
had been applied from the original  effective  date of SFAS No. 123. The Company
adopted the disclosure  provisions of SFAS No. 148 for the quarters ending after
December 15, 2002.

In January 2003, the FASB issued FIN No. 46, "Consolidation of Variable Interest
Entities". FIN No. 46 requires the consolidation of entities that cannot finance
their  activities  without  the support of other  parties and that lack  certain
characteristics of a controlling interest, such as the ability to make decisions
about the entity's  activities via voting rights or similar  rights.  The entity
that consolidates the variable interest entity is the primary beneficiary of the
entity's  activities.  FIN No.  46  applies  immediately  to  variable  interest
entities created after January 31, 2003, and must be applied in the first period
beginning  after  June  15,2003  for  entities  in which an  enterprise  holds a
variable  interest  entity that it acquired before February 1, 2003. The Company
plans to adopt this Interpretation in the first quarter of fiscal 2004.

In January 2003, the EITF released  Issue No. 00-21,  ("EITF  00-21"),  "Revenue
Arrangements with Multiple  Deliveries",  which addressed certain aspects of the
accounting  by a vendor for  arrangement  under which it will  perform  multiple
revenue-generating  activities.  Specifically,  EITF 00-21 addresses  whether an
arrangement  contains more than one unit of accounting and the  measurement  and
allocation to the separate units of accounting in the arrangement. EITF 00-21 is
effective  for revenue  arrangements  entered into in fiscal  periods  beginning
after June 15, 2003.  The adoption of this  standard  will not have an impact on
the Company's financial statements. 

                                      F-11


                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                      NOTES TO AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2003 AND 2002
================================================================================

NOTE A - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONT')

RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS (CONT.) - In May 2003, the FASB issued SFAS No.
149,  "Amendment  of  Statement  133  on  Derivative   Instruments  and  Hedging
Activities."  SFAS No.  149  amends  and  clarifies  accounting  for  derivative
instruments,   including  certain  derivative   instruments  embedded  in  other
contracts,  and for  hedging  activities  under  SFAS No.  133.  SFAS No. 149 is
effective  for  contracts  entered into or modified  after June 30, 2003 and for
hedging  relationships  designated  after June 30,  2003.  The Company  does not
believe that there will be any impact on its financial statements.

In May 2003,  the FASB issued SFAS No. 150,  "Accounting  for Certain  Financial
Instruments with  Characteristics  of both Liabilities and Equity." SFAS No. 150
establishes  standards for how companies  classify and measure certain financial
instruments with  characteristics  of both  liabilities and equity.  It requires
companies  to  classify  a  financial  instrument  that is within its scope as a
liability  (or an asset in some  circumstances).  SFAS No. 150 is effective  for
financial  instruments entered into or modified after May 31, 2003. The standard
will not impact the Company's financial statements.

NOTE B - SUPPLEMENTAL CASH FLOW INFORMATION

Supplemental  disclosures of cash flow  information for the years ended December
31, 2003 and 2002 is summarized as follows:

Cash paid during the periods for interest and income taxes:

                                          2003             2002
                                        --------         --------
         Income Taxes                   $   --           $   --
         Interest                       $   --           $   --


NOTE C - INCOME TAXES

The Company has  approximately  $42,000 of net operating  losses  available that
expire in various years through the year 2023.






                                      F-12



                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                      NOTES TO AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2003 AND 2002
================================================================================

NOTE C - INCOME TAXES (CONT.)

Due to  operating  losses and the  inability  to recognize an income tax benefit
there from,  there is no provision for current federal or state income taxes for
the years ended December 31, 2003 and 2002.

Deferred  income  taxes  reflect  the net tax effects of  temporary  differences
between the carrying  amounts of assets and liabilities for financial  reporting
purposes and the amount used for federal and state income tax purposes.

The Company's  deferred tax asset at December 31, 2003 consists of net operating
loss carry  forwards  calculated  using  federal and state  effective  tax rates
equating to  approximately  $14,000 less a valuation  allowance in the amount of
approximately  $14,000  respectively.  Because of the Company's lack of earnings
history,  the deferred tax asset has been fully offset by a valuation allowance.
The valuation  allowance  increased by  approximately  $7,000 and $7,000 for the
years ended December 31, 2003 and 2002.

The Company's total deferred tax asset as of December 31, 2003 is as follows:

         Net operating loss carry forwards           $   14,000
         Valuation allowance                            (14,000)
                                                     -----------
           Net deferred tax asset                    $       --
                                                     ===========  

The  reconciliation of income taxes computed at the federal statutory income tax
rate to total income taxes for the years ended  December 31, 2003 and 2002 is as
follows:

                                                          2003          2002
                                                        --------      --------
  Income tax computed at the federal statutory rate        34%           34% 
  State income taxes, net of federal tax benefit           -0-%          -0-%
                                                        --------      --------
  Valuation allowance                                     (34%)         (34%)
                                                        --------      --------
  Net deferred tax asset                                   -0-%          -0-%
                                                        ========      ========









                                      F-13

                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                      NOTES TO AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2003 AND 2002
================================================================================

NOTE D - GOING CONCERN

As shown in the  accompanying  financial  statements,  the Company has  suffered
recurring  losses from operations to date. It experienced  losses of $21,000 and
$21,000  during 2003 and 2002,  had a net  deficiency in equity of $42,000 and a
net working  capital  deficit of $42,000 as of December 31, 2003.  These factors
raise  substantial  doubt  about the  Company's  ability to  continue as a going
concern.

Management's plans in regard to this matter are to raise equity capital and seek
strategic relationships and alliances in order to increase sales in an effort to
generate  positive  cash flow.  Additionally,  the Company must continue to rely
upon equity  infusions from investors in order to improve  liquidity and sustain
operations.  The financial  statements do not include any adjustments that might
result from the outcome of this uncertainty.

NOTE E - SEGMENT REPORTING

Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 131, "DISCLOSURES ABOUT SEGMENTS
OF  AN  ENTERPRISE  AND  RELATED  INFORMATION"   requires  companies  to  report
information about operating segments in interim and annual financial statements.
It also requires  segment  disclosures  about products and services,  geographic
areas and  major  customers.  The  Company  determined  that it did not have any
separately reportable operating segments as of December 31, 2003.

NOTE  F - COMMITTMENTS

Pursuant to the aforementioned Agreement for the Purchase of Assets, the Company
is committed to 2.2% and 1.2% gross royalty  payments to other  entities.  These
percentages  are based on total net  revenues  (net of product  returns) and any
third party license royalties per each of the agreements.

The Company is also  committed  to an  employment  agreement  with its  officer.
Pursuant to the  employment  agreement,  the Company is  committed to paying its
officer  a base  salary  of  $150,000  per  annum  only in the  event it  raises
$750,000.  Until this event  occurs,  the Company is  obligated to pay a monthly
consulting  fee to this  individual of $5,000 through  September 30, 2004.  This
amount  increases  to  $7,500  per month on  October  1,  2004.  The term of the
agreement is five years. Also, by the seventy-fifth day of each new fiscal year,
the employee  shall be granted a ten year stock  option  based on the  Company's
profit  performance for the prior fiscal accounting year. The option is computed
based on a number of  factors  including  the  Company's  income  before  taxes,
provided that such pre-tax income exceeds $250,000.

                                      F-14



                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                      NOTES TO AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2003 AND 2002
================================================================================

NOTE  G - RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

Included in accounts payable in the  accompanying  balance sheet at December 31,
2003 is a $40,000 payable to Diamond  Services a division of Diamond  WorldWide,
Inc.

NOTE  H - SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

Subsequent to year-end,  the Company acquired 100% of the medical technology for
the non invasive  monitoring of blood pressure and blood flow and related assets
from certain interest  holders.  38,000,000 shares of the Company's common stock
were issued in exchange for 100% ownership of these assets and technology.

The  Company  also  changed  its  name  from  Tec  Factory,  Inc.  to  HeartSTAT
Technology, Inc. to better reflect the nature of its operations.

Subsequent   to  year-end,   the  Company   legally   amended  its  Articles  of
Incorporation to increase the number of authorized common shares from 25,000,000
to 80,000,000. The par value of $.001 remained the same.

Subsequent  to  year-end,  the Company  also  legally  amended  its  Articles of
Incorporation to authorize 5,000,000  convertible preferred shares. These shares
have a par value of $.001. The ratio of  convertibility  has not been determined
by the Company yet.



















                                      F-15



                                  ------------

                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)

                                  JUNE 30, 2004

                                  ------------


























                                                   BONGIOVANNI & ASSOCIATES
                                                  CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

                                      FF-1


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS



                                                                      PAGE(S)

INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS:

        Balance Sheet                                                   FF-3

        Statements of Operations                                        FF-4

        Statements of Cash Flows                                        FF-5

        Notes to Unaudited Financial Statements                      FF-6-FF-8

















                                      FF-2




                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                            (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                                  Balance Sheet
                           AT JUNE 30,2004 (UNAUDITED)
================================================================================

                                   ASSETS


                                                                             
CURRENT ASSETS
   Cash                                                                         $           -
                                                                                ----------------
         TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS                                                               -

OTHER ASSETS
   Goodwill                                                                             408,000
                                                                                ----------------
                                                                                        408,000
                                                                                ----------------

         TOTAL ASSETS                                                           $       408,000
                                                                                ================
                 LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT

CURRENT LIABILITIES
   Accounts Payable and Accrued Expenses                                        $        19,088
   Current Portion of Notes Payable
   Other Trade Payables - Related Parties                                                39,741
                                                                                ----------------
         TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES                                                       58,829
                                                                                ----------------

LONG TERM LIABILITIES
   Long Term Notes Payable - Related Parties                                            400,000
                                                                                ----------------
         TOTAL LONG TERM LIABILITIES                                                    400,000

STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
   Common Stock (80,000,000 shares authorized, 48,402,887
     shares issued and outstanding, par value $.001)                                     48,403
   Convertible Preferred Stock (5,000,000 shares authorized, no
     shares issued and outstanding, par value $.001)
   Retained Deficit                                                                     (99,232)
                                                                                ----------------
         TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT                                                    (50,829)
                                                                                ----------------

         TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT                            $       408,000
                                                                                ================







                                      FF-3




                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                            (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                            STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
      FOR THE THREE AND SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30,2004 AND 2003 (UNAUDITED)
================================================================================



                                                  3 Months           6 Months           3 Months           6 Months
                                                    Ended              Ended              Ended              Ended
                                                JUNE 30,2004       JUNE 30, 2004      JUNE 30, 2003      JUNE 30, 2003
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                          
REVENUES:
   Sales                                    $          -        $          -        $         -       $          -
   Cost of sales                                       -                   -                  -                  -
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
        GROSS PROFIT                                   -                   -                  -                  -

OPERATING EXPENSES:
   General and Administrative                       18,252              26,829              5,250             10,500
   Consulting R&D Expenses                          15,000              20,000                -                  -
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------  
        TOTAL EXPENSES                              33,252              46,829              5,250             10,500
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

        OPERATING LOSS                             (33,252)            (46,829)            (5,250)           (10,500)
                                            ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
        NET LOSS                            $      (33,252)     $      (46,829)     $      (5,250)    $      (10,500)
                                            ===========================================================================

Basic and Fully Diluted Loss per Share      $      (0.0030)     $      (0.0033)     $     (0.0005)    $      (0.0010)
                                            ===========================================================================

Weighted Average Shares Outstanding             11,235,764          14,359,051         10,402,887         10,402,887
                                            ===========================================================================








                                      FF-4




                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                            (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                            STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
           FOR THE SIX MONTHS ENDED JUNE 30,2004 AND 2003 (UNAUDITED)
================================================================================




                                                                        2004               2003
                                                                   -------------      -------------
                                                                                
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES: 
   Net loss                                                        $    (46,829)      $    (52,079)
   Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net 
     cash used in operating activities: 
       Increase in operating liabilities:
       Accounts payable and accrued expenses                             17,088             52,079
       Other current liabilities                                         29,741                -
                                                                   -------------      -------------
       NET CASH USED IN OPERATING ACTIVITIES                                -                  -
                                                                   -------------      -------------

       NET INCREASE (DECREASE) IN CASH AND 
       CASH EQUIVALENTS                                                     -                  -
                                                                   -------------      -------------

CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS: 
       Beginning of year                                                    -                  -
                                                                   -------------      -------------
       End of year                                                 $        -         $        -
                                                                   =============      =============

OTHER NON-CASH FINANCING ACTIVITIES: 
Incurrence of notes payable for purchase of goodwill               $    350,000       $        -
                                                                   =============      =============

Incurrence of trade accounts payable for purchase of goodwill      $     25,000       $        -
                                                                   =============      =============








                                      FF-5




                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                     NOTES TO UNAUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                FOR THE QUARTERS ENDED MARCH 31 AND JUNE 30, 2004
================================================================================

NOTE A - BASIS OF PRESENTATION

The accompanying unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements have been
prepared in accordance  with  accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the
United States of America for interim  financial  information and pursuant to the
rules and  regulations of the Securities and Exchange  Commission.  Accordingly,
they do not include all of the information  and footnotes  required by generally
accepted accounting principles for complete financial statements.

In the opinion of management,  the unaudited  condensed  consolidated  financial
statements contain all adjustments  consisting only of normal recurring accruals
considered  necessary to present fairly the Company's financial position at June
30, 2004,  the results of  operations  for the three and six month periods ended
June 30,  2004 and 2003,  and cash flows for the six months  ended June 30, 2004
and 2003.  The  results for the period  ended June 30, 2004 are not  necessarily
indicative  of the  results to be  expected  for the entire  fiscal  year ending
December 31, 2004. These financial  statement should be read in conjunction with
the  financial  statements  and  notes  for the year  ended  December  31,  2003
appearing  in the  Company's  annual  report  on Form  10-SB as  filed  with the
Securities and Exchange Commission.
 
MANAGEMENT'S  USE OF  ESTIMATES - The  preparation  of financial  statements  in
conformity with accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the United States
requires  management to make estimates and assumptions  that affect the reported
amounts of assets and  liabilities  and  disclosures  of  contingent  assets and
liabilities  at the date of financial  statements  and the  reported  amounts of
revenues and expenses during the reporting  period.  Actual results could differ
from those estimates.

LOSS PER  SHARE - We report  loss per  share in  accordance  with  Statement  of
Financial  Accounting  Standard  (SFAS)  No.128.  This  statement  requires dual
presentation of basic and diluted earnings (loss) with a  reconciliation  of the
numerator and denominator of the loss per share computations. Basic earnings per
share amounts are based on the weighted average shares of common outstanding. If
applicable, diluted earnings per share would assume the conversion,  exercise or
issuance of all potential common stock instruments such as options, warrants and
convertible  securities,  unless  the  effect  is to  reduce a loss or  increase
earnings  per share.  There  were no  adjustments  required  to net loss for the
period presented in the computation of diluted earnings per share.


                                      FF-6


                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                     NOTES TO UNAUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                FOR THE QUARTERS ENDED MARCH 31 AND JUNE 30, 2004
================================================================================

NOTE B - ASSET ACQUISITION AGREEMENT

On March 18, 2004 HeartSTAT Technology,  Inc. (FKA Tec Factory,  Inc.) completed
an asset  acquisition  agreement whereby the company issued 38,000,000 shares of
its stock to  various  interest  holders in a  technology  that will lead to the
commercialization  and  launch  of  a  product  line  of  hospital  devices  for
monitoring  patient blood flow,  perfusion,  and other  cardiovascular and heart
values. The HeartSTAT system is completely noninvasive and operates continuously
on  a  heart   beat-by-beat   basis.   It  works   with  a   simple   disposable
single-patient-use  sensor that has several  advantages for patient safety.  The
system also monitors the patient's blood pressure (BP).

The  transaction was accounted for in a manner SIMILAR TO a reverse merger under
APB No. 16 because:

         1.   The  assets were purchased from Ted Russell and other individuals,
              and not an operating company. How can you audit an individual?
          
         2.   There  was  no material  operations/revenue/expenses regarding the
              asset purchased per Ted Russell.
 
The  legal  and  accounting  acquirer  was Tec  Factory  based  on  management's
representations.  The  transaction  was booked in the  financial  statements  as
follows:
 
         1.   A debit  to goodwill of $38,000 representing the 38,000,000 common
              shares issued  at  legal par value of $.001 with related credit to
              common stock.
          
         2.   A debit of goodwill  for  $370,000 and  a related  credit to notes
              payable for assumption of debt in conjunction with the purchase.
          
There is no impairment of goodwill per inquiry of internal management.







                                      FF-7



                           HEARTSTAT TECHNOLOGY, INC.
                             (FKA TEC FACTORY, INC.)
                     NOTES TO UNAUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

                FOR THE QUARTERS ENDED MARCH 31 AND JUNE 30, 2004
================================================================================

NOTE C - LONG TERM DEBT

The Long Term Debt owed to related parties is as follows:

A.   $390,000 of this debt is due to  Diamond WorldWide, Inc. and  it payable as
     follows:

     1.  $40,000 is payable on December 31, 2005.
     2.  $300,000  is  payable  in  three  annual  installments  of $100,000  on
         December 31, 2006 through December 31, 2008.

     This  debt is  convertible into registered common stock valued at $0.35 per
     share at any time  by  Diamond WorldWide, Inc. and bears an annual interest
     rate of 8% to be paid monthly.


B.   $ 10,000 of  this debt is due to Mr. Ted Russell, CEO and major shareholder
     and will be  paid  in  full  on  December  31, 2006.  Again  this  debt  is
     convertible  into  stock  valued  at  $0.35 per  share and  bears an annual
     interest rate of 8% to be paid monthly.


















                                      FF-8