Quarterlytics / Technology / Computer Hardware / One Stop Systems, Inc.

One Stop Systems, Inc.

oss · NASDAQ Technology
Claim this profile
Ticker oss
Exchange NASDAQ
Sector Technology
Industry Computer Hardware
Employees 103
← All annual reports
FY2020 Annual Report · One Stop Systems, Inc.
Sign in to download
Loading PDF…
2 0 2 0  A N N U A L  R E P O R T

Revenue

$millions   

Adjusted EBITDA 1

$millions

$58.3

COVID-19 
Impact

$51.9

$37.0

$27.5

$3.2

$1.8

$1.0

$0.6

2017

2018

2019

2020

2017

2018

2019

2020

Major Program Wins

Non-GAAP Diluted EPS 1

Exceeding $1 million in Annual Revenue  

11

$0.14

6

$0.07

$0.10

$0.08

3

3

2017

2018

2019

2020

2017

2018

2019

2020

1 ) See  “Non-GA A P  Financial Measures ,”  in  the  Form  10-K  for  each  respe ctive  year  regardin g 

adjusted  EBITDA  and  non-GAAP  dilute d  EPS  and  their  re conciliati on  to  GAAP. 

Dear(cid:3)Fellow(cid:3)Stockholders,

AI(cid:3)Transportables

President’s Letter

In(cid:3)early(cid:3)2020,(cid:3)as(cid:3)the(cid:3)impact(cid:3)of(cid:3)the(cid:3)COVID(cid:882)19(cid:3)pandemic(cid:3)began(cid:3)to(cid:3)
take(cid:3)hold,(cid:3)we(cid:3)saw(cid:3)it(cid:3)as(cid:3)an(cid:3)opportunity(cid:3)to(cid:3)make(cid:3)several(cid:3)
transformative(cid:3)steps(cid:3)that(cid:3)would(cid:3)lay(cid:3)a(cid:3)new(cid:3)foundation(cid:3)for(cid:3)future(cid:3)
growth.(cid:3)

This(cid:3)included(cid:3)putting(cid:3)in(cid:3)place(cid:3)new(cid:3)senior(cid:3)leadership(cid:3)and(cid:3)
corporate(cid:3)organizational(cid:3)structure,(cid:3)reducing(cid:3)costs,(cid:3)and(cid:3)appointing(cid:3)
three(cid:3)new(cid:3)independent(cid:3)board(cid:3)members.(cid:3)We(cid:3)also(cid:3)began(cid:3)to(cid:3)focus(cid:3)
on(cid:3)a(cid:3)new(cid:3)long(cid:882)term(cid:3)strategic(cid:3)vision(cid:3)designed(cid:3)to(cid:3)create(cid:3)greater(cid:3)
shareholder(cid:3)value.(cid:3)

After(cid:3)coming(cid:3)off(cid:3)a(cid:3)record(cid:3)year(cid:3)in(cid:3)2019,(cid:3)with(cid:3)annual(cid:3)revenues(cid:3)up(cid:3)
57%,(cid:3)our(cid:3)momentum(cid:3)was(cid:3)soon(cid:3)reversed(cid:3)by(cid:3)COVID(cid:882)19(cid:3)in(cid:3)the(cid:3)
second(cid:3)quarter(cid:3)of(cid:3)2020.(cid:3)However,(cid:3)by(cid:3)the(cid:3)fourth(cid:3)quarter(cid:3)we(cid:3)began(cid:3)
to(cid:3)see(cid:3)signs(cid:3)of(cid:3)improving(cid:3)conditions,(cid:3)as(cid:3)we(cid:3)grew(cid:3)7%(cid:3)sequentially(cid:3)
and(cid:3)exceeded(cid:3)our(cid:3)quarterly(cid:3)revenue(cid:3)outlook(cid:3)by(cid:3)$900,000.(cid:3)

This(cid:3)turnaround(cid:3)was(cid:3)a(cid:3)result(cid:3)of(cid:3)our(cid:3)successful(cid:3)efforts(cid:3)to(cid:3)drive(cid:3)
existing(cid:3)OEM(cid:3)business(cid:3)and(cid:3)expand(cid:3)our(cid:3)customer(cid:3)base,(cid:3)and(cid:3)
thereby(cid:3)offsetting(cid:3)some(cid:3)of(cid:3)the(cid:3)downside(cid:3)from(cid:3)the(cid:3)pandemic.

COVID(cid:882)19(cid:3)Impact(cid:3)&(cid:3)Outlook(cid:3)(cid:3)
We(cid:3)are(cid:3)seeing(cid:3)early(cid:3)indications(cid:3)of(cid:3)improvement(cid:3)with(cid:3)customers(cid:3)
impacted(cid:3)by(cid:3)the(cid:3)pandemic.(cid:3)While(cid:3)we(cid:3)expect(cid:3)the(cid:3)effects(cid:3)of(cid:3)the(cid:3)
pandemic(cid:3)will(cid:3)continue(cid:3)for(cid:3)some(cid:3)time(cid:3)into(cid:3)2021,(cid:3)we(cid:3)are(cid:3)focusing(cid:3)
our(cid:3)energies(cid:3)on(cid:3)the(cid:3)opportunities(cid:3)inherent(cid:3)in(cid:3)such(cid:3)an(cid:3)improving(cid:3)
environment.

Compared(cid:3)to(cid:3)our(cid:3)initial(cid:3)annual(cid:3)plan(cid:3)for(cid:3)2020,(cid:3)we(cid:3)identified(cid:3)about(cid:3)
$14(cid:3)million(cid:3)in(cid:3)lost(cid:3)or(cid:3)delayed(cid:3)revenue(cid:3)due(cid:3)to(cid:3)COVID(cid:882)19(cid:3)related(cid:3)
matters.(cid:3)About(cid:3)$7(cid:3)million(cid:3)of(cid:3)this(cid:3)revenue(cid:3)shortfall(cid:3)was(cid:3)from(cid:3)our(cid:3)
largest(cid:3)customer(cid:3)in(cid:3)the(cid:3)media(cid:3)and(cid:3)entertainment(cid:3)industry.(cid:3)In(cid:3)Q4,(cid:3)
we(cid:3)saw(cid:3)an(cid:3)encouraging(cid:3)rebound(cid:3)by(cid:3)this(cid:3)customer(cid:3)as(cid:3)their(cid:3)new(cid:3)3D(cid:3)
virtual(cid:3)product(cid:3)line(cid:3)began(cid:3)to(cid:3)gain(cid:3)traction(cid:3)in(cid:3)the(cid:3)market.(cid:3)(cid:3)

This(cid:3)product(cid:3)line(cid:3)premiered(cid:3)on(cid:3)American(cid:3)Idol,(cid:3)powering(cid:3)the(cid:3)
virtual(cid:3)stage(cid:3)for(cid:3)a(cid:3)Katy(cid:3)Perry(cid:3)performance.(cid:3)We(cid:3)expect(cid:3)the(cid:3)
continued(cid:3)success(cid:3)of(cid:3)their(cid:3)virtual(cid:3)platform(cid:3)to(cid:3)help(cid:3)drive(cid:3)our(cid:3)sales(cid:3)
in(cid:3)the(cid:3)current(cid:3)and(cid:3)future(cid:3)quarters.(cid:3)We(cid:3)also(cid:3)anticipate(cid:3)the(cid:3)
eventual(cid:3)return(cid:3)of(cid:3)live(cid:3)events(cid:3)to(cid:3)contribute(cid:3)additional(cid:3)revenue(cid:3)
from(cid:3)this(cid:3)customer(cid:3)in(cid:3)the(cid:3)second(cid:3)half(cid:3)of(cid:3)the(cid:3)year.(cid:3)

Customer(cid:3)Diversification

In(cid:3)2020,(cid:3)our(cid:3)major(cid:3)program(cid:3)wins(cid:3)totaled(cid:3)16.(cid:3)While(cid:3)equal(cid:3)to(cid:3)2019,(cid:3)
we(cid:3)were(cid:3)then(cid:3)not(cid:3)facing(cid:3)the(cid:3)challenges(cid:3)of(cid:3)the(cid:3)pandemic.(cid:3)Our(cid:3)32(cid:3)
program(cid:3)wins(cid:3)over(cid:3)the(cid:3)past(cid:3)two(cid:3)years(cid:3)contributed(cid:3)$18(cid:3)million(cid:3)to(cid:3)
2020(cid:3)revenue,(cid:3)including(cid:3)$12(cid:3)million(cid:3)from(cid:3)new(cid:3)customers(cid:3)
supporting(cid:3)our(cid:3)diversification(cid:3)initiatives.

We(cid:3)have(cid:3)defined(cid:3)and(cid:3)started(cid:3)implementation(cid:3)of(cid:3)a(cid:3)multi(cid:882)year(cid:3)
strategic(cid:3)plan(cid:3)to(cid:3)enhance(cid:3)our(cid:3)product(cid:3)road(cid:3)map,(cid:3)market(cid:3)position(cid:3)
and(cid:3)value(cid:3)proposition(cid:3)for(cid:3)target(cid:3)industries(cid:3)and(cid:3)customers.(cid:3)After(cid:3)
extensive(cid:3)discussions(cid:3)with(cid:3)customers,(cid:3)deep(cid:3)research(cid:3)and(cid:3)trend(cid:3)
analysis,(cid:3)and(cid:3)review(cid:3)of(cid:3)our(cid:3)core(cid:3)strengths(cid:3)and(cid:3)current(cid:3)business,(cid:3)
we(cid:3)have(cid:3)identified(cid:3)a(cid:3)valuable(cid:3)new(cid:3)focus(cid:3)segment(cid:3)within(cid:3)the(cid:3)edge(cid:3)
computing(cid:3)space.(cid:3)We(cid:3)have(cid:3)coined(cid:3)this(cid:3)segment,(cid:3)“AI(cid:3)
Transportables™.”

AI(cid:3)Transportables(cid:3)is(cid:3)a(cid:3)rapidly(cid:3)emerging(cid:3)segment(cid:3)of(cid:3)the(cid:3)edge(cid:3)
computing(cid:3)market.(cid:3)It(cid:3)encompasses(cid:3)anything(cid:3)that(cid:3)is(cid:3)not(cid:3)in(cid:3)a(cid:3)fixed(cid:3)
location(cid:3)but(cid:3)requires(cid:3)the(cid:3)latest(cid:3)in(cid:3)high(cid:882)performance(cid:3)computing(cid:3)
for(cid:3)AI(cid:3)applications,(cid:3)and(cid:3)particularly(cid:3)where(cid:3)responsive(cid:3)action(cid:3)needs(cid:3)
to(cid:3)be(cid:3)taken(cid:3)immediately(cid:3)at(cid:3)the(cid:3)very(cid:3)edge(cid:3)where(cid:3)data(cid:3)is(cid:3)being(cid:3)
both(cid:3)acquired(cid:3)and(cid:3)processed.

AI(cid:3)Transportables(cid:3)solutions(cid:3)are(cid:3)currently(cid:3)the(cid:3)fastest(cid:882)growing(cid:3)part(cid:3)
of(cid:3)our(cid:3)business.(cid:3)In(cid:3)2020,(cid:3)it(cid:3)represented(cid:3)about(cid:3)20%(cid:3)of(cid:3)our(cid:3)revenue(cid:3)
and(cid:3)now(cid:3)more(cid:3)than(cid:3)50%(cid:3)of(cid:3)our(cid:3)perspective(cid:3)program(cid:3)wins.(cid:3)

Directly(cid:3)tied(cid:3)to(cid:3)our(cid:3)value(cid:3)proposition(cid:3)and(cid:3)key(cid:3)strengths,(cid:3)we(cid:3)see(cid:3)AI(cid:3)
Transportables(cid:3)as(cid:3)a(cid:3)higher(cid:882)margin(cid:3)business,(cid:3)and(cid:3)where(cid:3)we(cid:3)enjoy(cid:3)
an(cid:3)unmatched(cid:3)competitive(cid:3)edge(cid:3)for(cid:3)winning(cid:3)follow(cid:882)on(cid:3)programs.(cid:3)
We(cid:3)look(cid:3)forward(cid:3)to(cid:3)updating(cid:3)you(cid:3)in(cid:3)the(cid:3)future(cid:3)with(cid:3)our(cid:3)progress(cid:3)
in(cid:3)this(cid:3)exciting,(cid:3)fast(cid:882)growing,(cid:3)AI(cid:3)Transportables(cid:3)space.(cid:3)

Strong(cid:3)Balance(cid:3)Sheet(cid:3)for(cid:3)Growth

In(cid:3)March(cid:3)of(cid:3)this(cid:3)year,(cid:3)we(cid:3)completed(cid:3)a(cid:3)direct(cid:3)equity(cid:3)offering(cid:3)that(cid:3)
further(cid:3)fortified(cid:3)our(cid:3)cash(cid:3)position.(cid:3)We(cid:3)also(cid:3)realized(cid:3)significant(cid:3)
cash(cid:3)gains(cid:3)through(cid:3)a(cid:3)combination(cid:3)of(cid:3)lower(cid:3)expenses,(cid:3)increased(cid:3)
efficiency,(cid:3)and(cid:3)improvements(cid:3)in(cid:3)working(cid:3)capital.(cid:3)All(cid:3)of(cid:3)this(cid:3)has(cid:3)
resulted(cid:3)in(cid:3)a(cid:3)current(cid:3)cash(cid:3)position(cid:3)of(cid:3)about(cid:3)$19(cid:3)million.(cid:3)Our(cid:3)
strong(cid:3)cash(cid:3)position(cid:3)affords(cid:3)us(cid:3)the(cid:3)ability(cid:3)to(cid:3)invest(cid:3)wisely(cid:3)in(cid:3)key(cid:3)
strategic(cid:3)initiatives(cid:3)to(cid:3)fuel(cid:3)future(cid:3)growth.

Looking(cid:3)Ahead
While(cid:3)there(cid:3)remains(cid:3)uncertainty(cid:3)around(cid:3)when(cid:3)we(cid:3)will(cid:3)finally(cid:3)
conquer(cid:3)the(cid:3)pandemic(cid:3)and(cid:3)return(cid:3)to(cid:3)business(cid:3)as(cid:3)usual,(cid:3)we(cid:3)believe(cid:3)
the(cid:3)worst(cid:3)is(cid:3)finally(cid:3)behind(cid:3)us.(cid:3)Moreover,(cid:3)from(cid:3)facing(cid:3)the(cid:3)daunting(cid:3)
challenges(cid:3)it(cid:3)created,(cid:3)OSS(cid:3)has(cid:3)come(cid:3)out(cid:3)stronger(cid:3)and(cid:3)more(cid:3)able(cid:3)
to(cid:3)pursue(cid:3)a(cid:3)new(cid:3)strategic(cid:3)plan(cid:3)for(cid:3)growth(cid:3)over(cid:3)the(cid:3)coming(cid:3)years.

On(cid:3)behalf(cid:3)of(cid:3)the(cid:3)board(cid:3)of(cid:3)directors,(cid:3)I(cid:3)would(cid:3)like(cid:3)to(cid:3)express(cid:3)our(cid:3)
deepest(cid:3)appreciation(cid:3)to(cid:3)all(cid:3)of our(cid:3)team(cid:3)members(cid:3)for(cid:3)their(cid:3)
dedication(cid:3)to(cid:3)the(cid:3)success(cid:3)of(cid:3)OSS(cid:3)and(cid:3)their(cid:3)unwavering(cid:3)
commitment(cid:3)to(cid:3)quality(cid:3)and(cid:3)productivity(cid:3)during(cid:3)the(cid:3)most(cid:3)
challenging(cid:3)times(cid:3)in(cid:3)our(cid:3)company’s(cid:3)history.(cid:3)I(cid:3)would(cid:3)also(cid:3)like(cid:3)to(cid:3)
thank(cid:3)all(cid:3)our(cid:3)stockholders(cid:3)for(cid:3)their(cid:3)support(cid:3)and(cid:3)joining(cid:3)us(cid:3)on(cid:3)this(cid:3)
amazing(cid:3)journey(cid:3)of(cid:3)growth(cid:3)and(cid:3)innovation.(cid:3)The(cid:3)best(cid:3)is(cid:3)yet(cid:3)to(cid:3)
come.

Yours(cid:3)truly,

David(cid:3)Raun

President(cid:3)&(cid:3)CEO

Cautionary Note Regarding Forward(cid:882)Looking Statements

One Stop Systems cautions you that statements in this document that are not a description of historical facts are forward(cid:882)looking
statements. These statements are based on the company's current beliefs and expectations. The inclusion of forward(cid:882)looking statements
should not be regarded as a representation by One Stop Systems or its partners that any of our plans or expectations will be achieved,
including but not limited to, management’s expectations for revenue growth generated by new products and design wins, expectations
regarding the AI Transportables segment, and One Stop Systems’ ability to capitalize on such segment.

Actual results may differ from those set forth in this document due to the risk and uncertainties inherent in our business, including risks
described in our prior press releases and in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), including under the heading
"Risk Factors" in our Annual Report on Form 10(cid:882)K and any subsequent filings with the SEC. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance
on these forward(cid:882)looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof, and we undertake no obligation to revise or update this
document to reflect events or circumstances after the date hereof. All forward(cid:882)looking statements are qualified in their entirety by this
cautionary statement, which is made under the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

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

FORM 10-K

(Mark One)
(cid:3)(cid:3) ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT 

OF 1934

For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020 

or

(cid:4)(cid:4) TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT

OF 1934

For the transition period from _________ to _______

Commission File Number 001-38371

One Stop Systems, Inc.

(Exact name of Registrant as specified in its Charter)

Delaware
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)

33-0885351
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)

2235 Enterprise Street #110
Escondido, California 92029
(Address of principal executive offices, including Zip Code)

(760) 745-9883

(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of each class

Common Stock, par value $0.0001 per share 

Trading
Symbol(s)
OSS

Name of each exchange

on which registered

 The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes (cid:4) No (cid:3)

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes (cid:4) No (cid:3)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant: (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 
12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes (cid:3) No (cid:4)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 
of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).Yes (cid:3) No (cid:4)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth 
company.  See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.

Large accelerated filer

Non-accelerated filer
Emerging growth company

(cid:4)

(cid:3)
(cid:3)

Accelerated filer

Smaller reporting company

(cid:4)

(cid:3)

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial 
accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.  (cid:4)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial 
reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared or issued its audit report. (cid:4)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act). Yes (cid:4) No (cid:3)

As of June 30, 2020, the aggregate market value of the voting and non-voting common equity held by non-affiliates of the registrant was $22,794,553, based on the closing price of 
the registrant’s common stock on The Nasdaq Capital Market of $1.97 per share. 

As of March 15, 2021, the registrant had 18,409,318 shares of common stock (par value $0.0001) outstanding. 

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE:  None

Page

4
22
37
37
37
37

38
38
39
55
55
55
55
56

57
62
72
74
75

77
77

One Stop Systems, Inc.
FORM 10-K
For the Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2020
Table of Contents

Business

`
PART I
Item 1.
Item 1A. Risk Factors
Item 1B. Unresolved Staff Comments
Item 2.
Item 3.
Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures

Properties
Legal Proceedings

PART II

Item 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity 

Securities
Selected Financial Data

Item 6.
Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
Item 8.
Item 9.
Item 9A. Controls and Procedures
Item 9B. Other Information

Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

PART III

Item 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance
Item 11. Executive Compensation
Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters
Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence
Item 14. Principal Accountant Fees and Services

PART IV  

Item 15. Exhibit and Financial Statement Schedules
Item 16. Form 10-K Summary

2

 
 
 
 
 
CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

This Annual Report on Form 10-K (“Annual Report”) contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the

Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements other than statements of historical fact contained in this 
Annual Report, including statements regarding our future operating results, financial position and cash flows, our business
strategy and plans and our objectives for future operations, are forward-looking statements. These statements involve known 
and unknown risks, uncertainties and other important factors that may cause our actual results, performance or achievements 
to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking 
statements. This Annual Report also contains estimates and other statistical data made by independent parties and by us 
relating to market size and growth and other data about our industry. This data involves a number of assumptions and 
limitations, and you are cautioned not to give undue weight to such estimates. In addition, projections, assumptions and 
estimates of our future performance and the future performance of the markets in which we operate are necessarily subject to
a high degree of uncertainty and risk. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terms such as “may,” 
“will,” “would,” “could,” “should,” “expect,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “could,” “intend,” “target,” “project,” “contemplate,” 
“believe,” “estimate,” “predict,” “potential” or “continue” or the negative of these terms or other similar expressions.  The 
forward-looking statements in this Annual Report are only predictions. We have based these forward-looking statements 
largely on our current expectations and projections about future events and financial trends that we believe may affect our 
financial condition, operating results, business strategy, short-term and long-term business operations and objectives. These
forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this Annual Report and are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties 
and assumptions, including those described in Part I, Item 1A, “Risk Factors.” The events and circumstances reflected in our 
forward-looking statements may not be achieved or occur and actual results could differ materially from those projected in
the forward-looking statements. Moreover, we operate in a very competitive and rapidly changing environment. New risk 
factors and uncertainties may emerge from time to time, and it is not possible for management to predict all risk factors and 
uncertainties. Except as required by applicable law, we do not plan to publicly update or revise any forward-looking 
statements contained herein, whether as a result of any new information, future events, changed circumstances or otherwise.

One Stop Systems, the One Stop Systems logo, and other trademarks or service marks of One Stop Systems appearing
in this Annual Report are the property of One Stop Systems, Inc. This Annual Report also includes trademarks, tradenames 
and service marks that are the property of other organizations. Solely for convenience, trademarks and tradenames referred to
in this Annual Report appear without the ® and ™ symbols, but those references are not intended to indicate, in any way, that 
we will not assert, to the fullest extent under applicable law, our rights, or that the applicable owner will not assert its rights,
to these trademarks and tradenames.

WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION

We file annual, quarterly and current reports, proxy statements and other information required by the Securities and 

Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”).  You 
may read and copy any document we file with the SEC at the SEC’s public reference room located at 100 F Street, N.E.
Washington D.C. 20549, U.S.A.  Please call the SEC at 1-800-SEC0330 for further information on the public reference
room.  Our SEC filings are also available to the public from the SEC’s internet site at http://www.sec.gov.

On our internet website, http://www.onestopsystems.com, we post the following recent filings as soon as reasonably
practicable after they are electronically filed with or furnished to the SEC: our annual reports on Form 10-K, our quarterly 
reports on Form 10-Q, our current reports on Form 8-K, and any amendments to those reports filed or furnished pursuant to
Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act.  The information in or accessible through the SEC and our website are not 
incorporated into, and are not considered part of, this filing. Further, our references to the URLs for these websites are
intended to be inactive textual references only.

3

ITEM 1. BUSINESS.

Overview 

PART I

One Stop Systems (OSS) designs, manufactures, and markets specialized high-performance computing modules and 

systems targeting edge deployments.  These specialized computers and storage products incorporate state-of-the art 
components and allow our customers to offer high-end computing capabilities (often embbed within their equipment) to their 
target markets. Edge computing is when data is processed/analyzed on devices, that is, at the edge of the network, rather than 
in the cloud itself.  Factors such as increase in load on the cloud infrastructure globally and rises in artificial intelligence (AI) 
applications, are the major factors driving the growth of the edge computing market.  Our customer applications often require
connection to a wide array of data sources and sensors, ultra-fast processing power and the ability to quickly access and store 
large and ever-growing data sets at their location not in the cloud. This equipment requires datacenter class performance 
optimized for deployment at the edge in challenging environments.  Unlike the controlled air-conditioned data center, many
of these edge applications have unique requirements including special and compact form factors ruggedized for harsh 
conditions.  We are uniquely positioned as a specialized provider for the high-end of this marketplace providing custom 
servers, data acquisition platforms, compute accelerators, solid-state storage arrays, system IO expansion systems as well as 
edge optimized industrial and panel PCs, tablets and handheld compute devices. We deliver this high-end technology to our 
customers through the sale of equipment and embedded software.

The worldwide high-performance computing (HPC) market is expected to grow from $39 billion in 2019 to $50 billion
by 2023, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 7% while the overall edge computing market is forecasted 
to grow to $28.8 billion by 2025 with a compound annual growth rate of over 50% (Grandview research, “Edge Computing
Market Size,” June 2019). We are establishing a leading position as a provider of specialized servers, compute accelerators 
and flash storage arrays to the high-end of this growing marketplace targeting edge deployments.  OSS estimates the high-
performance specialized segment at the intersection of HPC and the edge computing market will be greater than $2 billion in 
2023.  It is OSS’ objective to be the leading vendor and technology innovator in this targeted market segment. 

Through our AI on the Fly ® initiative, we are delivering innovative specialized high-performance edge computing 

building blocks and platforms used by our customers to develop products for scientists, engineers, creators and other 
professionals.  These mission critical applications capture and store data and quickly, securely, and cost effectively transformrr
it into actionable intelligence at the edge.

High-performance computing applications are moving beyond the traditional academic and scientific realms to broad 
application across the spectrum of vertical markets. These applications include computationally intense areas like artificial 
intelligence (AI), deep learning, media and entertainment, test and measurement, medical imaging, genomics, cyber security, 
automotive, aerospace and defense. We are well positioned to leverage these market trends and capitalize on our unique core 
competencies in high-speed system design, switch fabrics, and edge system optimization. We have a proven track record of 
delivering first-to-market advanced technologies and have continued to do so with next generation PCI Express (PCIe) based 
input/output expansion systems, compute acceleration systems and high-performance flash array storage systems. PCIe offers
the highest performance and lowest latency which is critical for our target applications.  Edge optimizations include rugged 
chassis design with light-weight removable high-capacity canisters. These products fit solidly into the emerging markets for 
specialized high-performance computing at the edge. 

The more data input, GPU compute acceleration and flash-based storage resources available to a server, the faster it can 
acquire, process, store, and retrieve data. In cases where the amount of these resources does not fit within the constraints of a 
conventional server, PCIe is used to disaggregate the resources into a multi-chassis solution. We have built leading edge
expertise in PCIe expansion technology and leverage it to design and build systems that offer a high quantity and density of 
GPU compute acceleration, flash storage and data I/O interfaces. 

f

A key element of our product strategy is technological leadership. We believe a first-to-market strategy is key to our 
ability to continue to win significant OEM opportunities. As a result, we continue to develop new state-of-the-art products 
providing first-to-market next-generation PCIe based building blocks and systems. Our ability to drive the leading edge of 
technology is enabled by our strong relationships with strategic component manufactures, including NVIDIA (for GPUs), 
Western Digital and Micron (for flash memory); Broadcom (for PCIe switch components), Mellanox (for networking) and 
Intel, AMD and Marvel (for CPUs). In many of these cases, OSS has access to product roadmaps and other technical 
information relating to future technology. Access to this information allows us to begin our design process well before the 

4

future components we are designing for even exist. This accelerates our time-to-market and allows us to produce and release 
state-of-the-art designs well ahead of our competitors. 

OSS sells its products worldwide to industry leading customers.  We service over 1,800 customers per year worldwide, 
with major repeat customers including disguise, National Instruments, Raytheon, Thales, and Alcon. We anticipate continued 
market growth in our target markets and sustaining the ability to increase market share through our leading technology, 
engineering expertise, supply chain management and go-to-market innovation. 

We were originally organized as One Stop Systems, LLC, a California limited liability company in 1998 before 

converting into One Stop Systems, Inc., a California corporation in 1999. On July 6, 2016, we entered into a Merger 
Agreement and Plan of Reorganization with Mission Technology Group, Inc. (“Magma”) whereby Magma merged with and 
into OSS with OSS continuing as the surviving corporation. We reincorporated as a Delaware corporation on December 14, 
2017 and began trading as a public company on the Nasdaq Capital Markets on February 1, 2018. On August 31, 2018, we
acquired Concept Development Inc., a provider of specialty in-flight entertainment, networking and other aerospace
technology located in Irvine, California.  On October 31, 2018, we acquired Bressner Technology GmbH located near 
Munich, Germany.  Bressner is a valued-added reseller of high technology hardware which expanded the company’s high-
performance computing product lines to include industrial and panel PCs, tablets and handheld compute devices while also
opening up new markets in Europe.  Our principal executive offices are located at 2235 Enterprise Street, Suite 110,
Escondido, California 92029 and our telephone number is (760) 745-9883. Our website address is www.onestopsystems.com.
Information contained in, or accessible through, our website is for reference purposes only. 

Industry Background and Market Opportunity

High performance computing refers to computing solutions capable of ingesting and processing large amounts of data, 
and storing and retrieving that data at speeds 10-100 times faster than a typical corporate computer. Increasingly, commercial
companies, financial entities, governmental agencies, including the Department of Defense, and academic institutions are
turning to high-performance computing solutions to analyze vast amounts of data to obtain meaningful and actionable 
insights. Three technologies are fundamental: GPU compute accelerators, flash memory based storage, and high speed data 
acquisition I/O.  These technologies enable systems to ingest, process and store data at significantly higher rates than
traditional systems. By harnessing large quantities of these components, companies can receive necessary data analyses much 
more quickly, turning raw data to actionable intelligence. Industry experts typically divide the high-performance computing
market into the following categories: 

•

•

•

•

•

Servers – This market represents all high-end servers, which is composed of supercomputers, divisional servers,
departmental servers, and workgroup servers. 

Storage – This includes both traditional hard disc drive and flash-based storage devices.

Middleware – A broad category of software encompassing programming environments, schedulers, and other 
tools outside the operating system.

Applications – Specific software applications for high performance computing. 

Services – All services associated with high performance computing. 

Intersect360 Research categorizes and projects sales in the total high-performance computing market, as follows: 

High Performance Computing Market by Product Category — Total Market Forecast by Economic Sectors ($B)

Servers
Storage
Services
Software
NNetworks
Cloud
Other

Total

2021

2022

2023

CAGR

16.2 $
7.0
3.0
10.0
3.0
1.8
3.2
44.2 $

17.2 $
7.2
3.4
10.4
3.6
2.6
2.8
47.2 $

18.2
8.0
3.4
10.6
3.8
3.2
3.0
50.2

5.73%
8.87%
4.26%
4.09%
5.90%
21.14%
2.33%
6.29%

$

$

5

Source: 

Intersect360 Research, High Performance Computing (HPC) Revenue: Worldwide Market and Forecast Series, June 7, 

2019.

The markets for these products are large and growing. The industry sectors that are currently or anticipated to require

high-performance computing systems include: 

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Artificial Intelligence
Computer Aided Engineering
Test and Measurement
Media and Entertainment
Economics/Financial
Environmental Data Acquisition 
Geosciences
Mechanical Design
Defense – Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance
Government Laboratories 
Medical Imaging
Aerospace
Automotive

These industry sectors expect to deploy increasingly faster computing systems to meet industry and competitive goals.

GPU computer acceleration, high-performance flash storage and data acquisition are key subsets of the high-performance
computing market. 

GPU Compute Acceleration

The capabilities and speed of GPU accelerated computers are driving significant advances in AI and machine learning. 

Massive amounts of data are being collected, stored and analyzed by today’s sophisticated algorithms.   AI and machine
learning are poised to transform worldwide business, as advances in computing speed and storage come together to enable
businesses to solve complex problems. OSS is enabling the move of this AI capability from centralized datacenters to
deployments closer to the data sources at the edge.

High Density Solid-State Storage

The market for flash memory based on solid-state storage systems is large and growing. According to a study by 
Markets and Markets, the all-flash storage server market is growing at 25% per year, and is expected to reach $18 billion by 
2023. The proliferation of larger and larger data sets used in HPC and AI are feeding the need for higher capacity and higher 
performance storage devices. 

Traditionally, companies have used hard disk drives for their primary storage.  Hard drive-based systems are being 

replaced by flash memory based systems which offer higher capacity, performance, reliability and ruggedness.  Flash-based 
storage systems also consume significantly less power.

Flash-based storage systems are especially useful for high performance computing applications, which deal with large 

amounts of data and the need for complex calculations to be completed in real time. In these applications, speed and 
efficiency are paramount. Military systems, for example, collect vast amounts of data using sensor systems, cameras, radar 
systems, and a myriad of other real-world inputs. This data needs to be collected, stored, analyzed and acted upon in a real-
time environment. 

High Speed Data Acquisition

At the front end of these systems is high speed data acquisition technology. Depending on the application, the data can 

be generated from a wide array of sensors. In the case of autonomous vehicles, data is generated through arrays of video, 
LIDAR and radar sensors. In battlefield applications cameras, radar, sonar, FLIR (infrared), and RF sensors are deployed. 
Medical applications use MRI or CT sensors. In security applications, networks of security cameras produce high volumes of 
video data. Industrial automation includes telemetry data from Internet of Things (IoT) sensors and video feeds at a wide 
spectrum of frame rates.

6

Although data rates vary for all of these applications based on the sensors or array of sensors deployed, the 

fundamental requirements for the ingest subsystem is that it supports high speed data rates, does not allow loss of data, and 
does not impose flow control on the sensor data stream. For many AI on the Fly applications, local data rates can be 
extremely high, requiring specialized PCIe data capture hardware. As part of the capture process, the data is often processed 
in real time to be formatted in a useable form prior to movement to the storage devices. Capture hardware can be in the form 
of PCIe FPGAs, video capture, frame grabbers, or smart NICs performing a range of functions including tagging, encoding, 
sorting, and analog to digital conversion, filtering, time stamping, and channel synchronization. 

Key Components of Our Business

Product Development 

Our systems are built using the latest GPU and flash storage technologies and draw upon years of expertise in

designing and manufacturing semi-custom systems for OEMs. We have a history of being first-to-market with many 
solutions for emerging technologies. When PCIe was introduced in 2005, we were the first company to produce PCIe over 
cable adapters allowing system-to-system communication at same speed as internal I/O expansion. Similarly, in 2018, we
introduced the first PCIe Gen 4.0 cable adapters, and in 2019, introduced the first PCIe Gen 4.0 system building blocks and 
platforms. PCIe Gen 4.0’s ultra-high performance 16.0 GT/s (giga-transfers/second) and signal integrity challenges limits the 
number of players in this market and creates barriers of entry.  Today, we are one of the largest providers of PCIe adapters
and expansion components used worldwide.

When GPU technology and solid-state flash were first introduced, we began designing systems that maximized the

effectiveness of these technologies. We now produce compute systems with large numbers of GPUs and flash memory
communicating over PCIe to allow faster processing and data storage and retrieval. The more GPUs and flash devices 
available to a server, the faster that system can process and store data.

We use leading edge, state-of-the art components from major technology providers to design purpose-built systems that 

solve customer problems in an efficient, cost-effective manner. We apply the component technology provided by Intel, 
NVIDIA, Western Digital, Broadcom and others to deliver customer driven designs to provide true value to our customers. 

Worldwide Sales

We provide our products on a worldwide basis and are supported through a network of reseller and distribution 

partners. Sales in North America and Europe are predominately driven by our direct sales force, whereas Asian sales are
driven through distributors.

In October 2018, OSS GmbH acquired 100% of the outstanding stock of Bressner Technology GmbH, (Bressner) 
located in Gröbenzell, Germany.  This acquisition provides a base for European operations for sales, marketing, engineering, 
manufacturing and support capabilities.

Recent Business Initiatives

In April 2019, certain members of the Company’s Board of Directors executed definitive agreements to commit funds 
of up to $4,000,000 as a credit facility. The Company initially borrowed $1,150,000 from members of the Board of Directors,
and $350,000 from other shareholders for a two-year period at an interest rate of 9.5% which requires the Company to make
monthly principal and interest payments of $69,000 per month. In connection with these loans, the Company issued the note
holders warrants to purchase shares of the Company’s common stock equal to 10% of the original principal at a price per 
share equal to $2.15 per share.  Accordingly, the Company issued to the note holders warrants to purchase 69,766 share of 
the Company’s common stock.  The relative fair value of the warrants issued was $60,158.

In May 2019, the Company filed a Form S-3 prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Commission which became

effective on June 19, 2019, and allows the Company to offer up to $100,000,000 aggregate dollar amount of shares of its 
common stock, preferred stock, debt securities, warrants to purchase its common stock, preferred stock or debt securities, 
subscription rights to purchase its common stock, preferred stock or debt securities and\or units consisting of some or all of 
these securities, in any combination, together or separately, in one of more offerings, in amounts, at prices and on the terms 
that the Company will determine at the time of the offering and which will be set forth in a prospectus supplement and any 
related free writing prospectus. 

7

In July 2019, the Company sold 1,554,832 shares of common stock for total gross proceeds of $2,700,714, which

resulted in net proceeds to the Company of $2,488,148.

Coronavirus, COVID-19, continues to impact worldwide economic activity since it first surfaced around December 

2019.  A public health pandemic, including COVID-19, poses the risk that we or our employees, contractors, customers, 
suppliers, and other partners may be prevented from conducting business activities for an indefinite period of time, including 
due to shutdowns that may be requested or mandated by governmental authorities. 

On February 15, 2020, Steve Cooper was terminated as President and CEO of the Company, and was replaced by 

David Raun, who is now the current President and CEO of the Company.

On April 7, 2020, the Company implemented a cost reduction plan which included the termination of certain 
employees and elimination of certain costs.  Savings from this effort are estimated to be approximately $2.5 million on an 
annual basis.  

On April 24, 2020, the Company completed a $6.0 million debt financing on a non-interest bearing convertible note 

with a 10% original issue discount.  The first tranche of $3.0 million was received on April 27, 2020, with an additional $3.0 
million available seven months from the date of closing at the option of the Company conditioned upon meeting certain 
requirements which have been satisfied.  The note is repayable in twenty-two installments beginning three months after 
closing in cash or shares of the Company’s common stock.

On March 1, 2021, the Company entered into a Securities Purchase Agreement with an accredited investor, pursuant to 

which the Company agreed to issue and sell, in a registered direct offering, 1,497,006 shares of the Company’s common 
stock, par value $0.0001 per share, to the purchaser at an offering price of $6.68 per share. The registered offering was
conducted pursuant to the Company’s effective shelf registration statement on Form S-3 (Registration No. 333-231513), 
which was initially filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 15, 2019, and was declared effective on June
19, 2019. The Company filed the final prospectus supplement for the registered offering on March 3, 2021. In connection
with the Securities Purchase Agreement, the Company also entered into a Placement Agency Agreement, pursuant to which 
A.G.P./Alliance Global Partners agreed to serve as lead placement agent for the registered offering and The Benchmark 
Company, LLC agreed to serve as co-placement agent for such offering. As compensation for their services, the Company 
paid to the placement agents a fee equal to 7% of the gross proceeds received by the Company as a result of the registered 
offering, and reimbursed the placement agents for certain expenses incurred in connection with such offering. The Company 
estimates that the net proceeds from the registered offering will be approximately $9.25 million after deducting certain fees
due to the placement agents’ and the Company’s estimated transaction expenses. The net proceeds received by the Company
will be used for general corporate and working capital purposes.

What Sets OSS Apart 

Several factors differentiate OSS from other suppliers of high-performance computing solutions:

•

•

•

•

Our expertise in PCIe expansion and building custom systems allows us to design reliable systems using this 
challenging high-performance technology with a greater quantity of GPUs and flash storage devices than other 
suppliers.

We design systems that both attach to existing servers through high-performance PCIe over cable leveraging our 
customer’s existing network as well as all-in-one systems with the server, GPU computing, and flash storage
devices all included in a single package.

We design the software required to operate high-capacity, low-latency storage systems used by defense systems
and commercial applications. 

We ruggedize and harden systems to operate within mobile or harsh environments, including full mil-spec 
systems.

Our business model consists of developing specialized computing solutions that our customers utilize as a key
component of the equipment that they sell to end users.  Our niche is to provide reliable purpose-built platforms with the 
latest high-performance computing technology focused on challenging edge deployments.

8

Business Strategy

We have traditionally followed a strategy of being first-to-market in leading edge technologies by designing and 
developing products that are delivered before our competitors. This market leadership strategy is accomplished through what 
we term a “Catch the Wave” approach to the market. We currently have products spanning the spectrum of high-performance
computing including servers, flash storage, GPU acceleration, networking and PCIe data acquisition I/O expansion. Within 
these product areas the OSS “Catch the Wave” approach implies that we:

•

•

•

•

•

anticipate trends in these markets;

continuously deploy resources in engineering and sales to bring innovative products to market before our 
competitors; 

work closely and leverage strategic vendor relationships to get early access to future products and technologies; 

seek to procure early design wins; and

continually monitor the market for next generation technologies for which a new “Wave” may be forming.

Earnings Growth Strategy

OSS intends to continue its growth with a focus on growing earnings.  The earnings growth will be accomplished by:

Revenue growth driven by existing OEM and new design wins:

•

•

•

•

•

•

Participate in high-growth unique market segments

Demonstrate technology leadership in specific verticals

Target OEMs needing specialized solutions

Focus on repeat business

Maintain highly-skilled direct sales force

Expand worldwide sales and marketing

Higher Margins:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

OSS-designed technical content

Increased proprietary content, software and “stickiness”

Focus on highest return programs/markets

Maximizing military and other high value applications

Leverage economies of scale

Lower material costs

Increased operational efficiencies through automation, discipline and process improvements

Manage Expenses: 

•

•

•

•

Reduced spending and higher efficiency per employee

Utilize technology to increase efficiency

Leverage efficiencies of scale

Manage portfolio of products and business units, consolidate where efficient

9

Our Opportunity 

The worldwide high-performance computing market is expected to grow from $39 billion in 2019 to $50 billion by
2023. (Grandview research, “Edge Computing Market Size” June 2019) Within this market, OSS is positioned in the highest 
performance and fastest growing portions of the specialized edge computing market including the customer server, GPU 
accelerators, storage (flash arrays) and PCIe data acquisition and expansion sectors. 

Custom Built Servers

Within the server sector, OSS has secured a niche position of building purpose-built specialty servers, which the 

major server suppliers choose not to supply as they require custom tuning and special features that major OEMs cannot easily
provide. Such flexibility is difficult to maintain for major suppliers because their systems are not designed to reflect specificff
customer specifications. OSS on the other hand has continued to find efficient ways to service this market.  For example, 
OSS designs and builds a custom server with custom connectors and 16 high-definition video media outputs that are used in
the entertainment industry to provide multimedia at live performances. 

GPU Compute Accelerators

GPU computing uses hardware components that are optimized to perform mathematical calculations in a rapid fashion. 

NVIDIA is the market leader in the design and manufacturing of these components.  OSS works closely with NVIDIA to 
design and build systems which use multiple GPUs to accelerate applications.

Markets and applications such as artificial intelligence, image rendering and processing, autonomous vehicles, deep

learning, molecular modeling, genomics, advanced visualization, machine learning, and image processing, all benefit from 
the ability to use GPUs to accelerate the application. OSS builds specialized compute accelerators, using the latest GPU
technology, to attach to traditional servers used in these emerging growth markets. We estimate these markets to be very 
large and growing.  Because our strategy has been to be first-to-market with the fastest and densest compute accelerator 
appliances, we anticipate our addressable market to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars. 

We also have a strong position in the government market which, according to Intersect360, constitutes 25% of the 
market resulting in projected revenue of $13 billion by 2023. OSS products can form a basis for companies who wish to 
participate in the hyper-scale market, which includes deep learning and AI. This is a major technology trend that OSS is 
addressing. Intersect360 estimates the deep learning market was worth more than $8 billion in 2018 with projections to grow 
to over $28 billion by 2023, according to Kenneth Research dated August 2019.

All Flash Arrays

We build standard and custom flash storage arrays to customer specifications utilizing our unique know-how in PCIe 

device fan-out, packaging, cooling, and PCIe-over-cable. We deliver dense, high-performance systems that provide
customers with high value and utility in the most demanding, data-intensive operations.

Through a strategic agreement with Western Digital, we acquired the software engineering team several years back and 

the appropriate source code license for the Ion flash array software.  This provides OSS flash arrays with a high level of 
differentiation relating to storage management, latency and throughput. We provide standard flash array products and have
the in-house hardware and software expertise to provide customized systems for demanding applications that are not suitable 
for standard offerings. 

For example, we provide products to a large military contractor for integration into military aircraft that required us to 
design and manufacture a highly ruggedized mil-spec flash array. The resulting product provides high data density with low 
weight and a high degree of portability and security for the data. We believe our experience and capability in high speed,
low-latency, digital signaling via PCIe gives us an edge in providing these custom designs to OEMs, military programs and 
other special purpose applications.

10

The overall market for flash arrays is growing rapidly. According to Markets and Markets All-Flash Array Market – 
Global Forecast to 2023 published in February 2019, the flash storage market totaled $6 billion in 2018 and is expected to 
grow to reach $18 billion by 2023. According to Intersect360 about 80% of the total sales in 2018 were attributed to 
traditional large OEMs, like Dell EMC, NetApp, HPE, Hitachi, Lenovo, DDN and IBM. The remaining 20% is addressed by 
many smaller flash storage providers, including OSS. We believe that because our products are positively differentiated by 
speed, density, and management features for challenging edge applications, our offerings compete favorably in this market 
and provide a substantial growth opportunity. 

Since we develop custom flash storage arrays, we work closely with both OEMs and end users to insure they receive

the product they want in the specific configuration, size and weight required for their application. We believe this gives OSS 
an advantageous position in a market that is growing rapidly and allows us to favorably compete in the market. 

PCIe Data Acquisition Expansion and Adaptors 

PCIe is the high-speed standard for communications within a computer. This standard defines the signals and 
connectors (i.e. slots) that are used for computer add-in cards (such as Ethernet or graphics). Traditionally, communication
between computers in the network is done via Ethernet.  Although Ethernet is great for large networks, this introduces delays 
and latency challenges.  To keep performance at the highest level, PCIe signaling can also be routed over a cable, allowing 
expansion input/output slots to be physically located in a separate chassis. This provides for the high performance and low
latency which are essential in this market.

Being able to separate the server from the I/O expansion, using PCIe over a cable, facilitates disaggregation of server 
functionality. That is, with PCIe, server I/O functions no longer need to be contained in the physical server chassis, but can 
instead be separated into a separate chassis and continue to operate at full speed. This offers many advantages over higher 
latency and power consuming traditional networking communications like Ethernet.  From a practical perspective, servers 
can be connected directly to larger storage arrays or other peripheral devices, with the resulting group of chassis operating as 
if they were all in the same physical chassis.

We began developing our first PCIe-over-cable adaptor in 2006, and were one of the early providers of PCIe adaptors.

We recognized this as prime opportunity to utilize our core strengths, such as: 

•

•

•

•

•

•

High-speed board design and layout 

Signal integrity masters

Hardware tuning to improve signal integrity 

Design optimization for low cost 

Rapid design capability

Manufacturing and supply chain management 

This technology has now become a standard within the computer industry, and OSS customers have used our adaptors
to connect their custom input/output chassis and achieve performance equivalence as if the input/output was integrated into 
the server box. This gives designers and integrators a degree of flexibility and utility in architecting computer systems that is
unprecedented. For example, one of our customers has utilized PCIe-over-cable to connect its high-performance video editing
systems to a host computer, providing a system that is optimized for an application using standard servers. We have
expanded our PCIe adaptor market in breadth and depth, including making adaptors for many OEM customers. To date, we 
have shipped more than 100,000 PCIe adaptor cards to customers globally. 

With our expertise developed in designing adaptor cards, the logical extension of our capability led us to develop a 
method for expanding the PCIe bus into an external chassis containing one or many expansion slots. This allowed a customer 
to install multiple standard PCIe boards into a chassis and expand their system without having to add additional servers. A
user could now connect a multiplicity of PCIe devices to a single server, and achieve performance throughput and low 
latency that was not possible prior to the introduction of PCIe.

11

We have been a leader in PCIe expansion backplanes and chassis through generations 1, 2, 3, and 4. As PCIe evolves

through generations 5 and 6, we are uniquely positioned to continue our leadership role in this market. We have introduced a 
full line of PCIe Gen 4.0 products and will once again take a leadership role with PCIe Gen 5.0 when the specification is 
complete which is anticipated in 2021. We currently offer what we believe to be the largest PCIe expansion product line 
breadth, with chassis and backplanes that offer expansion from one to 64 slots. Due to its greater data throughput and 
flexibility of design, we believe this is a growing market, and we intend to maintain our leadership role. 

Our Technology

We design and manufacture high performance computing systems for use on the edge that increase compute 

performance while reducing cost and impact to the infrastructure. Our high-density compute accelerators connect directly to a 
server’s PCIe bus, delivering substantial compute performance. Our flash storage arrays support hundreds of terabytes of 
high-speed storage that can also be accessed by multiple servers.

Technology Drivers for OSS High-Performance Computing Business

OSS has developed expertise and core competencies in the three fundamental technology drivers of today’s high-

performance edge computing market. Namely, high-speed serial interconnect technology, compute acceleration utilizing 
GPUs, and low latency flash storage. In combination, these technologies are changing the economics of computing, bringing
high-performance computing within the grasp of a wide range of new industries and commercial applications on the edge. 
Simultaneously the emergence of massive data being generated in each of these industries is pushing the requirement for 
state-of-the-art technology. OSS is enabling this technology to be deployed at the edge by merging these fundamental 
technologies with our expertise in providing the system level customization for meeting requirements for ruggedization and 
SWAP constraints (space, weight and power).

The opportunity is not only to provide competitive advantage for corporations, but also address some of the most 
fundamental challenges in life science, energy and security. OSS is well situated to leverage these major industry forces. By 
exploiting its unique set of expertise in the underpinning technologies of high-performance computing, OSS will continue to 
deliver world leading solutions, with the opportunity to capture a growing market share of this rapidly expanding 
marketplace.

Switched Serial Interconnect 

Switched serial interconnects are the data highways connecting many elements of today’s high-performance computing 
platforms. At ever increasing speeds, these pathways move data between system’s processing units, storage, networking, and 
peripheral elements. For high performance computing the primary processing, storage and peripheral interconnect is PCIe
Gen 4.0. PCIe Gen 4.0 has an ability to run up to 16 lanes in parallel, which allows up to 64 gigabytes (full duplex) per 
second bandwidth between system elements.

Serial switches incorporated in system design allow many system elements to be connected together in a non-blocking

interconnect fabric at PCIe Gen 4 speeds. This switch fabric capability allows systems to scale internally avoiding
bottlenecks. The serial interconnect can be embedded directly in the computer printed circuit boards, across connectors 
board-to-board, or traverse across copper or optical cables for chassis-to-chassis connection. Due to the extremely high 
speeds, the design considerations around signal integrity are rigorous and with unforgiving tolerances. PCIe Gen 5 will begin 
deployment in 2021, doubling the interconnect speed once again. 

Compute Acceleration with GPUs

GPUs have evolved from graphics display acceleration to becoming general-purpose processing workhorses for high-

performance computing systems. Today, the majority of the fastest supercomputers in the world utilize GPUs as their 
primary compute engines. GPUs are ideal for high-performance computing workloads because of their ability to do
massively parallel processing. While traditional CPUs today may have dozens of processing cores, GPUs have thousands of 
cores that are able to execute calculations simultaneously.

For many high-performance applications, fundamental pieces of the code can be optimized to run in parallel and 
therefore experience significant performance enhancements. NVIDIA, a key supplier of GPUs to the market, has done 
extensive benchmarking showing the ability of single GPU based machines to exceed the performance of dozens or even 
thousands of traditional CPU-only computers. NVIDIA has worked extensively with the software development community, 
and hundreds of applications have been tuned and developed to run on GPUs. 

12

The current NVIDIA GPU Applications catalog lists more than 400 such applications across a broad set of market 

spaces including:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

Computational Finance 

Climate, Weather and Ocean Modeling

Computational Chemistry and Biology

Data Science and Analytics

Deep Learning and Machine Learning 

Federal Defense and Intelligence 

Genomics

Manufacturing 

Media and Entertainment 

Medical Imaging 

Oil and Gas

Safety and Security 

While NVIDIA is focused on the deployment of their GPUs in the Data Center and for gaming, OSS is focused on 

taking this capability to the edge.   Many of these applications also scale performance based on the number of GPU
components utilized. OSS has designed multi-GPU systems including up to 16 GPUs in a single system. Current state-of-the
art GPUs provide over 7 teraflops of performance, with future products set to dramatically increase overall processing
capabilities in the years to come.

GPUs also pose significant system design challenges due to their high-power requirements. High-end GPUs can require

as much as 350 watts of power, which generates a tremendous amount of heat. Sophisticated power distribution and cooling 
designs are required, especially for large scale systems with multiple GPUs per chassis.

PCI Express Flash Storage – NVMe protocol

The use of flash memory technology for system storage has gained traction over the last several years, as the cost per 

gigabyte has continued to drop. Flash memory is now becoming the ubiquitous storage technology in high-performance 
systems.

Combined with the move away from traditional rotating hard drive technology has been the trend toward eliminating 
traditional storage protocols in favor of low latency flash memory protocols. Newer flash memory modules utilize a protocol
known as NVMe, which connects the flash memory directly to the system’s PCIe interconnect. This direct connection allows
for very high bandwidth between the storage and the other system elements and eliminates the need for protocol translation 
as data is moved from storage subsystems to and from the compute complex.

Today, flash memory modules with capacities up to 8 terabytes and PCIe Gen 4 interfaces are becoming available. OSS 

flash storage arrays with hundreds of terabytes of capacity are available, enabling the scaling of high-speed storage to meet 
the full range of high-performance edge application requirements.

Core Technical Capabilities

OSS has developed unique expertise and core competency across the fundamental technologies of today’s rapidly 

expanding specialized high-performance edge computing marketplace. These valuable assets are embedded in the leading-
edge engineering capabilities of our engineers, the proprietary intellectual property residing in our vast library of designs, and 
our brand equity based on our reputation as a high-quality producer of state-of-the-art custom and standard solutions across a 
broad array of markets. 

13

High Speed System Interconnect Design

Our electrical engineers are experts in high-speed digital signaling design. They have continually designed at the 
leading edge of the state-of-the-art signaling speeds, as semiconductor technology has driven up the clock rate of digital 
transmission. We have consistently been among a small handful of companies able to come to market first with the latest 
technology. In fact, we delivered the industry’s first PCIe over cable solutions for PCIe Gen 1, Gen 2, Gen 3, and Gen 4 and 
are currently on track to accomplish this again in Gen 5. The expertise required includes circuit design, PCB (printed circuit 
board) layout and routing optimizations all with a focus on achieving the highest levels of signal integrity. In our current 
systems, PCIe Gen 4 signals are propagated across multiple PCBs, connectors, and copper cabling while maintaining the
ability to recognize digital signal transitions at 16 billion times per second.

In high-performance computing systems, especially on the edge, the trajectory of ever-increasing signaling speeds is

continuing.   An ever-shrinking set of companies have the capability to design robust, highly-reliable systems at speeds that 
can tolerate the harsh conditions on the edge. We believe our core competency in large-scale, high-speed design and layout 
will allow us to remain on the forefront of this growing industry. 

Complex System Design

In addition to low-level signal integrity design expertise, we have amassed expertise and intellectual property in high-
performance system architecture design. This expertise allows us to develop extremely sophisticated systems with massive
scaling, while meeting customer demands for reliability, cost, and flexibility. 

We have developed the deep knowledge for high-capacity input/output systems and operating system adjustments and 
configuration tuning required. Our engineers are often called upon to co-design with OEM designers to create the perfect fit 
solution for their customers. 

For highly scalable systems, a deep understanding and experience with switching topologies and interconnect fabric

design is required. We have worked with serial switching technology starting with the first generation of PCIe and have been 
an innovator in creating unique and flexible topologies to meet the specific needs of the customers. Creating custom solutions
for unique customer solutions is a core competency and relies on this deep knowledge of switch capabilities and limitations.

For maximum system performance, design for optimizing data transfer speeds is also an important consideration. OSS 

has developed expertise in system design to leverage peer-to-peer data flows between GPUs and pioneering techniques for 
optimized data flows between flash storage and GPU compute engines. Our systems optimize switch and GPU configuration
topologies to optimize GPU-to-GPU communication without requiring latency-inducing data transfer between host dual 
processors. Our platforms feature RDMA (remote direct memory access) across compute nodes, which support data transfer 
without burdening the host CPU.

OSS has pioneered the ability to extend the PCIe bus beyond the confines of a single enclosure, opening the possibility
of flexible system expansion options. We believe we are one of the leading designers and suppliers of PCIe host bus adapters
that extend PCIe signals from the host motherboard across copper or optical cables to expansion enclosures. OSS adapters
provide both ends of the external cable connection. Our expertise in high-speed signal design in printed circuit boards, 
connectors and cables is essential to successful expansion designs. We also hold expertise in incorporating clustering and 
rack scale expansion into our system designs, including 100/200 gigabit Ethernet, 100/200 gigabit InfiniBand, and emerging 
PCIe top-of-rack switch technology. 

Expertise in power, cooling, and mechanical design are required to address the requirements of the high-performance
computing customers especially while meeting the constrained time requirements of edge deployments. We have developed 
leadership design capability in high-power design and distribution within large rack enclosures as well as edge optimized 
configurations. High-end GPUs today require 350 watts or above, and in our high-end systems, up to 16 of these can reside in 
a single chassis. Thousands of kilowatts of redundant power are required. Power stability and huge thermal loads are some of 
the critical design issues that must be addressed.

We have expertise in power distribution, redundant power, and complex chassis cooling design, including materials
selection, airflow simulation, fan technology and cable routing. We have also developed extensive intellectual property in 
regulatory compliance of complex high-performance computing system design across emission, shock, vibration, thermal, 
humidity and other environmental requirements that are required for highly reliable and highly available solutions. OSS
engineers are experts in design for regulatory testing for FCC (Federal Communications Commission), CE (European 

14

Conformity), UL (Underwriters Laboratories), and Mil-Spec (Military Standard) standards. Additionally, we have expertise
in rapid prototyping, design for manufacturability, and design for serviceability. 

Storage Management Software

Given our hardware design and integration expertise, we see the next natural step is to add a robust software capability 

that will allow us to offer more optimized and customized systems. Our Ion software design team provides the expertise to 
deliver full server and storage solutions that produce the highest performance from today’s leading-edge flash storage
devices.

The Ion software allows flash-based modules to be put into a variety of storage and network configurations which can 
then be accessed by multiple servers. The Ion software can do this cost-effectively, while preserving the low latency that is 
vital for many business and mission-critical enterprise applications, from database and transaction processing to massive data
collection programs. Ion also has a full high-availability option to ensure complete data integrity. 

In-house mature and established foundational storage software allows OSS to add new products and capabilities to its

product portfolio. Possibilities range from increasing data efficiency with snapshot, de-duplication and compression, to 
improving system manageability and adding NVMe over Fabrics storage scale out capabilities to our products.

Benefits of Technology and Core Capabilities to our Customers 

Due to our core capabilities, we can provide our high-performance computing customers with platforms possessing 

high reliability and cost effectiveness. Such performance allows our customers to solve bigger problems faster, and save the 
cost and time of highly-paid engineers, data scientists, and other human resources. Our technology enhances innovation by
allowing more ‘what-if’ analysis in a finite amount of time. Our price/performance leadership enhances our customers’
competitiveness, and lowers capital expense and total cost of ownership. We work with our OEM customers to develop
custom ‘perfect fit solutions’ for their unique requirements.

Our Products 

OSS has developed a complete line of products that have been customized for the benefit of our customers. 

GPU Appliances – high-density, fully integrated computer clusters that are purpose-built for user applications. They 

provide thousands of cores and hundreds of teraflops of computing performance. 

GPU Expansion – expansion units can add hundreds or thousands of computing cores with hundreds of teraflops of 

computing performance to virtually any OEM server. 

Flash Storage and Network Appliances – networked storage appliances optimized for the environment and system

software of our customers. These offer flexible and powerful turnkey, customer-driven solutions for the HPC market.

Flash Storage Arrays – arrays that provide hundreds of terabytes of storage and millions of input/output operations per 

second with flash memory. They are flexible, powerful, and configurable for customers in the HPC market.

Servers – OSS designs servers optimized for PCIe-over-cable expansion. Available in various turn-key and custom 

configurations, they provide simple, reliable and cost-effective server solutions. These servers are optimized to work 
seamlessly with other OSS systems and appliances. 

Desktop Computing Appliances – OSS designs and builds desktop expansion appliances in many configurations that 
add input/output flexibility to any user’s desktop system. These appliances come pre-configured with many combinations of 
flash memory, GPUs, and other add-in boards. 

PCIe Expansion – PCIe is the standard for high-speed connectivity from a server to a PCIe device. It provides vastly 
faster throughput compared to USB or Ethernet in a simple, cost-effective connection. It requires no special software, which
adds no overhead to the system, and improves latency of throughput. OSS provides cables, kits, backplanes, enclosures,
switches, and adaptor cards for this market. 

Industrial and Panel PCs – OSS provides small form factor high-performance compute platforms customizable to 

meet needs in industrial applications on the edge where space constraint is a fundamental consideration.

Tablets and Handhelds – OSS provides ruggedized mobile high-performance compute devices that meet the 

specialized requirement for devices deployed at the edge in a diverse set of environmental conditions.  

15

Customers

OSS serves a global clientele consisting of multinational companies, governmental agencies, and leading technology

providers. Some of our key customers are set forth below, including case studies illustrating how we provide custom 
solutions.

Raytheon – OSS worked closely with Raytheon to build a customized flash storage array, with flash drives installed in

removable canisters. Raytheon has installed these storage arrays on a current military aircraft equipped with multiple sensors, 
encryption devices and data recorders. These devices are fully compliant with appropriate military specifications, including 
shock and vibration. Each canister has the capacity to save 100 terabytes of data and weighs only 6.5 pounds, a fraction of the 
weight of the previous spinning hard drive design. Data is captured onto the compact OSS flash array canisters, which can be 
easily removed at the end of the mission for analysis. Our expertise in designing and manufacturing high-density flash arrays 
in the lightest, most compact package allows military aircraft to realize faster turnarounds during critical missions. These 
systems are being incorporated into new aircraft and retrofitted into the existing fleet.  In addition to these storage arrays, 
OSS has also expanded into designing and manufacturing compute platforms for Raytheon, adding AI on the fly capabilities 
to aircrafts.

disguise– disguise is the leading provider of hardware and software that allows their customers to produce live events, 

television broadcasts, theater effects, and special effects for concert tours. In addition to its live event products, disguise is
becoming a leader in the virtual world by leveraging the same technology and OSS’ products to create realistic 3D backdrops 
in studios around the world. OSS has worked with disguise to design purpose-built, custom servers that act as video
controllers for special effects at these events. These edge servers work seamlessly with disguise software applications,
providing up to 16 simultaneous video outputs that supports a rich array of special effects and extended reality experiences. 
Events like the Super Bowl halftime show, sporting events, feature films and numerous musical concerts rely upon disguise
controllers, designed and produced by OSS to deliver a lasting impression on audiences.

National Instruments – National Instruments is a market leader and multinational company that produces automated 

test equipment and virtual instrumentation software. OSS provides several PXI/PXIe/PCIe interface cards that are branded by 
National Instruments. OSS acts as an extension to National Instruments’ engineering group, allowing National Instruments to 
complete their product roadmap in a timely and cost-effective manner. 

Sales and Marketing 

Our sales and marketing efforts are focused on promoting sales, producing expert content, and brand awareness. 

Sales 

Our sales efforts entail three main areas: 

•

•

General Sales – OSS maintains a web site, web store and direct sales team that sell directly to end-users. This
includes e-commerce sales via typical web store functionality, and direct calling of potential customers to 
provide unique solutions that fits their needs. The OSS direct sales team interfaces with new potential customers
at live events and virtual industry tradeshows, directly interacts with potential customers, and presents solutions
for their high-performance edge needs. 

OEM Focused Sales – Our direct sales team is organized to best identify and develop the top potential
commercial OEM and government program customers. These OEM and government programs form the largest 
and fastest growing parts of our business. 
• Our Commercial Sales Team focuses on OEM customers where we sell standard or design and build 

customer specified systems based on OSS technology expertise that are branded with the OEM’s name and 
label. These companies, many market leaders, then resell the products through their own sales channels. We
actively seek this type of relationship, which is leveraged as a sales multiplier, allowing us to grow sales at a
faster rate without adding as many dedicated sales resources.

• Our Government Sales Team focuses on this large (~30%) and growing portion of the OSS business which 
provides systems to US Federal Department of Defense programs.  Our government sales team has the
knowledge and expertise to identify major program opportunities and provide the extensive technical and 
business documentation to bring these programs from concept to successful completion.  The growing part 
of our business is a focus and provides higher contribution of profit margin.

16

•

Channels – We have a dedicated sales resource that manages our worldwide network of resellers and distributors. 
We sell a large breadth of standard products through these channels, which allow us to achieve global customer 
touch without requiring a physical presence in all geographies. The master distributors in several countries have 
dedicated sales expertise to capture additional OEM business with both Fortune 500 and second tier OEM firms
extending our international footprint. With the acquisition of Bressner, we have a greater direct presence in 
Europe which allows greater access to those markets.

Marketing 

Our marketing department is responsible for defining our vision and product road map while also producing the highest 

return on our investments.  They primarily focus on positioning OSS as an expert and visionary in the field of high-
performance computing in edge applications utilizing PCI Express. We generate expert content to support our market leading
products while also building cost effective brand/product awareness in several ways. We use traditional and non-traditional 
marketing as well as partnerships and word of mouth to convey the uniqueness and compelling value of our products and 
services. The markets and applications we target include machine learning, deep learning, finance, medical equipment, in-
flight entertainment, manufacturing automation, defense/government, oil and gas exploration, media and entertainment.
Among the many channels utilized are: 

•

•

•

•

Trade Shows – We participate in several live and virtual tradeshows and events during the year to generate new 
relationships and foster existing relationships with customers and partners. These engagements allow us to
showcase our standard and custom product expertise to our target markets.  The target trade shows include 
AUSA (US Army), Sea-Air-Space (Navy/NASA), National Association of Broadcasters and IBC (media &
entertainment), GPU Technology Conferences globally, DSEI (International Military), AI World and AI Summit,
Supercomputing and International Supercomputing, Flash Memory Summit, Airline Passenger Expo and AIX 
(in-flight entertainment), Medica (medical) and Embedded World. OSS evaluates the ROI and costs of each 
show on an annual basis so participation may change from year to year. 

Electronic Media – We use various forms of electronic advertising media to market both the products and 
capabilities of OSS.  Electronic media includes internal direct email campaigns such as monthly newsletters and 
various press releases for new products, technology developments, partnerships and significant application
design wins. In addition, we use media companies relevant to our target markets to disseminate information 
about OSS to a larger set of potential customers.  The format of the electronic advertising varies but with the 
common focus on content advertising with a secondary focus on brand awareness. The various electronic media 
formats include search engine ads and keyword campaigns, digital ads, display ads, datasheet emails, e-
newsletters and text ads. Our web site is very key at leveraging our leadership content, positioning and SEO 
capabilities.  We will continue to invest on this front.

Social Media – We regularly use Facebook, Linked-in and Twitter to instantly alert the followers of OSS to new 
events, products, services, and customer stories.

Publications – We periodically publish white papers, customer success stories, and other demand generation
technology articles in printed and electronic periodicals and newsletters that include InsideHPC, Military
Embedded Systems, Storage Newsletter and HPC wire. We also carefully purchase some print ads with the
highest ROI in select industry magazines for brand awareness.

As we grow, it is anticipated our marketing efforts will likewise continue to increase in size and diversity. 

Competition

OSS’ core business is to provide specialized high-performance edge computing building blocks and platforms to OEMs 

who incorporate these products in their complete solutions which they sell to end users in specific vertical markets.  Due to
the nature of OSS’ business there are a number of categories of potential competitors of our products.

Customer in-house design resources 

Many of OSS’ target OEM customers have in-house engineering design resources which could be used as an
alternative to engaging with OSS.  Examples of current OSS customers who have significant in-house resources include 
National Instruments, Raytheon, and Lockheed Martin. This potential competition is mitigated by the technical specialization
OSS has especially in high end and large scale PCI Express switch fabrics and PCI Express over cable capabilities.  OEMs
can invest their in-house resources on value-add capabilities within their specific vertical market and outsource these 
horizontal technology capabilities to OSS.  OSS has also developed a trusted partner relationship with many of these OEMs

17

and has established a market reputation for technical expertise and a responsive and cost-effective engagement model. We 
win when our customers realize that together we can produce better products faster and more cost-effectively than they can
themselves. This has proven to be particularly evident when customers require state-of-the-art products that are constructed 
of parts available commercially. This has resulted in several design wins that demonstrate our flexibility and how we can 
work closely with large OEM and government customers. Interestingly, it appears that when these large companies cut back 
on their workforce or have more limited budgets, such events may actually help our position as we may become these 
companies’ only option to get their desired product or service deployed within a reasonable period of time.

Major Tier 1 & 2 Mainstream Computer and Storage Vendors

These vendors offer mainstream high-performance computing platforms including servers and storage systems that can 

address some applications at the edge in OSS target markets. They do not; however, offer ‘specialized’ platforms or 
customization capabilities that OSS specializes in to meet unique form factor or ruggedization or scale out requirements 
sought by OEM customers.  For the most part these vendors focus on the large air-conditioned data centers and compete on 
price/volume.  OSS’ strategy is specifically designed to avoid head-to-head competition with this class of vendors.  In some 
scenarios OSS can provide a complementary specialized component or building block which interface to one of these 
vendors mainstream products. Examples of companies in this space include HP, Dell/EMC, IBM, Pure Storage, and NetApp.

Chip Vendors with vertical integration offerings

Third party competitive products include cases where the manufacturers of the underlying chip or board-level products
decide to also offer system-level products. This is the case with Intel, NVIDIA, Western Digital and others. These offerings 
tend to be tactical, short-term products that are intended to demonstrate a new technology, rather than long-term forays into
the systems business. In addition, these “technology demonstration systems” tend to be priced at high levels, making them 
less competitive once the newness factor wears off. 

Specialized Horizontal HPC Vendors

There are a handful of fragmented competitors who offer specialized products in the same categories as OSS.  These
companies are small and tend to focus in specific geographic area or with an established set of long-term customers.  They 
have limited bandwidth to take on many simultaneous projects and are rarely seen in direct competitive situations. Examples 
of companies in this space include Trenton and Cyclone.

Multi GPU Platform Vendors

A significant area of focus for OSS is in specialized multi-GPU platforms for edge applications.  Due to the 
tremendous interest in AI solutions using GPUs there are many vendors offering products in this space.  Similar to the 
mainstream computer and storage vendors mentioned above these vendors offer standard solutions without the options for 
specialization and customization that OSS offers. As the primary GPU vendor, NVIDIA is a safe choice as a system provider 
for many customers who do not need or desire a level of specialization in their products.  OSS has a strong and positive 
relationship with NVIDIA which includes receiving leads from them for specialized solutions not addressed by their 
mainstream system offering.  Other companies such as SuperMicro and Tyan who offer their own system products directly 
are also happy to work with OSS to resell their products when customers need a combination of standard and specialized 
products.  OSS offers its EOS server based on SuperMicro motherboards. Examples of companies in this space include 
NVIDIA, SuperMicro and Tyan.

Vertical HPC Vendors – Military/Aerospace

In certain vertical markets, there are competitors who focus primarily in that market. The military and aerospace

markets are prime examples.  These vendors often provide complete solutions including both hardware and software and 
some specialization in terms of form factor and ruggedization.  In these markets, OSS provides unique capability in terms of 
scaling of PCI Express components over cable (copper and fiber) that can address unique requirements of specific military or 
government programs.  OSS has also established good relationships with prime contractors or agencies (Raytheon, Lockheed, 
Boeing, NASA, ONR, and others) which can be important influencers or decision makers on technology selection.  
Competitors in this space include companies such as Mercury, Crystal, Curtiss Wright, and Systel.  In the past, we have been 
able to offer the latest technology normally only deployed in commercial applications well before our competitors by 
leveraging our “performance, without compromise” strategy. 

18

Vertical Vendors – M&E/Visualization

Another vertical market with different competitors is the media and entertainment and visualization markets.  These 

companies focus on understanding and tuning their hardware systems to the specific application and data types of these
markets.  This focus provides those benefits in terms of brand awareness in the vertical, but often they are limited in ability toy
meet specialized and customized requirements of OEMs in this space.  Examples of companies in this space include Boxx,
Cubix and Sonnet.

Manufacturing and Operations 

OSS is certified under ISO 9001-2015 for “design, manufacture, and supply of industrial computers.” This means OSS
has demonstrated its ability to consistently provide products that meet both customer requirements and applicable regulatory 
or statutory requirements. It also indicates that we have programs and processes in place to ensure a high level of customer 
satisfaction, as well as a continuous improvement program that ensures OSS gets better over time.

We utilize lean principles to drive our manufacturing and assembly process. One of the key aspects of this is our 
application of just-in-time principles that ensure effective ordering and utilization of inventory, and this helps optimize cash
flow throughout the manufacturing cycle. Within the manufacturing process, our operations encompass three categories of 
“builds:”

•

•

•

Standard Builds – These are builds of standard products that are sold with little or no customization or non-
standard features. These are products that are ready to be installed or integrated by the customer upon receipt. 

Custom Builds – Custom builds involve a product built to a customer specification. Upon receipt, the customer 
has a unique product that performs all the functions and has the physical dimensions that match their 
specifications.

Engineering Project Builds – OSS supports the product development process by building models and prototypes
of products. Developed by the OSS engineering group, the prototypes can be of standard or custom products. 

OSS is dedicated to quality and customer satisfaction. Within the manufacturing operations function at OSS, our 
processes begin with the end goal in mind. This means we start with the customer. All our business processes begin with the 
idea that the customer is the essence of why we exist. Our continuous improvement efforts require us to review products, 
services, and processes with the idea that minor changes can lead to greater outcomes for our customers.

While we are cognizant of the additive nature of small improvements, we believe a disciplined approach to 

improvement sometime leads to extraordinary, large, and positive advances in our products and services. This is extremely 
important to OSS, as our goal is to bring the most advanced leading-edge technologies to our customers before our 
competitors can. Our operations strategy supports our overall mission of being first-to-market with customized, leading-edge 
products that are best-in-market in terms of speed and overall performance. 

Although we serve the high end of the edge computing space, we are constantly looking for ways to become more 

efficient and drive down costs while driving up margins.

Research and Development 

Our ability to compete successfully in our industry is heavily dependent upon our ability to ensure a continual and 
timely flow of competitive products, services, and technologies to the marketplace. We continue to develop new products and 
technologies and to enhance existing products in order to drive further commercialization. We may also expand the range of 
our product offerings and intellectual property through licensing and/or acquisition of third-party business and technology.

Intellectual property research and development at OSS is centered on the exploitation of key technologies as they 
evolve in the marketplace. Our product roadmap reflects new technologies for CPUs, GPUs, flash storage, and advanced 
PCIe switches. We design first-to-market, custom implementations utilizing market leading component technologies.
Accordingly, our focus lies not in the capital-intensive development of silicon implementations of technologies (i.e., chips, 
processors, GPUs, or storage devices), but rather leverages leading-edge technologies and building first-to-market products 
that fully exploit those technologies for solving customer problems. 

19

The OSS research and development strategy can be summarized as follows: OSS drives design wins by utilizing key

new technologies to develop products that are leading edge and first-to-market while solving challenging problems 
working closely with our customers.

Some examples of OSS developments:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

GPU compute accelerators with the most GPUs per rack unit

Networking of GPUs

Broad range of solutions, due to specific customer design

Capability to expand existing servers from virtually any OEM

First-to-market products as new GPUs are introduced by NVIDIA, Intel, Western Digital and Broadcom

Complete customization per the needs of our OEM customers

Integration of multiple new technologies (servers, GPUs, flash drives, and PCIe) into optimized products for our 
OEM customers

Intellectual Property 

The primary intellectual property value of OSS emanates from the more than 600 individual design projects we have

undertaken over the decades since our founding. These designs are archived and cataloged, so we rarely begin a new design 
from scratch.  In general, we maintain the rights to the product to use elsewhere.

Over the years, our team has developed and maintained expertise in high-speed signal design and analysis, electronic
and mechanical packaging, PCIe-over-cable, fiber optics transmission, high-speed/density flash arrays, and integration and 
deployment of GPUs in compute accelerators and servers. This extensive expertise positions us to expand and rationalize our 
product line to meet the growing and ever-changing HPC market. 

Working Capital Items

Our inventory levels are currently adequate for our short-term needs based upon present levels of demand.  We 

consider the component parts of our different products to be generally available and current suppliers to be reliable and 
capable of satisfying anticipated needs.

Markets, Seasonality, and Major Customers

The Company’s products and services serve a global clientele consisting of multinational companies, governmental
agencies, and leading technology providers. Based on recent market experience, it appears there may be some seasonality
with deliveries decreasing in January and February each year, likely as a result of Asia’s holiday season and as a result of 
varied customer appropriation cycles; however, we believe these market factors will continue to evolve and the Company’s 
insight to these trends will improve with continued commercial success and time.

For the year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively, 24.1% and 41.0% of our total consolidated revenues 

were associated primarily with two customers. A loss or decline in business with these customers could have an adverse 
impact on our business, financial condition, and results of operations.

We typically provide our products under contract supply agreements or purchase orders. We provide our products,

software, and services from our offices located in California, Utah, and Germany. 

Distribution, Marketing, and Strategic Relationships

We have developed strategic relationships with well-established companies in key areas including distribution and 

manufacturing. We sell our products worldwide, with a primary focus on North America, Europe and Asia markets, through
our direct product sales force, and partner networks.

20

Materials and Suppliers

Although most components essential to our business are generally available from multiple sources, we believe there

are component suppliers and manufacturing vendors whose loss to us could have a material adverse effect upon our business
and financial condition. 

Historically, we have not experienced significant delays in the supply or availability of our key materials or 

components provided by our suppliers, nor have we experienced a significant price increase for materials or components.  We 
do not anticipate any such delays or significant price increases in our fiscal year 2021. 

Human Capital Resources, Employees, and Personnel

We believe that our future success will depend, in part, on our ability to continue to attract, hire, and retain qualified
d 
personnel.  To achieve this objective the Company provides competitive compensation, benefits, stock participation and a
personnel.  To achieve this objective the Company provides competitive compensation, benefits, stock participation and a
success driven work environment.

As of December 31, 2020, we had approximately 99 employees, of which 97 are full-time and 2 are part-time
employees.  Seventy-three of our employees are domestic and twenty-six are international. Our employees include highly 
skilled engineers, technicians, assemblers, and support staff. They are housed in multiple facilities, and are led by a
management team that is supportive but expects a lot. We are proud of our low turnover of personnel where we keep the team 
challenged and encourage input and creative thinking by all.  The management team provides transparency to its employees 
through regular communication meetings designed to update employees on current metric driven results and future 
expectations. None of our employees are covered by a collective bargaining agreement or represented by a labor union. We 
consider our relationship with our employees to be strong. 

Environmental Matters

No significant pollution or other types of hazardous emission result from the Company’s operations and it is not 
anticipated that our operations will be materially affected by federal, state or local provisions concerning environmental
controls.  Our costs of complying with environmental, health and safety requirements have not been material. 

Furthermore, we do not believe that compliance with existing or pending climate change legislation, regulation, or 
international treaties or accords are reasonably likely to have a material effect in the foreseeable future on our business or 
markets that we serve, nor on our results of operations, capital expenditures, earnings, competitive position, financial 
position, or any of our operations.  However, we will continue to monitor emerging developments in this area. 

Government Approval and Effect of Government Regulations

Because our core business is to provide specialized high performance edge computing building blocks and platforms to
OEMs who incorporate these products in their complete solutions which they sell to end users in specific vertical markets, we
do not believe that any government agency approval is required for the products and services that we provide to our 
customers.

However, governmental regulations, including but not limited to import and export law, customer, and trade 

regulations, may affect our business.  For more information, see the section titled, “Risk Factors” found on Part I, Item1A, to 
this Annual Report.

Company Website

We maintain a corporate Internet website at: http://www.onestopsystems.com

The contents of our website are not incorporated in or otherwise to be regarded as part of this Annual Report. We file
reports with the SEC which are available on our website free of charge. These reports include annual reports on Form 10-K,
quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, “Section 16” filings on Form 3, Form 4, and Form 5, and other 
related filings, each of which is provided on our website as soon as reasonably practical after we electronically file such 
materials with or furnish them to the SEC. In addition, the SEC maintains a website (www.sec.gov) that contains reports, 
proxy and information statements, and other information regarding issuers that file electronically with the SEC, including the 
Company.

21

ITEM 1A.  RISK FACTORS

Investing in our common stock involves a high degree of risk. You should carefully consider the risks described below,

as well as the other information in this Annual Report, including our financial statements and the related notes and 
“Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations,” before deciding whether to 
invest in our common stock. The occurrence of any of the events or developments described below could harm our business,
financial condition, operating results, and growth prospects. In such an event, the market price of our common stock could 
decline, and you may lose all or part of your investment. Additional risks and uncertainties not presently known to us or that 
we currently deem immaterial also may impair our business operations. 

Risks Related to Our Business and Industry

Navigating the demand, supply and operational challenges associated with the ongoing coronavirus (COVID-19) 
pandemic unsuccessfully may affect our financial condition and results of operations.

COVID-19 has spread worldwide, resulting in shutdowns of manufacturing and commerce. COVID-19 has resulted in 

government authorities implementing numerous measures to try to contain it, such as travel bans and restrictions, 
quarantines, shelter-in-place orders and shutdowns. These measures have impacted, and may further impact, our workforce 
and operations, the operations of our customers and our partners, and those of our respective vendors and suppliers. Our 
critical business operations, including our headquarters, most of our finished goods inventory and many of our key suppliers, 
are located in regions which have been impacted by COVID-19. Our customers and suppliers worldwide have also been 
affected and may continue to be affected by COVID-19 related restrictions and closures.

The COVID-19 pandemic has increased economic and demand uncertainty. In the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2020, the

Company experienced protracted timelines and shortages for delivery of product as well as delays in the ability to transact 
business due to remotely accessing customer representatives and their decision makers.

The manufacture of product components, the final assembly of our products and other critical operations are

concentrated in certain geographic locations that have been impacted by COVID-19, and local governments continue to take 
measures to try to contain the pandemic. There is considerable uncertainty regarding the impact of such measures and 
potential future measures, including restrictions on manufacturing facilities, on our support operations or workforce, or on
our customers, partners, vendors and suppliers. Such measures, as well as restrictions or disruptions of transportation, such as
reduced availability or increased cost of air transport, port closures and increased border controls or closures, could limit our 
capacity to meet customer demand and have a material adverse effect on our financial condition and results of operations.

The spread of COVID-19 has caused us to modify our business practices as the Company complies with state mandated 

requirements for safety in the workplace to ensure the health, safety and welling-being of our employees. These measures 
include personal protective equipment, social distancing, cleanliness of the facilities and daily monitoring of the health of 
employees in our facilities, as well as modifying our policies on employee travel and the cancellation of physical 
participation in meetings, events and conferences. We may take further actions as required by government authorities or that 
we determine are in the best interests of our employees, customers, partners and suppliers. However, we have not developed a 
specific and comprehensive contingency plan designed to address the challenges and risks presented by the COVID-19
pandemic and, even if and when we do develop such a plan, there can be no assurance that such plan will be effective in 
mitigating the potential adverse effects on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

In addition, while the extent and duration of the COVID-19 pandemic on the global economy and our business in 
particular is difficult to assess or predict, the pandemic has resulted in, and may continue to result in, significant disruption of 
global financial markets, which may reduce our ability to access capital or our customers’ ability to pay us for past or future 
purchases, which could negatively affect our liquidity. A recession or financial market correction resulting from the lack of 
containment and spread of COVID-19 could impact overall technology spending, adversely affecting demand for our 
products, our business and the value of our common stock.

The ultimate impact of the COVID-19 pandemic or a similar health epidemic is highly uncertain and subject to change. 

The extent of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our operational and financial performance, including our ability to
execute our business strategies and initiatives in the expected time frame, will depend on future developments, including, but 
not limited to, the duration and continued spread of the pandemic, its severity, the actions to contain the disease or treat its
impact, further related restrictions on travel, and the duration, timing and severity of the impact on customer spending, 
including any recession resulting from the pandemic, all of which are uncertain and cannot be predicted. An extended period 
of global supply chain and economic disruption as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic could have a material negative impact 
on our business, results of operations, access to sources of liquidity and financial condition, though the full extent and 
duration is uncertain. 

22

The COVID-19 pandemic continues to impact our business and could materially adversely affect our financial condition
and results of operations.

Our business has begun to be negatively affected by a range of external factors related to COVID-19 that are not within 

our control. For example, numerous measures have been implemented by governmental authorities across the globe to
contain the virus, including travel bans and restrictions, quarantines, shelter-in-place orders, restrictions and limitations of 
public gatherings, and business limitations and shutdowns. Many of our customers’ businesses have been severely impacted 
by these measures and some have been required to reduce employee headcount as a result. If a significant number of our 
customers are unable to continue as a going concern, this would have an adverse impact on our business and financial
condition. In addition, many of our customers are working remotely, which may delay the timing of new business and 
implementations of our services. If COVID-19 continues to have a substantial impact on our partners, customers, or 
suppliers, our results of operations and overall financial performance will be harmed.

The impacts of COVID-19 on our business, customers, partners, suppliers, employees, markets and financial results
and condition are uncertain, evolving and dependent on numerous unpredictable factors outside of our control, including:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

the spread, duration and severity of COVID-19 as a public health matter and its impact on governments, 
businesses and society generally and our clients, partners, suppliers and our business more specifically;

the measures being taken by governments, businesses and society in response to COVID-19 and the effectiveness
of those measures, including our suppliers in China experiencing delays due to the Chinese government’s
response to COVID-19;

the scope and effectiveness of fiscal and monetary stimulus programs and other legislative and regulatory 
measures being implemented by federal, state and local governments in response to COVID-19;

the duration and impact of the numerous measures implemented by governmental authorities throughout the 
country to contain COVID-19, including travel bans and restrictions, quarantines, shelter-in-place orders, 
restrictions and limitations on public gatherings, and business limitations and shutdowns;

the increase in business failures or slowdowns among our customers, suppliers, and other businesses;

the pace and extent to which our customers and other businesses are able to operate and/or reduce their number 
of employees and other compensated individual; the willingness of current and prospective clients to invest in
our products and services; and

the satisfaction of customers with product and service remote delivery and support

If we are not able to respond to and manage the impact of such events effectively, our business will be harmed.

At present, it is clear the global economy has been negatively impacted by COVID-19, and demand for some of our 

products and services has been reduced due to uncertainty and the economic impact of COVID-19. For example, during the 
year, a customer in certain of the industries most impacted by COVID-19, requested, and we expect will continue to request, 
relief to existing contracts or the timing of payment obligations. For example, some customers are delaying payments owed 
to the Company while they address immediate financial crises in their operations due to COVID-19. In particular, in the 
media and entertainment and commercial airlines industries, demand for the use of outdoor media equipment has been 
impacted due to restrictions on public gatherings and the airlines industry has been impacted by reduced travel. Until such 
restrictions improve, we expect that demand for certain of our clients’ products and services will be limited, and thus, may 
impact our financial results and operations.

More generally, COVID-19 raises the possibility of an extended global economic downturn, which could affect 
demand for our products and services and impact our results and financial condition even after the pandemic is contained and 
remediation/restriction measures are lifted. For example, we may be unable to collect receivables from customers that are 
significantly impacted by COVID-19. Also, a decrease in orders in a given period could negatively affect our revenues in 
future periods.

Though management has been proactively managing through the current known impacts, if the situation further 
deteriorates or the outbreak results in further restriction on both supply and demand factors, our cash flows, financial position 
and operating results for 2021 and beyond will be negatively impacted. Neither the length of time nor the magnitude of the 
negative impacts can be presently determined. 

23

The longer the COVID-19 pandemic persists, the greater the potential for significant adverse impact to our business 

operations.   Quarantines, travel restrictions, prohibitions on non-essential gatherings, shelter-in-place orders and other 
similar directives and policies intended to reduce the spread of the disease, may reduce our productivity and that of the third 
parties on which we rely and may disrupt and delay many aspects of our business.

Business disruptions could harm our business, lead to a decline in revenues and increase our costs.

Our worldwide operations could be disrupted by earthquakes, telecommunications failures, power or water shortages, 
outages at cloud service providers, tsunamis, floods, hurricanes, typhoons, fires, extreme weather conditions, cyber-attacks, 
terrorist attacks, medical epidemics or pandemics (including, but not limited to, COVID-19) and other natural or man-made 
disasters, catastrophic events or climate change. The occurrence of any of these disruptions could harm our business and 
result in significant losses, a decline in revenue and an increase in our costs and expenses. Any of these business disruptions 
could require substantial expenditures and recovery time in order to fully resume operations. Our corporate headquarters, and 
a portion of our research and development activities, are located in California, and other critical business operations, finished 
goods inventory, and some of our suppliers are located in Europe and Asia, near major earthquake faults known for seismic 
activity. The manufacture of product components, the final assembly of our products and other critical operations are
concentrated in certain geographic locations, including California, Germany, and China. Geopolitical change or changes in 
government regulations and policies in the United States or abroad may result in changing regulatory requirements, trade 
policies, import duties and economic disruptions that could impact our operating strategies, product demand, access to global
markets, hiring, and profitability. In particular, revisions to laws or regulations or their interpretation and enforcement could 
result in increased taxation, trade sanctions, the imposition of import duties or tariffs, restrictions and controls on imports or 
exports, or other retaliatory actions, which could have an adverse effect on our business plans. For example, regulations to 
implement the Export Control Reform Act of 2018 could have an adverse effect on our business plans. Catastrophic events 
can also have an impact on third-party vendors who provide us with critical infrastructure services for IT and research and 
development systems and personnel. In addition, geopolitical and domestic political developments, such as existing and 
potential trade wars, political or social unrest, elections and post-election developments, and other events beyond our control, 
can increase levels of political and economic unpredictability globally and increase the volatility of global financial markets. 
Political instability or adverse political developments in or around any of the major countries in which we do business would 
also likely harm our business, financial condition and results of operations. Our operations could be harmed if manufacturing, 
logistics or other operations in these locations are disrupted for any reason, including natural disasters, high heat events or 
water shortages, information technology system failures, military actions or economic, business, labor, environmental, public 
health, regulatory or political issues. The ultimate impact on us, our third-party vendors and other suppliers and our general 
infrastructure of being located near major earthquake faults and being consolidated in certain geographical areas is unknown.
In the event a major earthquake or other disaster or catastrophic event affects us or the third-party systems on which we rely,
our business could be harmed as a result of declines in revenue, increases in expenses, substantial expenditures and time
spent to fully resume operations. All of these risks and conditions could materially adversely affect our future sales and 
operating results. 

A reversal of the U.S. economic recovery and a return to volatile or recessionary conditions in the United States or abroad 
could adversely affect our business or our access to capital markets in a material manner.

Worsening economic and market conditions, downside shocks, or a return to recessionary economic conditions could 

severely reduce demand for our products and adversely affect our operating results. These economic conditions may also 
impact the financial condition of one or more of our key suppliers, which could affect our ability to secure product to meet 
our customers’ demand.  Our results of operations and the implementation of our business strategy could be adversely 
affected by general conditions in the global economy.  An economic downturn may cause uncertainty in the capital and credit 
markets and could have a material adverse effect on us. We could also be adversely affected by such factors as changes in 
foreign currency rates, weak economies, and political conditions in each of the countries in which we sell our products.

The market for our products is developing and may not develop as we expect.

The market for cutting-edge, high performance computing products is characterized by rapid advances in technologies.

We believe our future success will depend in large part on our ability to develop products, new business initiatives and 
creating innovative and custom designs for our customers. The growth of server clusters, specialized or high-performance
applications, and hosted software solutions which require fast and efficient data processing, is crucial to our success. It is
difficult to predict the development of the demand for high performance computing, supercomputers, and related hardware
solutions, the size and growth rate for this market, the entry of competitive products, or the success of existing competitive 
products. Any expansion in our market depends on several factors, including the demand, cost, performance, and perceived 
value associated with our products. If our products are not adopted or there is a reduction in demand for our products caused 
by a lack of customer acceptance, a slowdown in demand for computational power, an overabundance of unused 
computational power, technological challenges, competing technologies and products, decreases in corporate spending,
weakening economic conditions, or otherwise, it could result in reduced customer orders, early order cancellations, the loss 
of customers, or decreased sales, any of which would adversely affect our business, operating results, and financial condition. 

24

Our operating results may fluctuate significantly, which makes our future operating results difficult to predict and could 
cause our operating results to fall below expectations or our guidance. 

Our quarterly and annual operating results have fluctuated in the past and may fluctuate significantly in the future,
which makes it difficult for us to predict our future operating results. The timing and size of sales of our products are variablea
and difficult to predict and can result in fluctuations in our net sales from period to period. In addition, our budgeted expense 
levels depend in part on our expectation of future sales. Any substantial adjustment to expenses to account for lower levels of 
sales is difficult and takes time, thus we may not be able to reduce our costs sufficiently to compensate for a shortfall in net 
sales, and even a small shortfall in net sales could disproportionately and adversely affect our operating margin and operating 
results for a given quarter. 

Our operating results may also fluctuate due to a variety of other factors, many of which are outside our control,
including the changing and volatile local, national, and international economic environments, any of which may cause our 
stock price to fluctuate. Besides the other risks in this “Risk Factors” section, factors that may affect our operations include:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

fluctuations in demand for our products and services; 

the inherent complexity, length, and associated unpredictability of product development windows and product 
lifecycles; 

changes in customers’ budgets for technology purchases and delays in their purchasing cycles;

changing market conditions; 

any significant changes in the competitive dynamics of our markets, including new entrants, or further 
consolidation;

our ability to continue to broaden our customer base beyond our traditional customers; 

the timing of product releases or upgrades by us or our competitors; and 

our ability to develop, introduce, and ship in a timely manner new products and product enhancements and 
anticipate future market demands that meet our customers’ requirements. 

Each of these factors individually, or the cumulative effect of two or more of these factors, could result in large
fluctuations in our quarterly and annual operating results. As a result, comparing our operating results on a period-to-period 
basis may not be meaningful. You should not rely on our past results as an indication of future performance. 

Our products are subject to competition, including competition from the customers to whom we sell. 

Servers, computer accelerators, flash storage arrays, PCIe expansion products, and other products that we design, 
manufacture, and sell or license are subject to competition. The computer hardware and technology fields are well established 
with limited, and in many cases no, intellectual property and technological barriers to entry. The markets in which we operate 
are competitive and we expect competition to increase in the future from established competitors and new market entrants. 
The markets are influenced by, among others, brand awareness and reputation, price, strength and scale of sales and 
marketing efforts, professional services and customer support, product features, reliability and performance, scalability of 
products, and breadth of product offerings. Due to the nature of our products, competition occurs at the design, performance,
and sales stages. A design or sales win by us does not limit further competition and our customers may purchase competitive
products from third parties at any time. This competition could result in increased pricing pressure, reduced profit margins,
increased sales and marketing expenses and failure to increase, or the loss of, market share, any of which would likely 
seriously harm our business, operating results or financial condition. From a cost and control perspective, our products are 
specialized and thus generally cost more than our competitors’ products. If our ability to design specialized solutions is
deemed to be on par or of lesser value than competing solutions, we could lose our customers and prospects. 

Many of our customers and competitors, often with substantially more resources or larger economies of scale, produce 

products that are competitive with our products. Many of these third parties mass-produce hardware solutions and have not 
heavily invested in or allocated resources to the smaller scale specialized products and solutions we design. A decrease in the 
cost of general mass-produced hardware solutions, which can serve as a substitute for our products, or the entrance of or 
additional allocation of resources by one of these customers or competitors into the production of specialized systems which
compete with our products could create increased pricing pressure, reduced profit margins, increased sales and marketing 
expenses, or the loss of market share or expected market share, any of which may significantly harm our business, operating 
results and financial condition. 

25

New entrants and the introduction of other distribution models in our markets may harm our competitive position. 

The markets for development, distribution, and sale of our high-performance computing solutions are rapidly evolving.
New entrants seeking to gain market share by introducing new technology, new products and new server configurations may 
make it more difficult for us to sell our products and earn design wins which could create increased pricing pressure, reduced 
profit margins, increased sales and marketing expenses, or the loss of market share or expected market share, any of which 
may significantly harm our business, operating results and financial condition. 

Large computer hardware and equipment manufacturers and suppliers have traditionally designed, produced, and sold 

general purpose servers, and storage arrays and related products and equipment. Our customers supplement these general 
purpose systems by purchasing our specialized or customized systems or supplemental products which improve the speed,
efficiency, or performance of such systems. If the speed, efficiency, or computational power of such general purpose systems 
increases such that supplemental or specialized products become unnecessary, or the cost of such general purpose systems
declines such that it is more cost effective for prospective customers to add general-purpose equipment rather than 
specialized or supplemental equipment, we could experience a significant decline in demand for the products which may 
significantly harm to our business, operating results and financial condition. 

Our products compete with and supplement general purpose servers, storage systems and related equipment. If the 

producers of general purpose equipment implement proprietary standards, software, interfaces, or other interoperability
restrictions, including controls which restrict the equipment’s compatibility with third party systems, we could experience a 
significant decline in sales because our products would not be interoperable with such systems, resulting in significant harm
to our business, operating results and financial condition.

In our marketplace, general-purpose equipment is traditionally mass-produced and available to order while specialized 
equipment and custom bulk-order equipment is subject to a bid-based purchase system. If one or more large manufacturers of 
general or standard servers storage arrays, or related products and equipment provide specialized, customized, or 
supplementary equipment on a made-to-order or generally available basis, we could be forced to reduce our prices or change
our selling model to remain competitive which would significantly harm to our business, operating results and financial 
condition. 

If we are unable to manage our growth and expand our operations successfully, our business and operating results will be
harmed, and our reputation may be damaged.

We have expanded our operations significantly since inception and anticipate that further significant expansion will be 

required to achieve our business objectives. The growth and expansion of our business and product offerings places a 
continuous and significant strain on our management, operational and financial resources. Any such future growth would also 
add complexity to and require effective coordination throughout our organization. To manage any future growth effectively, 
we must continue to improve and expand our information technology and financial infrastructure, our operating and 
administrative systems and controls, and our ability to manage headcount, capital and processes in an efficient manner. We
may not be able to successfully implement improvements to these systems and processes in a timely or efficient manner,
which could result in additional operating inefficiencies and could cause our costs to increase more than planned. If we do 
increase our operating expenses in anticipation of the growth of our business and this growth does not meet our expectations, 
our operating results may be negatively impacted. If we are unable to manage future expansion, our ability to provide high
quality products and services could be harmed, which could damage our reputation and brand, and may have a material 
adverse effect on our business, operating results and financial condition. 

A limited number of customers represent a significant portion of our sales. If we were to lose any of these customers, our 
sales could decrease significantly.

In the years ended December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019, approximately 24.1%, and 41.0% of net sales represent 

customers which are greater than 10% of our consolidated annual revenue.  This concentration is with two customers, 
disguise and Raytheon.

In addition, a few products comprise a significant amount of our sales, and the discontinuation, modification, or 
obsolescence of such products may materially and adversely affect our sales and results of operations. Any loss of, or a
significant reduction in purchases by, these other significant customers or a decrease in the high performance applications 
that drive the use of our products, or the modification, discontinuation, or obsolescence of a device which constitutes a 
significant portion of our sales could have an adverse effect on our financial condition and operating results. 

26

Some of our contracts allow our customers to have access to the design drawings for products which we have designed 
and manufacture for them.

Some of our contracts allow our customers to have access to the design drawings for products which we have designed 

and manufactured for them.  In some cases, these drawings are included as a deliverable in conjunction with their non-
recurring engineering fee, and in other cases, an additional fee is required to obtain the drawings package.  Since these 
customers have access to the drawings, there is no guarantee that they will continue to purchase the manufactured products
from OSS.  This arrangement applies to our large media and entertainment customer, several of CDI’s customers, and other 
customers of OSS as well.  Neither our media and entertainment customer, nor our current CDI customers have had any of 
the OSS-designed products manufactured by anyone other than OSS, but they may have the capability to do so in the future.

We rely on a limited number of parts suppliers to support our manufacturing and design processes.

We rely on a limited number of suppliers to provide us with the necessary devices, parts and systems to allow us to
build, design and manufacture our products, and the failure to manage our relationships with these parties successfully could 
adversely affect our ability to market and sell our products. In the years ended December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019,
suppliers for which purchases represent greater than 10% of our total parts purchases accounted for approximately 18.3%,
and 11%, of materials purchased respectively.  This concentration is with one supplier, Concisys Inc. 

Although we do believe we could locate additional suppliers to fulfill our needs, any significant change in our 
relationship with these suppliers could have a material adverse effect on our business, operating results, and financial 
condition unless and until we are able to find suitable replacements. We make substantially all of our purchases from our 
contract suppliers on a purchase order basis. Our suppliers are not required to supply our raw materials for any specific period 
or in any specific quantity or price. 

Global pandemics or other disasters or public health concerns in regions of the world where we have operations or 
source material or sell products, such as outbreaks of novel coronavirus or H1N1 flu could result in the disruption of our 
business. Specifically, the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in increased travel restrictions and extended shutdowns
of certain businesses in the region. These or any governmental developments or health concerns in countries in which we 
operate could result in social, economic, or labor instability. Although we are monitoring the situation regularly, it is 
currently unknown whether the outbreak will continue to disrupt our product shipments or impact manufacturing in the
region over a prolonged period. If such disruption were to extend over a prolonged period, it could have a material adverse
impact on our business and our financial results. Any disruption resulting from similar events could also cause significant 
delays in shipments of our products until we are able to resume normalized operations and this could have a material negative 
impact on our results of operations and cash flows.

Our future success depends on our ability to develop and successfully introduce new and enhanced products that 

meet the needs of our customers.

Our sales depend on our ability to anticipate our existing and prospective customers’ needs and develop products that 

address those needs. Our future success will depend on our ability to design new products, anticipate technological
improvements and enhancements, and to develop products that are competitive in the rapidly changing computer hardware 
and software industry. Introduction of new products and product enhancements will require coordination of our efforts with
those of our customers, suppliers, and manufacturers to develop products that offer performance features desired by our 
customers and performance and functionality superior or more cost effective than solutions offered by our competitors. If we
fail to coordinate these efforts, develop product enhancements or introduce new products that meet the needs of our 
customers as scheduled, our operating results will be materially and adversely affected, and our business and prospects will
be harmed. We cannot assure that product introductions will meet our anticipated release schedules or that our products will 
be competitive in the market. Furthermore, given the rapidly changing nature of the computer equipment market, there can be
no assurance our products and technology will not be rendered obsolete by alternative or competing technologies. 

Delays in our production cycle could result in outdated equipment or decreased purchases of our products. 

The design and manufacture of our products can take several months to several years. The length of such process 
depends on the complexity and purpose of the system or equipment being designed, and may be affected by factors such as:
the development and design of unique or specialized systems, the fabrication, availability, and supply of parts, the
customization of parts as applicable, the manufacture and/or assembly of the units, quality control testing, and the 
development and incorporation of new technologies. If our products are outdated upon completion of this process our sales 
could materially decline and it may be necessary to sell products at a loss.

27

Unsuccessful government programs or OEM contracts could lead to reduced revenues. 

We design and manufacture certain products to fit the specifications of government programs or OEM contracts. These

programs may take months or years to complete and involve significant investment of our time, money and resources. We 
generally receive upfront fees for these programs but there is often no or little obligation on the part of our customer to
purchase large volumes of products at the time of final product launch. Unsuccessful product launches could lead to reduced 
revenues, potential returns of products and have a material adverse effect on our financial condition and operating results. We 
may be forced to sell products at a loss or spend a significant amount of resources to find additional customers for these 
products if these programs do not fit the future needs of our intended customers. 

Our inventory may rapidly become obsolete.

Sales cycles for some of our products can take several months or longer. In addition, it can take time from the bid to the 

development and manufacture of the equipment. We maintain inventory based in large part on our forecasts of the volume
and timing of orders. The varying length of the sales cycles makes accurate forecasting difficult. The delays inherent in our 
sales cycles raise the risk that the inventory we have on hand will become obsolete or impaired prior to its use or sale. If our 
forecasted demand does not materialize into purchase orders, we may be required to write off our inventory balances or 
reduce the value of our inventory, based on a reduced sales price. A write off of the inventory, or a reduction in the inventory 
value due to a sales price reduction, could have an adverse effect on our financial condition and operating results. 

If our products contain significant defects, we could incur significant expenses to remediate such defects, our reputation 
could be damaged, and we could lose market share.

Our products are complex and may contain defects or security vulnerabilities, or experience failures or unsatisfactory

performance due to any number of issues in design, fabrication, packaging, materials and/or use within a system. These risks 
may increase as our products are introduced into new devices, markets, technologies and applications, or as new versions are
released. Some errors in our products or services may only be discovered after a product or service has been shipped or used 
by customers or the end users of such product. Undiscovered vulnerabilities in our products or services could expose our 
customers or end users to hackers or other unscrupulous third parties who develop and deploy viruses, worms and other 
malicious software programs that could attack our products or services. Failure of our products to perform to specifications,
or other product defects, could lead to substantial damage to the products we sell directly to customers, the end product in 
which our device has been integrated by OEMs and to the user of such end product. Any such defect may cause us to incur 
significant warranty, support and repair or replacement costs, write off the value of related inventory, cause us to lose market 
share, and divert the attention of our personnel from our product development efforts to find and correct the issue. In
addition, an error or defect in new products or releases or related software drivers after commencement of commercial
shipments could result in failure to achieve market acceptance or loss of design wins, harm our relationships with customers
and partners and harm consumers’ perceptions of our brand. Also, we may be required to reimburse our customers, partners
or consumers, including costs to repair or replace products in the field. A product recall, including a recall due to a bug in our 
products, or a significant number of product returns could be expensive, damage our reputation, harm our ability to attract 
new customers, result in the shifting of business to our competitors and result in litigation against us, such as product liability
suits. If a product liability claim is brought against us, the cost of defending the claim could be significant and would divert rr
the efforts of our technical and management personnel, and harm our business. Further, our business liability insurance may 
be inadequate or future coverage may be unavailable on acceptable terms, which could adversely impact our financial results.

We offer an extended product warranty to cover defective products at no cost to the customer. An unexpected change in 
failure rates of our products could have a material adverse impact on our business. 

We offer product warranties that generally extend for one or two years from date of sale that requires us to repair or 

replace defective products returned by the customer during the warranty period at no cost to the customer. Our product 
warranties are in addition to warranties we receive from our vendors. We record an estimate for anticipated warranty-related 
costs based on historical and estimated future product return rates and expected repair or replacement costs. While such costs
have historically been within management’s expectations and the provisions established and we receive warranty coverage 
from our vendors, unexpected changes in failure rates could have a material adverse impact on our business requiring 
additional warranty reserves. These failures could adversely impact our operating results. 

28

If we fail to achieve design wins for our products, our business will be harmed. 

Achieving design wins is an important success factor for our business. We work closely with OEM’s and end users to

ensure the customer gets the product they want in the specific configuration, size and weight required for the application. We 
have participated in many design wins based upon our ability to interpret technical specifications and proceed rapidly through 
prototyping, development, and delivery. This approach and expertise are two of the factors driving our growth. Failure to
maintain our expertise and ability to deliver custom, specific design systems could harm our business. In order to achieve
design wins, we must:

•

•

•

anticipate the features and functionality that OEMs, customers and consumers will demand;

incorporate those features and functionalities into products that meet the exacting design requirements 
of our customers; and 

price our products competitively. 

Unanticipated changes in industry standards could render our products incompatible with products developed by major 

hardware manufacturers and software developers. Further, if our products are not in compliance with prevailing industry
standards, our customers may not incorporate our products into their design strategies. 

If we cannot retain, attract and motivate key personnel, we may be unable to effectively implement our business plan.

Our success depends in large part upon our ability to retain, attract and motivate highly skilled management, 
development, marketing, sales and service personnel. The loss of and failure to replace key technical management and 
personnel could adversely affect multiple development efforts. Recruitment and retention of senior management and skilled 
technical, sales and other personnel is very competitive, and we may not be successful in either attracting or retaining such
personnel. We have lost key personnel to other high technology companies, and many larger companies with significantly 
greater resources than us having aggressively recruited, and continue to aggressively recruit, key personnel. As part of our 
strategy to attract and retain key personnel, we may offer equity compensation through grants of stock options, restricted 
stock awards or restricted stock units. Potential employees, however, may not perceive our equity incentives as attractive
enough. In addition, due to the intense competition for qualified employees, we may be required to, and have had to, increase 
the level of compensation paid to existing and new employees, which could materially increase our operating expenses.

We have made in the past, and may make in the future, acquisitions which could require significant management 
attention, disrupt our business, result in dilution to our stockholders, deplete our cash reserves and adversely affect our 
financial results.

Acquisitions involve numerous risks, including the following:

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

difficulties in successfully integrating the operations, systems, technologies, products, offerings and personnel of 
the acquired company or companies; 

insufficient revenue to offset increased expenses associated with acquisitions;

diversion of management’s attention from normal daily operations of the business and the challenges of 
managing larger and more widespread operations resulting from acquisitions; 

potential difficulties in completing projects associated with in-process research and development intangibles;

difficulties in entering markets in which we have no or limited direct prior experience and where competitors in
such markets have stronger market positions;

initial dependence on unfamiliar supply chains or relatively small supply partners; and 

the potential loss of key employees, customers, distributors, vendors and other business partners of the
companies we acquire following and continuing after announcement of acquisition plans. 

Acquisitions may also cause us to:

•

•

use a substantial portion of our cash reserves or incur debt; 

issue equity securities or grant equity incentives to acquired employees that would dilute our current 
stockholders’ percentage ownership; 

29

•

•

•

•

•

assume liabilities, including potentially unknown liabilities;

record goodwill and non-amortizable intangible assets that are subject to impairment testing on a regular basis 
and potential periodic impairment charges; 

incur amortization expenses related to certain intangible assets;

incur large and immediate write-offs and restructuring and other related expenses; or 

become subject to intellectual property litigation or other litigation. 

Acquisitions of high-technology companies and assets are inherently risky and subject to many factors outside of our 

control and no assurance can be given that our recently completed or future acquisitions will be successful and will not 
materially adversely affect our business, operating results, or financial condition. Failure to manage and successfully 
integrate acquisitions could materially harm our business and operating results.

The continuing commoditization of HPC hardware and software has resulted in increased pricing pressure and may 
adversely affect our operating results.

The continuing commoditization of HPC hardware, such as processors, interconnects, flash storage and other 
infrastructure, and the growing commoditization of software, including plentiful building blocks and more capable open 
source software, as well as the potential for integration of differentiated technology into already-commoditized components, 
has resulted in, and may result in increased pricing pressure that may cause us to reduce our pricing in order to remain 
competitive, which can negatively impact our gross margins and adversely affect our operating results. 

Risks Relating to Intellectual Property 

If we are unable to protect our proprietary design and intellectual property rights, our competitive position could be
harmed, or we could be required to incur significant expenses to enforce our rights. 

Our ability to compete effectively is dependent in part upon our ability to protect our proprietary technology. We rely

on patents, trademarks, trade secret laws, confidentiality procedures and licensing arrangements to protect our intellectual 
property rights. There can be no assurance these protections will be available in all cases or will be adequate to prevent our 
competitors from copying, reverse engineering or otherwise obtaining and using our technology, proprietary rights or 
products. For example, the laws of certain countries in which our products are manufactured or licensed do not protect our 
proprietary rights to the same extent as the laws of the United States. In addition, third parties may seek to challenge, 
invalidate or circumvent our patents, trademarks, copyrights and trade secrets, or applications for any of the foregoing. There 
can be no assurance that our competitors will not independently develop technologies that are substantially equivalent or 
superior to our technology or design around our proprietary rights. In each case, our ability to compete could be significantly 
impaired. To prevent substantial unauthorized use of our intellectual property rights, it may be necessary to prosecute actions 
for infringement and/or misappropriation of our trade secrets and/or proprietary rights against third parties. Any such action
could result in significant costs and diversion of our resources and management’s attention, and there can be no assurance we 
will be successful in such action. Furthermore, many of our current and potential competitors have the ability to dedicate 
substantially greater resources to enforce their intellectual property rights than we do. Accordingly, despite our efforts, we
may not be able to prevent third parties from infringing upon or misappropriating our trade secrets and/or intellectual
property.

Many of our proprietary designs are in digital form and the breach of our computer systems could result in these designs
being stolen. 

If our cybersecurity measures are breached or unauthorized access to private or proprietary data is otherwise obtained,
our proprietary designs could be stolen. Because we hold many of these designs in digital form on our servers, there exists an
inherent risk that an unauthorized third party could conduct a cybersecurity breach resulting in the theft of our proprietary
information. While we have taken cybersecurity steps to protect our proprietary information, because techniques used to 
obtain unauthorized access or sabotage systems change frequently and generally are not identified until they are launched 
against a target, we may be unable to anticipate these techniques or to implement adequate preventative measures. Any or all 
of these issues could negatively impact our competitive edge and our ability to obtain new customers thereby adversely
affecting our financial results. 

30

Our proprietary designs are susceptible to reverse engineering by our competitors.

Much of the value of our proprietary rights is derived from our vast library of design specifications. While we consider 
our design specifications to be protected by various proprietary, trade secret and intellectual property laws, such information 
is susceptible to reverse engineering by our competitors. We may not be able to prevent our competitors from developing 
competing design specifications and the cost of enforcing these rights may be significant. If we are unable to adequately 
protect our proprietary designs our financial condition and operating results could suffer. 

If we are unable to protect the confidentiality of our trade secrets, our business and competitive position would be harmed. 

We consider trade secrets, including confidential and unpatented know-how and designs important to the maintenance 

of our competitive position. We protect trade secrets and confidential and unpatented know-how, in part, by customarily 
entering into non-disclosure and confidentiality agreements with parties who have access to such knowledge, such as our 
employees, outside technical and commercial collaborators, consultants, advisors and other third parties. We also enter into
confidentiality and invention or patent assignment agreements with our employees and consultants that obligate them to
maintain confidentiality and assign their inventions to us. Despite these efforts, any of these parties may breach the
agreements and disclose our proprietary information, including our trade secrets, and we may not be able to obtain adequate 
remedies for such breaches. 

Claims by others that we infringe their intellectual property or trade secret rights could harm our business.

Our industry is characterized by vigorous protection and pursuit of intellectual property rights, which has resulted in 

protracted and expensive litigation for many companies. Third parties may in the future assert claims of infringement of 
intellectual property rights against us or against our customers or channel partners for which we may be liable. As the number 
of products and competitors in our market increases and overlaps occur, infringement claims may increase. 

Intellectual property or trade secret claims against us, and any resulting lawsuits, may result in us incurring significant 

expenses and could subject us to significant liability for damages and invalidate what we currently believe are our proprietary 
rights. Our involvement in any patent dispute or other intellectual property dispute or action to protect trade secrets and 
know-how could have a material adverse effect on our business. Adverse determinations in any litigation could subject us to 
significant liabilities to third parties, require us to seek licenses from third parties and prevent us from manufacturing and 
selling our products. Any of these situations could have a material adverse effect on our business. These claims, regardless of 
their merits or outcome, would likely be time consuming and expensive to resolve and could divert management’s time and 
attention. 

We are generally obligated to indemnify our channel partners and end-customers for certain expenses and liabilities 
resulting from intellectual property infringement claims regarding our products, which could force us to incur substantial 
costs.

We have agreed, and expect to continue to agree, to indemnify our channel partners and end-customers for certain
intellectual property infringement claims regarding our products. As a result, in the case of infringement claims against these 
channel partners and end-customers, we could be required to indemnify them for losses resulting from such claims or to 
refund amounts they have paid to us. Our channel partners and other end-customers in the future may seek indemnification 
from us in connection with infringement claims brought. 

Privacy  concerns  relating  to  our  products  and  services  could  damage  our  reputation,  deter  current  and  potential  users
from using our products and services, result in liability, or result in legal or regulatory proceedings.

Our products and services may provide us with access to sensitive, confidential or personal data or information that is 

subject to privacy and security laws and regulations. Concerns about our practices with regard to the collection, use, 
retention, security or disclosure of personal information or other privacy-related matters, even if unfounded, could damage
our reputation and adversely affect our operating results. The theft, loss, or misuse of personal data collected, used, stored, or 
transferred by us to run our business or by one of our partners could result in significantly increased security costs, damage to
our reputation, regulatory proceedings, disruption of our business activities or increased costs related to defending legal 
claims.

31

Worldwide regulatory authorities are considering and have approved various legislative proposals concerning data 
protection, which continue to evolve and apply to our business. For example, the European Union adopted the General Data 
Protection Regulation, or GDPR, which requires companies to meet new requirements effective as of May 2018 regarding the 
handling of personal data, including its use, protection and the ability of persons whose data is stored to correct or delete such 
data about themselves. Failure to meet GDPR requirements could result in penalties of up to 4% of worldwide revenue. In 
addition, the interpretation and application of consumer and data protection laws in the United States, Europe and elsewhere 
are often uncertain and fluid, and may be interpreted and applied in a manner that is inconsistent with our data practices. If 
so, we may be ordered to change our data practices and/or be fined. Complying with these changing laws has caused, and 
could continue to cause, us to incur substantial costs, which could have an adverse effect on our business and results of 
operations. Further, failure to comply with existing or new rules may result in significant penalties or orders to stop the 
alleged noncompliant activity.

Risks Related to Our International Operations 

Our international sales and operations subject us to additional risks that can adversely affect our operating results and 
financial condition. 

Our international operations subject us to a variety of risks and challenges, including: exposure to fluctuations in 

foreign currency exchange rates, increased management, travel, infrastructure and legal compliance costs associated with 
having international operations; reliance on channel partners; increased financial accounting and reporting burdens and 
complexities; compliance with foreign laws and regulations; compliance with U.S. laws and regulations for foreign 
operations; and reduced protection for intellectual property rights in some countries and practical difficulties of enforcing
rights abroad. Any of these risks could adversely affect our international operations, reduce our international sales or increase 
our operating costs, adversely affecting our business, operating results and financial condition and growth prospects. 

We are subject to governmental export and import controls that could impair our ability to compete in international 
markets due to licensing requirements and subject us to liability if we are not in compliance with applicable laws. 

Our products are subject to export control and import laws and regulations, including the U.S. Export Administration 

Regulations, U.S. Customs regulations and various economic and trade sanctions regulations administered by the U.S. 
Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Controls. Exports of our products must be made in compliance with these 
laws and regulations. If we violate these laws and regulations, we and certain of our employees could be subject to substantial 
civil or criminal penalties, including the possible loss of export or import privileges, fines, which may be imposed on us and 
responsible employees or managers and, in extreme cases, the incarceration of responsible employees or managers. In 
addition, if our channel partners, agents or consultants fail to obtain appropriate import, export or re-export licenses or 
authorizations, we may also be adversely affected through reputational harm and penalties. Obtaining the necessary 
authorizations, including any required license, for a particular sale may be time-consuming, is not guaranteed and may result 
in the delay or loss of sales opportunities. Changes in our products or changes in applicable export or import laws and 
regulations may also create delays in the introduction and sale of our products in international markets, prevent our end-
customers with international operations from deploying our products or, in some cases, prevent the export or import of our 
products to certain countries, governments or persons altogether. Any change in export or import laws and regulations, shift 
in the enforcement or scope of existing laws and regulations, or change in the countries, governments, persons or 
technologies targeted by such laws and regulations, could also result in decreased use of our products, or in our decreased 
ability to export or sell our products to existing or potential end-customers with international operations. Any decreased use 
of our products or limitation on our ability to export or sell our products would likely adversely affect our business, financial
condition and operating results. 

New regulations or standards or changes in existing regulations or standards in the United States or internationally
related to our suppliers products may result in unanticipated costs or liabilities, which could have a material adverse effect 
on our business, operating results and future sales, and could place additional burdens on the operations of our business.

Our suppliers’ products are subject to governmental regulations in many jurisdictions. To achieve and maintain market 

acceptance, our suppliers’ products must continue to comply with these regulations and many industry standards. As these
regulations and standards evolve, and if new regulations or standards are implemented, our suppliers may have to modify 
their products. The failure of their products to comply, or delays in compliance, with the existing and evolving industry 
regulations and standards could prevent or delay introduction of our products, which could harm our business. Supplier 
uncertainty regarding future policies may also affect demand for HPC products, including our products. Moreover, channel 
partners or customers may require us, or we may otherwise deem it necessary or advisable, to alter our products to address 
actual or anticipated changes in the regulatory environment. Our inability to alter our products to address these requirements 
and any regulatory changes may have a material adverse effect on our business, operating results and financial condition. 

32

We could be adversely affected by violations of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and similar worldwide anti-bribery 
laws. 

We have international operations. The U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and similar anti-bribery laws generally 
prohibit companies and their intermediaries from making improper payments to foreign government officials for the purpose
of obtaining or retaining business. Practices in the local business communities of many countries outside the United States
have a level of government corruption that is greater than that found in the developed world. Our policies mandate
compliance with these anti-bribery laws and we have established policies and procedures designed to monitor compliance
with these anti-bribery law requirements; however, we cannot assure that our policies and procedures will protect us from 
potential reckless or criminal acts committed by individual employees or agents. If we are found to be liable for anti-bribery
law violations, we could suffer from criminal or civil penalties or other sanctions that could have a material adverse effect on 
our business. 

Risks Related to Our Common Stock 

The price of our common stock may be volatile, and you could lose all or part of your investment.

The trading price of our common stock may fluctuate substantially. The trading price of our common stock will depend 

on several factors, including those described in this “Risk Factors” section, many of which are beyond our control and may
not be related to our operating performance. These fluctuations could cause you to lose all or part of your investment in our 
common stock since you might be unable to sell your shares at or above the price you paid.  Factors that could cause
fluctuations in the trading price of our common stock include: 

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

price and volume fluctuations in the overall stock market from time to time; 

volatility in the market prices and trading volumes of technology stocks; 

changes in operating performance and stock market valuations of other technology companies generally, or those 
in our industry in particular; 

sales of shares of our common stock by us or our stockholders;

failure of financial analysts to maintain coverage of us, changes in financial estimates by any analysts who follow 
our company, or our failure to meet these estimates or the expectations of investors; 

the financial projections we may provide to the public, any changes in those projections or our failure to meet 
those projections;

announcements by us or our competitors of new products or new or terminated significant contracts, commercial 
relationships or capital commitments;

the public’s reaction to our press releases, other public announcements and filings with the SEC; 

rumors and market speculation involving us or other companies in our industry; 

actual or anticipated changes in our operating results or fluctuations in our operating results; 

actual or anticipated developments in our business or our competitors’ businesses or the competitive landscape
generally; 

litigation involving us, our industry or both or investigations by regulators into our operations or those of our 
competitors; 

developments or disputes concerning our intellectual property or other proprietary rights; 

announced or completed acquisitions of businesses or technologies by us or our competitors;

new laws or regulations or new interpretations of existing laws or regulations applicable to our business; 

changes in accounting standards, policies, guidelines, interpretations or principles;

any major change in our management; 

general economic conditions and slow or negative growth of our markets; and 

other events or factors, including those resulting from war, incidents of terrorism or responses to these events. 

33

In addition, the stock market in general, and the market for technology companies in particular, have experienced 

extreme price and volume fluctuations that have often been unrelated or disproportionate to the operating performance of 
those companies. Broad market and industry factors, as well as general economic, political and market conditions such as
recessions or interest rate changes, may seriously affect the market price of our common stock, regardless of our actual 
operating performance. 

In the past, following periods of volatility in the overall market and the market prices of particular companies’
securities, securities class action litigations have often been instituted against these companies. Litigation of this type, if 
instituted against us, could result in substantial costs and a diversion of our management’s attention and resources. Any
adverse determination in any such litigation or any amounts paid to settle any such actual or threatened litigation could 
require that we make significant payments. 

Our directors and principal stockholders own a significant percentage of our stock and will be able to exert significant 
control over matters subject to stockholder approval. 

Our directors, executive officers and significant stockholders have substantial control over the Company and could 
delay or prevent a change in corporate control. Our directors, executive officers and holders of more than 5% of our common 
stock, together with their affiliates, beneficially own, in the aggregate, 36.0% of our outstanding common stock, based on the 
number of shares outstanding as of February 28, 2021. As a result, these stockholders, acting together, would have the ability 
to control the outcome of matters submitted to our stockholders for approval, including the election of directors and any 
merger, consolidation or sale of all or substantially all of our assets. In addition, these stockholders, acting together, would 
have the ability to control the management and affairs of our company. Accordingly, this concentration of ownership might 
adversely affect the market price of our common stock by: 

•

•

•

delaying, deferring or preventing a change in control of the Company;

impeding a merger, consolidation, takeover, or other business combination involving us; or 

discouraging a potential acquirer from making a tender offer or otherwise attempting to obtain control of the
company.

If securities or industry analysts issue an adverse opinion regarding our stock or do not publish research or reports about 
our company, our stock price and trading volume could decline.

The trading market for our common stock will depend in part on the research and reports that equity research

analysts publish about us and our business. We anticipate having limited analyst coverage and we may continue to have
inadequate analyst coverage in the future. Even if we obtain adequate analyst coverage, we would have no control over such 
analysts or the content and opinions in their reports. Securities analysts may elect not to provide research coverage of our 
company and such lack of research coverage may adversely affect the market price of our common stock. The price of our 
common stock could also decline if one or more equity research analysts downgrade our common stock or if those analysts
issue other unfavorable commentary or cease publishing reports about us or our business. If one or more equity research 
analysts cease coverage of our company, we could lose visibility in the market, which in turn could cause our stock price to 
decline. 

Substantial future sales of shares of our common stock could cause the market price of our common stock to decline. 

The market price of shares of our common stock could decline as a result of substantial sales of our common stock, 
particularly sales by our directors, executive officers and significant stockholders, a large number of shares of our common
stock becoming available for sale or the perception in the market that holders of a large number of shares intend to sell their 
shares. As of February 28, 2021, we have 16,912,312 shares of our common stock outstanding. 

Moreover, certain holders of our common stock will have rights, subject to some conditions, to require us to file 
registration statements covering their shares or to include their shares in registration statements that we may file for ourselves 
or our stockholders. 

34

Anti-takeover provisions in our charter documents and under Delaware law could make an acquisition of us, which may 
be beneficial to our stockholders, more difficult and may prevent attempts by our stockholders to replace or remove our 
current management and limit the market price of our common stock.

Provisions in our certificate of incorporation and amended and restated bylaws may have the effect of delaying or 

preventing a change of control or changes in our management. Some of these provisions: 

•

•

•

•

•

•

authorize our board of directors to issue, without further action by the stockholders, up to 10,000,000 shares of 
undesignated preferred stock and up to 50,000,000 shares of authorized common stock; 

require that any action to be taken by our stockholders be affected at a duly called annual or special meeting and 
not by written consent; 

specify that special meetings of our stockholders can be called only by our board of directors, the chairman of the 
board of directors, the chief executive officer or the president;

establish an advance notice procedure for stockholder approvals to be brought before an annual meeting of our 
stockholders, including proposed nominations of persons for election to our board of directors; 

provide that our directors may be removed only for cause; and, 

provide that vacancies on our board of directors may, except as otherwise required by law, be filled only by a 
majority of directors then in office, even if less than a quorum. 

In addition, we are subject to the provisions of Section 203 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, which limits the 

ability of stockholders owning in excess of 15% of our outstanding voting stock to merge or combine with us. Furthermore, 
our certificate of incorporation specifies that, unless we consent in writing to the selection of an alternative forum, the Court 
of Chancery of the State of Delaware will be the sole and exclusive forum for most legal actions involving actions brought 
against us by stockholders. We believe this provision benefits us by providing increased consistency in the application of 
Delaware law by chancellors particularly experienced in resolving corporate disputes, efficient administration of cases on a 
more expedited schedule relative to other forums and protection against the burdens of multi-forum litigation. However, the
provision may have the effect of discouraging lawsuits against our directors and officers. The enforceability of similar choice
of forum provisions in other companies’ certificates of incorporation has been challenged in legal proceedings, and it is 
possible that, in connection with any applicable action brought against us, a court could find the choice of forum provisions 
contained in our certificate of incorporation to be inapplicable or unenforceable in such action.

These anti-takeover provisions and other provisions in our certificate of incorporation and amended and restated 

bylaws make it more difficult for stockholders or potential acquirers to obtain control of our board of directors or initiate
actions that are opposed by the then-current board of directors and could also delay or impede a merger, tender offer or proxy
contest involving our company. These provisions could also discourage proxy contests and make it more difficult for you and 
other stockholders to elect directors of your choosing or cause us to take other corporate actions you desire. Any delay or 
prevention of a change of control transaction or changes in our board of directors could cause the market price of our 
common stock to decline. 

Our inability to raise additional capital on acceptable terms in the future may limit our ability to develop and 

commercialize new solutions and technologies and expand our operations. 

If our available cash balances and anticipated cash flow from operations are insufficient to satisfy our liquidity 

requirements, due to lower demand for our products as a result of other risks described in this “Risk Factors” section, we may 
seek to raise additional capital through equity offerings, debt financings, collaborations or licensing arrangements. We may 
also consider raising additional capital in the future to expand our business, pursue strategic investments, take advantage of 
financing opportunities, or other reasons. 

Additional funding may not be available to us on acceptable terms, or at all. If we raise funds by issuing equity 
securities, dilution to our stockholders could result. Any equity securities issued also may provide for rights, preferences or 
privileges senior to those of holders of our common stock. The terms of debt securities issued or borrowings could impose 
significant restrictions on our operations. The incurrence of indebtedness or the issuance of certain equity securities could 
result in increased fixed payment obligations and could also result in restrictive covenants, such as limitations on our ability 
to incur additional debt or issue additional equity, limitations on our ability to acquire or license intellectual property rights,
and other operating restrictions that could adversely affect our ability to conduct our business. In addition, the issuance of 
additional equity securities by us, or the possibility of such issuance, may cause the market price of our common stock to
decline. If we raise additional funds through collaboration and licensing arrangements with third parties, it may be necessary 
to relinquish some rights to our technologies or our products, or to grant licenses on terms that are not favorable to us. If we
are unable to raise adequate funds, we may have to liquidate some or all of our assets, or delay or reduce the scope of our 
development programs. We also may have to reduce marketing, customer support or other resources devoted to our products 
or cease operations. Any of these actions could harm our business, operating results and financial condition.

35

We are an “emerging growth company” and we cannot be certain if the reduced disclosure requirements applicable to 
emerging growth companies will make our common stock less attractive to investors. 

We are an “emerging growth company” as defined in the JOBS Act. For as long as we continue to be an emerging 
growth company, we may choose to take advantage of certain exemptions from various reporting requirements applicable to 
other public companies but not to emerging growth companies, which includes, among other things: 

•

•

•

exemption from the auditor attestation requirements under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002;

reduced disclosure obligations regarding executive compensation in our periodic reports and proxy statements; 
and 

exemption from the requirements of holding non-binding stockholder votes on executive compensation 
arrangements. 

We could be an emerging growth company until the last day of the fiscal year following the fifth anniversary after our 
initial public offering (December 31, 2023), or until the earliest of (i) the last day of the fiscal year in which we have annual 
gross revenue of $1.07 billion or more; (ii) the date on which we have, during the previous three year period, issued more
than $1.07 billion in non-convertible debt; or (iii) the date on which we are deemed to be a large accelerated filer under the
federal securities laws. We will qualify as a large accelerated filer as of the first day of the first fiscal year after we have
(i) more than $700 million in outstanding common equity held by our non-affiliates, and (ii) been public for at least 12 
months. The value of our outstanding common equity will be measured each year on the last day of our second fiscal quarter. 

We cannot predict if investors will find our common stock less attractive if we rely on these exemptions. If some 
investors find our common stock less attractive as a result, there may be a less active trading market for our common stock 
and our stock price may be more volatile. 

36

ITEM 1B. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS. 

Not applicable.

ITEM 2. PROPERTIES.

Our corporate headquarters are in a leased space comprising approximately 29,342 square feet in Escondido, California 

under a lease that was modified in February 2019 and expires in August 2024.  We also lease a 3,208 square foot facility in 
Salt Lake City, Utah that houses our Ion software development team that is a month-to-month lease. CDI is the lessee of 
12,880 square feet located in Irvine, California with the lease expiring in June 2021.  Bressner Technology leases space
comprising 8,073 square feet on a month-to-month lease.

The Company believes its existing facilities and equipment are in good operating condition and are suitable for the

conduct of its business.

ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS. 

We are subject to litigation, claims, investigations, and audits arising from time to time in the ordinary course of our
r 

bbusiness.

On September 29, 2020, the Company’s former Chief Executive Officer, Stephen D. Cooper, commenced an action

p

p

entitled Stephen D. Cooper v. One Stop Systems, Inc. et al, in San Diego County Superior Court, Case No. 37-2020-
00034492-CU-BC-CTL.  Mr. Cooper alleges claims for (1) breach of written contract and (2) violation of California Labor 
Code Sections 201 and 203 in connection with the Company’s alleged failure to pay unpaid wages and an earned bonus
following the Company’s termination of Mr. Cooper’s employment with the Company back in February 2020. Mr. Cooper 
seeks unspecified compensatory damages and statutory penalties.

p y

,

The Company has denied Mr. Cooper’s allegations. On December 8, 2020, the Company filed a cross-complaint 
(“Cross Complaint”) against Mr. Cooper for (1) breach of contract (in connection with a binding commitment letter and Mr.
Cooper’s employment agreement), (2) intentional misrepresentation, (3) negligent misrepresentation, and (4) breach of 
fiduciary duty. The Company is seeking compensatory damages, punitive damages, pre-judgment interest, attorneys’ fees, 
and the cost of suit incurred in connection with Mr. Cooper’s complaint and the Cross Complaint. The Company intends to
vigorously defend all allegations. 

ITEM 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES.

Not Applicable.

37

 
PART II

ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT’S COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS AND 
ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES. 

Market Information

Our common stock, par value $0.0001, has been publicly traded on The Nasdaq Capital Market under the symbol 
“OSS”.  Below is our quarterly information with respect to the high and low sale prices for our common stock for such time 
periods. 

First Quarter (through March 15, 2021)

*  On March 15, 2021, the closing price was $8.40

Year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019
First Quarter 
Second Quarter
Third Quarter
Fourth Quarter

Holders

$

$
$
$
$

High
9.50

Low
3.61

$

*

2020

2019

High

Low

High

Low

3.01
2.63
3.14
5.33

$
$
$
$

0.59
1.15
1.80
2.08

$
$
$
$

3.09
2.75
3.04
3.25

$
$
$
$

1.78
1.52
1.32
1.62

As of February 28, 2021, there were 16,912,312 shares of our common stock outstanding held by approximately 62 

holders of record of our common stock.  This number was derived from our stockholder records and does not include
beneficial holders of our common stock whose shares are held in “street name” with various dealers, clearing agencies, 
banks, brokers and other fiduciaries.

Dividend Policy

We have never declared or paid cash dividends on our common stock. We currently intend to retain all available funds 

and any future earnings for use in the operation of our business and do not anticipate paying any cash dividends on our 
common stock in the foreseeable future.  We may enter into credit agreements or other borrowing arrangements in the future
that will restrict our ability to declare or pay cash dividends on our common stock. Any future determination to declare 
dividends will be made at the discretion of our board of directors and will depend on our financial condition, operating
results, capital requirements, general business conditions and other factors that our board of directors may deem relevant. 

Equity Compensation Plan Information 

See Part III, Item 12, “Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder 

Matters” for information regarding securities authorized for issuance under equity compensation plans. 

Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities 

None.

Issuer Repurchases of Equity Securities

None.

ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA. 

Not Applicable. 

38

ITEM 7.  MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF
OPERATIONS.

You should read the following discussion and analysis of our financial condition and operating results together with
our financial statements and related notes included elsewhere in this Annual Report. This discussion and analysis contains
forward-looking statements based upon current beliefs, plans and expectations that involve risks, uncertainties and 
assumptions. Our actual results may differ materially from those anticipated in these forward-looking statements as a result 
of various factors, including those set forth under “Risk Factors” or in other parts of this Annual Report.

Overview

OSS designs, manufactures and sells specialized high-performance edge computing (HPC) systems to customers
world-wide.  We differentiate ourselves from other suppliers of HPC solutions by utilizing our high-performance expertise in
custom systems design and PCIe expansion to build systems with a greater quantity of PCIe add-in slots, GPU-based 
compute cards and/or flash cards. These applications require ultra-fast processing power and the ability to quickly access and 
store ever-growing data sets.  Systems are built using the latest GPU (graphical processing unit) and solid-state flash
(memory) technologies.  

Our systems offer industry leading capabilities that occupy less physical space and power consumption.  We are a

niche provider of HPC custom servers, compute accelerators, and flash storage arrays.  We deliver this technology to 
customers through sale of equipment and software to customers.  Concept Development Inc., (“CDI”) which was acquired on 
August 31, 2018, specializes in the design and manufacture of specialized high-performance in-flight entertainment systems 
for commercial aircraft.  CDI’s capabilities include electrical, mechanical and software design as well as extensive 
experience in test and certifications required for airborne systems.  Bressner Technology GmbH, (Bressner) which was 
acquired on October 31, 2018, provides standard and customized servers, panel PCs, and PCIe expansion systems. Bressner 
provides manufacturing, test, sales and marketing services for customers throughout Europe.

Recent Developments

CDI has been fully integrated into the core operations of OSS as of June 1, 2020.

In March 2020, the World Health Organization declared the outbreak of Coronavirus, or COVID-19, a global pandemic

and the United States federal government declared it a national emergency. COVID-19 continues to impact worldwide 
economic activity. A public health pandemic, including COVID-19, poses the risk that we or our employees, contractors, 
customers, suppliers, and other partners may be prevented from conducting business activities for an indefinite period of 
time, including due to shutdowns that may be requested or mandated by governmental authorities. 

More generally, COVID-19 raises the possibility of an extended global economic downturn, which could affect 
demand for our products and services and impact our results and financial condition even after the pandemic is contained and 
remediation/restriction measures are lifted. For example, we may be unable to collect receivables from customers that are 
significantly impacted by COVID-19. Also, a decrease in orders in a given period could negatively affect our revenues in 
future periods. COVID-19 may also have the effect of heightening many of the other risks described in the “Risk Factors” 
section of our Annual Report on Form 10-K, including risks associated with our customers and supply chain. We will
continue to evaluate the nature and extent of the impact of COVID-19 to our business.

At present, it is clear the global economy has been negatively impacted by COVID-19, and demand for some of our 

products and services have been reduced due to uncertainty and the economic impact of COVID-19. For example, customers 
in certain of the industries most impacted by COVID-19, have requested, and we expect will continue to request, relief to 
existing contracts or payment obligations, and the impact of those is uncertain. Furthermore, some customers are delaying 
payments owed to the Company while they address immediate financial crises in their operations due to COVID-19. In 
particular, in the media and entertainment industry, demand for the use of outdoor media equipment has been impacted due to 
restrictions on public gatherings. Until such restrictions improve, we expect that demand for certain of our clients’ products 
and services will be limited, and may not return to prior levels, and thus, may impact our financial results and operations. 

Specifically, our business has also begun to be negatively affected by a range of external factors related to COVID-
19 that are not within our control. For example, numerous measures have been implemented by governmental authorities 
across the globe to contain the virus, including travel bans and restrictions, quarantines, shelter-in-place orders, restrictions 
and limitations of public gatherings, and business limitations and shutdowns. Many of our customers’ businesses have been 
severely impacted by these measures and some have been required to reduce employee headcount as a result. If a significant 

39

number of our customers are unable to continue as a going concern, this would have an adverse impact on our business and 
financial condition. In addition, many of our customers are working remotely, which may delay the timing of new business 
and implementations of our services. If COVID-19 continues to have a substantial impact on our partners, customers, or 
suppliers, our results of operations and overall financial performance will be harmed. 

Though management has been proactively managing through the current known impacts, if the situation further 
deteriorates or the outbreak results in further restriction on both supply and demand factors, our cash flows, financial position 
and operating results for 2021 and beyond will be negatively impacted. Neither the length of time nor the magnitude of the 
negative impacts can be presently determined. 

The longer the COVID-19 pandemic persists, the greater the potential for significant adverse impact to our business 

operations.   Quarantines, travel restrictions, prohibitions on non-essential gatherings, shelter-in-place orders and other 
similar directives and policies intended to reduce the spread of the disease, may reduce our productivity and that of the third 
parties on which we rely and may disrupt and delay many aspects of our business.

The Company is complying with state mandated requirements for safety in the workplace to ensure the health, safety 
and welling-being of our employees.  These measures included personal protective equipment, social distancing, cleanliness
of the facilities and daily monitoring of the health of employees in our facilities.  We have not developed a specific and 
comprehensive contingency plan designed to address the challenges and risks presented by the COVID-19 pandemic and,
even if and when we do develop such a plan, there can be no assurance that such plan will be effective in mitigating the 
potential adverse effects on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

On February 15, 2020, Steve Cooper was terminated as President and CEO of One Stop Systems, Inc., and was 

replaced by David Raun who is now the president and CEO of the Company.

On April 7, 2020, the Company implemented a cost reduction plan which included the termination of certain 
employees and elimination of certain costs.  Savings from this effort are estimated to be approximately $2.5 million on an 
annual basis.  

On April 24, 2020, the Company completed a $6.0 million debt financing on a non-interest bearing convertible note 

with a 10% original issue discount.  The first tranche of $3.0 million was received on April 27, 2020, with an additional $3.0 
million available seven months from the date of closing at the option of the Company conditioned upon meeting certain 
requirements which have been satisfied.  The note is repayable in twenty-two installments beginning three months after 
closing in cash or shares of the Company’s common stock.

On March 1, 2021, the Company entered into a Securities Purchase Agreement with an accredited investor, pursuant to 

which the Company agreed to issue and sell, in a registered direct offering, 1,497,006 shares of the Company’s common 
stock, par value $0.0001 per share, to the purchaser at an offering price of $6.68 per share. The registered offering was
conducted pursuant to the Company’s effective shelf registration statement on Form S-3 (Registration No. 333-231513), 
which was initially filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 15, 2019, and was declared effective on June
19, 2019. As compensation for their services, the Company paid to the placement agents a fee equal to 7% of the gross 
proceeds received by the Company as a result of the registered offering, and reimbursed the placement agents for certain
expenses incurred in connection with such offering. The Company estimates that the net proceeds from the registered 
offering will be approximately $9.25 million after deducting certain fees due to the placement agents’ and the Company’s 
estimated transaction expenses. The net proceeds received by the Company will be used for general corporate and working 
capital purposes.

Components of Results of Operations 

Revenue

The Company recognizes revenue under accounting standard ASC 606.  Revenue is primarily generated from the sale 

of computer hardware and engineering services and to some extent the sale of software, and sales of software maintenance 
and support contracts.   The Company’s performance obligations are satisfied over time as work is performed or at a point in
time. The majority of the Company’s revenue is recognized at a point in time when products ship and control is transferred to 
the customer. The Company determines revenue recognition through the following steps: (1) identification of the contract 
with a customer; (2) identification of the performance obligations in the contract; (3) determination of the transaction price; 
(4) allocation of the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract; and (5) recognition of revenue when, or 
as, a performance obligation is satisfied.

40

Cost of revenue

Cost of revenue primarily consists of costs of materials, costs paid to third-party contract manufacturers (which may 

include the costs of components), and personnel costs associated with manufacturing and support operations. Personnel costs
consist of wages, bonuses, benefits, stock-based compensation expenses. Cost of revenue also includes freight, allocated 
overhead costs and inventory write-offs and changes to our inventory and warranty reserves. Allocated overhead costs consist 
of certain facilities and utility costs. We expect cost of revenue to increase in absolute dollars with an improvement in 
margin, as product revenue increases. 

Operating expenses

Our operating expenses consist of general and administrative, sales and marketing and research and development 
expenses. Salaries and personnel-related costs, benefits, and stock-based compensation expense, are the most significant 
components of each category of operating expenses. Operating expenses also include allocated overhead costs for facilities
and utility costs.

General and Administrative - General and administrative expense consists primarily of employee compensation and 

related expenses for administrative functions including finance, legal, human resources and fees for third-party professional 
services, as well as allocated overhead. We expect our general and administrative expense to increase in absolute dollars as
we continue to invest in growing the business.

Marketing and Sales – Marketing and Sales expense consists primarily of employee compensation and related 
expenses, sales commissions, marketing programs, travel and entertainment expenses as well as allocated overhead.
Marketing programs consist of advertising, tradeshows, events, corporate communications and brand-building activities. We 
expect marketing and sales expenses to increase in absolute dollars as we expand our sales force, increase marketing
resources, and further develop sales channels.

Research and Development - Research and development expense consists primarily of employee compensation and 

related expenses, prototype expenses, depreciation associated with assets acquired for research and development, third-party 
engineering and contractor support costs, as well as allocated overhead. We expect our research and development expenses to
increase in absolute dollars as we continue to invest in new and existing products.

Other Income (Expense), net 

Other income consists of miscellaneous income and income received for activities outside of our core business.  Other 

expense includes expenses for activities outside of our core business. 

Provision for Income Taxes

Provision for income taxes consists of estimated income taxes due to the United States and German governments as

well as state tax authorities in jurisdictions in which we conduct business, along with the change in our deferred income tax
assets and liabilities.

41

Results of Operations 

The following tables set forth our results of operations for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 respectively, 

presented in dollars and as a percentage of net revenue. 

For the Year
Ended December 31,

$

2020
51,895,388
35,460,774
16,434,614

$

2019
58,308,019
38,905,756
19,402,263

8,418,358
-
4,120,778
4,319,759
16,858,895
(424,281)

418,379
(550,774)
(53,612)
(186,007)
(610,288)
(603,744)

$

(6,544) $

8,501,572
1,697,394
5,138,762
4,843,554
20,181,282
(779,019)

151,113
(165,560)
130,381
115,934
(663,085)
237,252
(900,337)

For the Year
Ended December 31,

2020

2019

100.0%
68.3%
31.7%

16.2%
0.0%
7.9%
8.3%
32.5%
-0.8%

0.8%
-1.1%
-0.1%
-0.4%
-1.2%
-1.2%
0.0%

100.0%
66.7%
33.3%

14.6%
2.9%
8.8%
8.3%
34.6%
-1.3%

0.3%
-0.3%
0.2%
0.2%
-1.1%
0.4%
-1.5%

Revenue
Cost of revenue

Gross profit
Operating expenses:

General and administrative
Impairment of goodwill
Marketing and selling
Research and development

Total operating expenses

Loss from operations
Other (expense) income:
Interest income
Interest expense
Other (expense) income, net

Total other (expense) income, net

Loss before income taxes
(Benefit) provision for income taxes

Net loss

Revenue
Cost of revenue
Gross profit
Operating expenses:

General and administrative
Impairment of goodwill
Marketing and selling
Research and development

Total operating expenses

Loss from operations
Other (expense) income:
Interest income
Interest expense
Other (expense) income, net

Total other (expense) income, net

Loss before income taxes
(Benefit) provision for income taxes

Net loss

42

Comparison of the Years Ended December 31, 2020 and 2019

For The Year Ended December 31, 2020

For The Year Ended December 31, 2019

Revenue
$ 33,650,019
18,245,369
$ 51,895,388

Cost of
Revenue

Gross
Margin

$(21,081,787) $12,568,232
3,866,382
$(35,460,774) $16,434,614

(14,378,987)

Gross
Margin
%

Revenue

Cost of
Revenue

Gross
Margin

37.3% $40,055,408
21.2% 18,252,611
31.7% $58,308,019

$(24,762,812) $15,292,596
4,109,667
$(38,905,756) $19,402,263

(14,142,944)

Gross
Margin
%

38.2%
22.5%
33.3%

Entity:
OSS
Bressner Technology GmbH

Revenue

For the year ended December 31, 2020, total revenue decreased $6,412,631 or 11.0%, as compared to the same period 
in 2019.  OSS saw a decrease in revenue of $6,405,389 or 16.0 percentage points as compared to the prior year.  The majority
of this decrease is attributable to a reduction in shipments of $10,978,121 to our two largest customers of which $8,057,289 is 
attributable to our media and entertainment customer which saw a significant reduction in business resulting from COVID -
19 restrictions. Reductions in revenue were offset by new business of which $6,621,676 was from four customers for which 
the incremental revenue was more than one million dollars from each customer.  There was also a small decrease of $7,242 or 
a decrease of 0.04 percentage points attributable to Bressner. 

Cost of revenue and gross profit

g

p

Cost of revenue decreased by $3,444,982 or 8.9%, for the year ended December 31, 2020 as compared to the prior year 

2019. The decrease in cost of revenue was mainly attributable to our reduced sales and changes in product mix.  OSS saw a 
decrease in cost of revenue of $3,681,025 or 9.5 percentage points as compared to the prior year. Bressner’s cost of revenue 
increased $236,043 or 0.6 percentage points.  

The overall gross margin percentage decreased from 33.3% for the year ended December 31, 2019 to 31.7% for the 

year ended December 31, 2020, a decrease of 1.6 percentage points.  OSS’ gross margin percentage for the year ended 
December 31, 2020 was 37.3%, a decrease of 0.9 percentage points as compared to the prior year of 38.2% attributable to
changes in product mix.  Bressner contributed gross margin at a rate of 21.2% as compared to the prior year 2019 of 22.5%, a
decrease of 1.3 percentage points which was attributable to a change in product mix.  

43

g
Operating expenses

p

p

General and administrative expense

General and administrative expense decreased $83,214 or 1.0%, for the year ended December 31, 2020 as compared to 

the prior year 2019.  OSS experienced an increase of $10,434 which was offset by a decrease at Bressner of $93,648.  The 
decrease in general and administrative expense was primarily attributable to cost containment efforts implemented in April 
2020.  Much of the current year benefit derived from this cost containment effort was offset by increased costs associated 
with the termination benefits for employees released in April 2020 and the termination of our previous president and CEO. 
Overall, total general and administrative expense increased as a percentage of revenue to 16.2% during the year ended 
December 31, 2020 as compared to 14.6% during the same period in 2019, which is attributable to the lower revenue in 2020.

Impairment of goodwill

During the prior year 2019, the Company recognized a write-down of $1,697,394 attributable to impairment of 
goodwill of CDI due to a short-fall in the actual overall financial performance of CDI as compared to plan, a recurring need 
for working capital, and a decrease in the overall Company’s stock price.  There was no such impairment charge in 2020.

Marketing and selling expense

Marketing and selling expense decreased $1,017,984 or 19.8% during the year ended December 31, 2020 as compared 
to the prior year 2019.  OSS had a decrease of $1,025,309 or 100.7% of the total decrease attributable to reductions in travel, 
advertising and tradeshows associated with constraints imposed by COVID-19 restrictions.  Bressner saw a modest increase
of $7,325 or 0.7%.  Overall, total marketing and selling expense decreased as a percentage of revenue to 7.9% during the year 
ended December 31, 2020 as compared to 8.8% during the same period in 2019. 

Research and development expense

Research and development expense decreased $523,795 or 10.8% during the year ended December 31, 2020 as 
compared to the prior year.  OSS saw a decrease of $534,461 or 102% of the decrease.  The decrease was largely driven by
cost reduction efforts implemented in quarter two of the current year.  This reduction was offset by an increase of $10,666 or 
0.2% at Bressner. Overall, there was no change to the total research and development expense as a percentage of revenue as 
compared to the prior year with both years at 8.3% of revenue.

Interest income

Interest income increased $267,266 for the year ended December 31, 2020 as compared to the prior year 2019.  The
increase is attributable to increased finance charges on outstanding accounts receivable balances from our largest customer in 
the media and entertainment industry.

Interest expense

p

Interest expense increased $385,214 for the year ended December 31, 2020 as compared to same period in 2019.  On 

April 24, 2020, the Company borrowed $3,000,000 through a senior secured convertible debt offering issued with a 10% 
original issue discount and incurred legal costs associated with this debt offering.  The interest and the professional fees
incurred on securing the debt are being amortized on an effective interest rate basis to interest expense.

Other income (expense), net

( p

),

Other income (expense), for the year ended December 31, 2020 resulted in net expenses of $53,612 as compared to net 
other income of $130,381 in the prior year 2019, for a net change of $183,993.  The majority of the decrease is a reduction in
foreign currency transactions gains and losses.

(
(Benefit) provision for income taxes

) p

We have recorded an income tax (benefit) provision of $(603,744) and $237,252, respectively, for the years ended 

December 31, 2020 and 2019.  The effective tax rate for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 differs from the
statutory rate mainly due to permanent non-deductible goodwill amortization for Bressner Technology GmbH, income from 
the Global Intangible Low-Taxed Income inclusion for 2019 only, deductions related to expenses of OSS stock options, as 

44

well as projecting federal, foreign and state tax liabilities for the year.  The effective tax rate for 2020 is 98.9% as compared 
to 35.7% in the prior year.

Liquidity and capital resources

Given our recent operating losses, the Company’s primary sources of liquidity have been provided by (i) the 
Company’s February 2018 initial public offering (net proceeds were approximately $16,100,000); (ii) March 2019 notes
payable from members of the Board of Directors and others of $1,500,000; (iii) the July 2019 sale of 1,554,546 shares of the
Company’s common stock for net cash proceeds of $2,488,148; (iv) the April 24, 2020 sale of $3,000,000 of Senior Secured 
Convertible Promissory Notes issued at a 10% original issue discount; (v) receipt of approximately $1,500,000 on April 28, 
2020 of government loan proceeds under the Paycheck Protection Program; and (vi) a receipt of approximately $9,250,000
on March 3, 2021 in a registered direct offering.

As of December 31, 2020, the Company’s cash and cash equivalents were $6,316,921 and working capital was
$16,266,293.  Cash and cash equivalents held by Bressner totaled $1,062,818 (USD) at December 31, 2020, and Bressner’s
debt covenants do not permit the use of those funds by its parent company. During the year ended December 31, 2020, the 
Company experienced an operating loss of $424,281, with cash used in operating activities of $250,173.  During the year, our 
largest customer, engaged in the media and entertainment industry, was having significant financial hardships attributable to 
the COVID-19 pandemic and as a result had been slow in paying their outstanding account receivables. The Company
formulated a plan whereby extended payment terms were made available, and our customer is now current, having paid down
their past-due outstanding account receivables and are presently honoring their credit terms.  

Our sources of liquidity and cash flows are used to fund ongoing operations, research and development projects for 

new products and technologies, and provide ongoing support services for our customers. Over the next two fiscal years, we 
anticipate that we will use our liquidity and cash flows from our operations to fund our growth. In addition, as part of our 
business strategy, we occasionally evaluate potential acquisitions of businesses and products and technologies. Accordingly, 
a portion of our available cash may be used at any time for the acquisition of complementary products or businesses. Such 
potential transactions may require substantial capital resources, which may require us to seek additional debt or equity 
financing. We cannot assure you that we will be able to successfully identify suitable acquisition candidates, complete
acquisitions, integrate acquired businesses into our current operations, or expand into new markets. Furthermore, we cannot 
provide assurances that additional financing will be available to us in any required time frame and on commercially 
reasonable terms, if at all. 

The Company’s revenue growth during the year has slowed due to the effects of COVID-19.   However, resulting from

a reduction in force and strict cost containment, the Company has been able to mitigate the effects, to some degree, of the 
reduced revenue.  For a further description and risk factors associated with COVID-19, please see Part 1A of this Annual
Report on Form 10-K.

 Management’s plans are to continue its efforts towards responding to the changing economic landscape attributable to

COVID-19, to restructure the Company with the primary objectives of reducing costs, conserving cash, strengthening 
margins, and improving company-wide execution.  Specific actions already implemented by management include a reduction 
in force, a limited freeze on hiring, reduced work week, minimizing overtime, travel and entertainment, and contractor costs. 
On April 7, 2020, the Company implemented a cost reduction plan which included the termination of certain employees and 
elimination of certain costs.

While management expects these actions to result in prospective cost reductions, management is also committed to
securing debt and/or equity financing to ensure that liquidity will be sufficient to meet the Company’s cash requirements 
through at least a period of the next twelve months. Management believes potential sources of liquidity include at least the
following:     

(cid:3)

In May 2019, the Company filed a Form S-3 prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Commission which
became effective on June 19, 2019, and allows the Company to offer up to $100,000,000 aggregate dollar 
amount of shares of its common stock, preferred stock, debt securities, warrants to purchase its common stock, 
preferred stock or debt securities, subscription rights to purchase its common stock, preferred stock or debt 
securities and\or units consisting of some or all of these securities, in any combination, together or separately, in
one or more offerings, in amounts, at prices and on the terms that the Company will determine at the time of the 
offering and which will be set forth in a prospectus supplement and any related free writing prospectus. 

45

(cid:3)

(cid:3)

On April 24, 2020, the Company completed a $6.0 million debt financing on a non-interest bearing convertible 
note with a 10% original issue discount.  The first tranche of $3.0 million was received on April 27, 2020, with 
an additional $3.0 million available seven months from the date of closing at the option of the Company 
conditioned upon meeting certain requirements which have been satisfied.  The note is repayable in twenty-two 
installments beginning three months after closing in cash or shares of the Company’s common stock.

On March 1, 2021, the Company entered into a definitive agreement with an institutional investor for the 
purchase and sale of 1,497,006 shares of common stock at a purchase price of $6.68 in a registered direct 
offering priced At-The-Market under Nasdaq rules.  Total estimated proceeds are $9,250,000 after commissions
and offering costs.

As a result of management’s cost reduction plans, the Company’s potential sources of liquidity and management’s
most recent cash flow forecasts, management believes that the Company has sufficient liquidity to satisfy its anticipated 
working capital requirements for its ongoing operations and obligations for at least the next twelve months. However, there 
can be no assurance that management’s cost reduction efforts will be effective or the forecasted cash flows will be achieved. 
Furthermore, the Company shall continue to evaluate its capital expenditure needs based upon factors including but not 
limited to the Company’s sales from operations, growth rate, the timing and extent of spending to support development 
efforts, the expansion of the Company’s sales and marketing, the timing of new product introductions, and the continuing 
market acceptance of the Company’s products and services. If cash generated from operations is insufficient to satisfy the 
Company’s capital requirements, the Company may open a revolving line of credit with a bank, or it may have to sell 
additional equity or debt securities or obtain expanded credit facilities to fund its operating expenses, pay its obligations,
diversify its geographical reach, and grow the Company. In the event such financing is needed in the future, there can be no 
assurance that such financing will be available to the Company, or, if available, that it will be in amounts and on terms
acceptable to the Company. If the Company cannot raise additional funds when it needs or wants them, the Company’s
operations and prospects could be negatively affected. However, if cash flows from operations become insufficient to 
continue operations at the current level, and if no additional financing were obtained, then management would restructure the 
Company in a way to preserve its business while maintaining expenses within operating cash flows.

The following table summarizes our cash flows for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019:

Cash flows:
NNet cash (used in) provided by operating activities
NNet cash used in investing activities
NNet cash provided by financing activities

Operating Activities

For the Year Ended December 31,

2020

(250,173) $
(818,794) $
$
2,109,235

2019
2,374,868
(2,385,177)
2,922,101

$
$
$

During the year ended December 31, 2020, we used $250,173 in cash from operating activities, a decrease of 
$2,625,041 when compared to the cash generated in operating activities of $2,374,868 during the year 2019. This use of 
operating cash and the change from the prior year is mostly attributable to a decrease in revenue attributable to a COVID-19 
economic environment.  The economic effect from COVID-19 directly affected our revenue with our largest customer and 
caused an increase in the use of working capital in the financing of inventory due to longer lead-times.

The decrease in cash generated by operating activities was primarily a result of an increase in working capital 

requirements of $1,936,267, an improvement in net loss of $893,793, offset by a decrease in non-cash adjustments of 
$1,582,567.  Non-cash adjustments include increases of $1,033,653 loss on disposal of property and equipment, the provision
for bad debt, depreciation, inventory reserves, amortization of debt discount and stock-based compensation expense.  These 
increases were offset by $2,616,218 in decreases in non-cash adjustments attributable to deferred taxes, impairment of 
goodwill, warranty reserves, amortization of deferred gain, and amortization.

Working capital requirements increase overall by $1,936,267.  The source of working capital of $5,451,890 was
attributable to reductions in accounts receivable for the comparable period.  This source was offset by uses of working capital 
of $7,388,157 due to increased inventory levels, and prepaid expense and other current assets and reductions in accounts
payable and accrued expenses and other liabilities.

Our ability to generate cash from operations in future periods will depend in large part on our profitability, the rate and 
timing of collections of our accounts receivable, our inventory turns and our ability to manage other areas of working capital
including accounts payable.

46

Investing Activities

During the year ended December 31, 2020, the Company used cash of $818,794 in investing activities as compared to

$2,385,177 used during the prior year 2019, a decrease of $1,566,383. The main projects for the year 2020, were the
continued enhancement of our ERP system, the purchase of test equipment for the engineering department, and demo 
equipment for the sales and marketing department.  The expenditures in the prior year 2019 are primarily due to tenant 
improvements to our headquarter facility and software costs and external consulting costs associated with the implementation
of our ERP system for which phase one of the project was substantially completed in 2020.  We currently do not anticipate 
any other significant purchases of equipment or expansion of our ERP system beyond completion of phase II of the project, 
which is the integration of certain sales functions.  

Financing Activities

Given the economic and financial hardships operating in a COVID-19 environment, the Company believed it to be 
imperative to secure additional financial resources to ensure financial stability during trying economic times.  Therefore, 
during the year ended December 31, 2020, the Company obtained liquidity through two new debt instruments.  During the 
year ended December 31, 2020, we generated $2,109,235 from financing activities as compared to the cash generated of 
$2,922,101 during the year 2019.  During 2020, the Company entered into a $3.0 million, two-year senior secured convertible 
debt offering with a 10% original issue discount and received net proceeds of $2,383,726 after payment of professional fees. 
The Company also received proceeds from a federal Paycheck Protection Program of $1,499,360, and proceeds of $181,892
from the exercise of warrants and stock options.

During the year ended December 31, 2019, the Company raised $1,500,000 from individuals and related parties 
through the issuance of notes payable that bear interest at an annual rate of 9.5% and are repaid through 24 months monthly 
installments.  Additionally, during the third quarter of the year, the Company sold 1,554,832 shares of common stock for total 
gross proceeds of $2,700,714, which after commissions to brokers and other expenses resulted in net proceeds to the
Company of $2,488,148.  The Company also received proceeds of $47,334 from the exercise of warrants and stock options.

Contractual obligations and commitments 

The following table sets forth our non-cancellable contractual obligations as of December 31, 2020. 

Contractual Obligations:
NNotes payable
Operating leases
Total

Total
5,664,188
1,351,868
7,016,056

Less than 1 year
3,619,374
$
526,339
4,145,713

$

1-3 years
2,044,814
825,529
2,870,343

$

$

$

$

$

$

3-5 years

More than 5 Years
-
$
-
-

$

-
-
-

We have made certain indemnities, under which the Company may be required to make payments to an indemnified 

party, in relation to certain transactions.  We indemnify our directors, officers, employees and agents to the maximum extent 
permitted under the laws of the State of Delaware.  In connection with our facilities leases, we indemnify our lessors for 
certain claims arising from the use of our facilities.  The duration of the indemnities varies, and in many cases is indefinite.  
These indemnities do not provide for any limitation of the maximum potential future payments we could be obligated to 
make.  Historically, we have not been obligated to make any payments for these obligations and no liabilities have been
recorded for these indemnities.

Known trends or uncertainties 

Although we have not seen any significant reduction in revenues to date due to consolidations, we have seen some

consolidation in our industry during economic downturns. These consolidations have not had a negative effect on our total 
sales; however, should consolidations and downsizing in the industry continue to occur, those events could adversely impact 
our revenues and earnings going forward. 

As discussed in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, the world has been affected due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Until 
the pandemic has passed, there remains uncertainty as to the effect of COVID-19 on our business in both the short and long-
term.

We believe that the need for improved productivity in the research and development activities directed toward 
developing new products and/or software will continue to result in increasing adoption of high-performance computers and 
interconnect technologies such as those we produce. New product and/or software developments in the specialized compute
business segment could result in increased revenues and earnings if they are accepted by our markets; however, there can be 
no assurances that new products and/or software will result in significant improvements to revenues or earnings. For 
competitive reasons, we do not disclose all of our new product development activities.

Also, the potential for growth in new markets is uncertain. We will continue to explore these opportunities until such 

time as we either generate sales or determine that resources would be more efficiently used elsewhere.

Inflation 

We have not been affected materially by inflation during the periods presented, but we may experience some effect in
n

the near future due to trade tariffs imposed on certain products from China and increased product pricing due to
semiconductor product shortages.

Off balance sheet arrangements

Other than lease commitments incurred in the normal course of business and certain indemnification provisions, we do 

not have any off-balance sheet financing arrangements or liabilities, guarantee contracts, retained or contingent interests in 
transferred assets, or any obligation arising out of a material variable interest in an unconsolidated entity. 

We do not have any majority-owned subsidiaries that are not consolidated in the financial statements. Additionally, we

do not have an interest in, or relationships with, any special purpose entities.

Stockholder transactions

In 2016, we entered into a management services agreement with a company owned by the former Chief Executive 
Officer of Magma.  Payments for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 were $0 and $21,875, respectively. Such 
management services agreement has been now fully completed.

In April 2019, certain members of the Company’s Board of Directors executed definitive agreements to commit funds
of up to $4,000,000 as a credit facility. The Company initially borrowed $1,150,000 from members of the Board of Directors
and $350,000 from other shareholders for a two year period at an interest rate of 9.5% which requires the Company to make
monthly principal and interest payment of $69,000 per month. In connection with these loans, the Company issued to the note
holders warrants to purchase shares of the Company’s common stock equal to 10% of the original principal as a price per 
share equal to $2.15 per share.  Accordingly, the Company issued to the note holders warrants to purchase 69,766 shares of 
the Company’s common stock.  The relative fair value of the warrants issued was $60,158.

Critical accounting policies and estimates 

Our consolidated financial statements are prepared in accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles 

(GAAP). The preparation of these financial statements requires us to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported 
amounts of assets, liabilities, revenue, expenses, and related disclosures. We evaluate our estimates and assumptions on an 
ongoing basis. Our estimates are based on historical experience and various other assumptions that we believe to be
reasonable under the circumstances. Our actual results could differ from these estimates.  The critical accounting estimates, 
assumptions and judgments that we believe have the most significant impact on our consolidated financial statements are
described below.

Revenue Recognition

g

On January 1, 2019, the Company adopted the new accounting standard update ASC 606, Revenue from Contracts with

Customers, which superseded nearly all existing revenue recognition guidance under GAAP, to all contracts using the
modified retrospective method. The comparative information has not been restated and continues to be reported under the
accounting standards in effect for those periods.

48

The Company’s performance obligations are satisfied over time as work is performed or at a point in time. The

majority of the Company’s revenue is recognized at a point in time when products ship and control is transferred to the 
customer. The Company determines revenue recognition through the following steps: (i) identification of the contract with a
customer; (ii) identification of the performance obligations in the contract; (iii) determination of the transaction price; (iv) 
allocation of the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract; and (v) recognition of revenue when, or as, a
performance obligation is satisfied.

The Company’s contracts are executed through a combination of written agreements along with purchase orders with 

all customers including certain general terms and conditions. Generally, purchase orders entail products, quantities and 
prices, which define the performance obligations of each party and are approved and accepted by the Company. The
Company’s contracts with customers do not include extended payment terms. Payment terms vary by contract type and type
of customer and generally range from 30 to 60 days from invoice. Additionally, taxes assessed by a governmental authority 
that are both imposed on and concurrent with a specific revenue-producing transaction, that are collected by the Company 
from a customer and deposited with the relevant government authority, are excluded from revenue.

The transaction price is determined based on the consideration to which the Company will be entitled in exchange for 
transferring goods or services to the customer adjusted for estimated variable consideration, if any.  Variable consideration 
may include discounts, rights of return, refunds, and other similar obligations. The Company allocates the transaction price to 
each distinct product and service based on its relative standalone selling price. The standalone selling price for products
primarily involves the cost to produce the deliverable plus the anticipated margin and for services is estimated based on the 
Company’s approved list price.

In the normal course of business, the Company does not accept product returns unless the items are defective as
manufactured. The Company establishes provisions for estimated returns and warranties. In addition, the Company does not 
typically provide customers with the right to a refund and does not transact for noncash consideration.

Customer agreements include one vendor managed inventory program. The Company recognizes revenue under this 

arrangement when all of the following criteria are met: (i) the goods have been identified separately as belonging to the
customer; (ii) the goods are ready for physical shipment to the customer; (iii) the Company does not have the ability to direct 
the goods to another customer; and (iv) the arrangement was requested by the customer and that the customer has sufficiently 
explained a substantial business purpose for the arrangement.  Management also considers whether the customer's custodial
risks are insured and whether modifications to the Company's normal billing and credit terms were required.

Revenues on certain fixed-price contracts where we provide engineering services, prototypes and completed products 
are recognized based upon percentage of completion or based upon milestones delivered that are provided during the period 
and compared to milestone goals to be provided over the entire contract. These services require that we perform significant, 
extensive and complex design, development, modification or implementation of our customers’ systems. Performance will 
often extend over long periods of time, and our right to receive future payment depends on our future performance in 
accordance with the agreement.

The percentage-of-completion methodology involves recognizing probable and reasonably estimable revenue using the 

percentage of services completed, on a current cumulative cost to estimated total cost basis, using a reasonably consistent 
profit margin over the performance period. Due to the long-term nature of these projects, developing the estimates of costs 
often requires significant judgment. Factors that must be considered in estimating the progress of work completed and 
ultimate cost of the projects include, but are not limited to, the availability of labor and labor productivity, the nature and 
complexity of the work to be performed and the impact of delayed performance. If changes occur in delivery, productivity or 
other factors used in developing the estimates of costs or revenues, we revise our cost and revenue estimates, which may
result in increases or decreases in revenues and costs, and such revisions are reflected in earnings in the period in which the 
revision becomes known.

49

The Company recognizes contract assets or unbilled receivables related to revenue recognized for services completed 

but not yet invoiced to the clients. Unbilled receivables are recorded as accounts receivable when the Company has an
unconditional right to contract consideration. A contract liability is recognized as deferred revenue when the Company 
invoices clients in advance of performing the related services under the terms of a contract. Deferred revenue is recognized as 
revenue when the Company has satisfied the related performance obligation.

On certain contracts with several of the Company’s significant customers, the Company receives payments in advance

of manufacturing. Advanced payments are recorded as deferred revenue until the revenue recognition criteria described 
above has been met.  Related billings that are in excess of revenue earned are deferred and recorded as a liability on the 
consolidated balance sheet until the related services are provided.

Stock-Based Compensation

p

We measure and recognize compensation expense for all stock-based awards granted to our employees and other 

service providers, including stock options granted under the 2017 Plan and 2015 Stock Option Plan that was approved in 
December 2015 (the “2015 Plan”), based on the estimated fair value of the award. We use the Black-Scholes option pricing 
model to estimate the fair value of stock option awards granted under the 2017 Plan and 2015 Plan. We recognize the fair 
value of stock options granted under the 2017 Plan and 2015 Plan as stock-based compensation on a straight-line basis over 
the requisite service period. We record expense net of anticipated forfeitures and adjust the annual expense based upon actual 
experience. 

Compensation cost for stock awards, which include restricted stock units (“RSUs”) is measured at the fair value on the

grant date and recognized as expense, net of estimated forfeitures, over the related service period. The fair value of stock 
awards is based on the quoted price of our common stock on the grant date less the present value of expected dividends not 
received during the vesting period.

Our use of the Black-Scholes option pricing model requires the input of highly subjective assumptions, including the

fair value of the underlying common stock, expected term of the option, expected volatility of the price of our common stock,
risk-free interest rates and the expected dividend yield of our common stock. The assumptions used in our option pricing 
model represent management’s best estimates. These estimates involve inherent uncertainties and the application of 
management’s judgment. If factors change and different assumptions are used, our stock-based compensation expense could 
be materially different in the future.  

These assumptions and estimates are as follows: 

•

•

•

•

•

Fair Value of Common Stock.  Since the completion of our IPO, we use the closing quoted price of our common 
stock on the date of grant. 

Expected Term.  The expected term represents the period that our stock-based awards are expected to be 
outstanding. The expected term assumptions were determined based on the vesting terms and contractual lives of 
the options, using the simplified method.

Expected Volatility.  Since we do not have sufficient trading history of our common stock, the expected volatility 
was determined based on the historical stock volatilities of comparable companies. Comparable companies
consist of public companies in our industry that is similar in size, stage of life cycle and financial leverage. We
intend to continue to apply this process using the same or similar public companies until a sufficient amount of 
historical information regarding the volatility of our own share price becomes available, or unless circumstances 
change such that the identified companies are no longer similar to us, in which case, more suitable companies
whose share prices are publicly available would be used in the calculation. 

Risk-Free Interest Rate.  The risk-free interest rate is based on the implied yield available on U.S. Treasury zero-
coupon issues with remaining terms similar to the expected term on the options. 

Dividend Rate.  We have never declared or paid any cash dividends and do not plan to pay cash dividends in the
foreseeable future, and, therefore, use an expected dividend yield of zero. 

We will continue to use judgment in evaluating the assumptions related to our stock-based compensation on a
prospective basis. As we continue to accumulate additional data related to our common stock, we may refine our estimation 
process, which could materially impact our future stock-based compensation expense. 

50

y
Inventory Valuation

We value our inventory at the lower of cost or its estimated net realizable value.  We use the average cost method for 

purposes of determining cost, which approximates the first-in, first-out method. We write down inventory for excess and 
obsolescence based upon a review of historical usage and assumptions about future demand, product mix and possible
alternative uses. Actual demand, product mix and alternative usage may be lower than those that we project, and this
difference could have a material adverse effect on our gross margin if inventory write-downs beyond those initially recorded 
become necessary.  Alternatively, if actual demand, product mix and alternative usage are more favorable than those we 
estimated at the time of such a write-down, our gross margin could be favorably impacted in future periods. 

Goodwill, Intangible Assets and Long-lived Assets

g

g

,

We evaluate our goodwill, intangible and long-lived assets for impairment when events or circumstances arise that 
indicate our goodwill, intangible and long-lived assets may be impaired. Indicators of impairment include, but are not limited to,
a significant deterioration in overall economic conditions, a decline in our market capitalization, the loss of significant business, 
significant decreases in funding for our contracts, or other significant adverse changes in industry or market conditions.  
Regardless, goodwill is tested for potential impairment at least annually.

Income Taxes

The determination of income tax expense requires us to make certain estimates and judgments concerning the 

calculation of deferred tax assets and liabilities, as well as the deductions and credits that are available to reduce taxable
income. We recognize deferred tax assets and liabilities for the expected future tax consequences of events that have been 
included in our consolidated financial statements. Under this method, deferred tax assets and liabilities are determined based 
on the difference between the financial statement and tax basis of assets and liabilities using enacted tax rates for the year in
which the differences are expected to reverse. 

In evaluating our ability to recover deferred tax assets, we consider all available positive and negative evidence, including 

our past operating results, our forecast of future earnings, future taxable income, and tax planning strategies. The assumptions
utilized in determining future taxable income require significant judgment. We record a valuation allowance against deferred tax
assets if, based upon the available evidence, it is more likely than not that some or all of the deferred tax assets will not be
realized. If it becomes more likely than not that a tax asset will be used for which a reserve has been provided, we reverse the
related valuation allowance. If our actual future taxable income by tax jurisdiction differs from estimates, additional allowances
or reversals of reserves may be necessary.

We use a two-step approach to recognize and measure uncertain tax positions. First, the tax position must be evaluated 

to determine the likelihood that it will be sustained upon external examination. If the tax position is deemed more-likely-
than-not to be sustained, the tax position is then assessed to determine the amount of benefit to recognize in the financial
statements. The amount of the benefit that may be recognized is the largest amount that has a greater than 50% likelihood of 
being realized upon ultimate settlement. We reevaluate our uncertain tax positions on a quarterly basis and any changes to 
these positions as a result of tax audits, tax laws or other facts and circumstances could result in additional charges to
operations.

Business Combinations

We utilize the acquisition method of accounting for business combinations and allocate the purchase price of an 
acquisition to the various tangible and intangible assets acquired and liabilities assumed based on their estimated fair values.
We primarily establish fair value using the income approach based upon a discounted cash flow model. The income approach 
requires the use of many assumptions and estimates including future revenues and expenses, as well as discount factors and 
income tax rates. Other estimates include:

•

•

•

estimated step-ups or write-downs for fixed assets and inventory;

estimated fair values of intangible assets; and 

estimated income tax assets and liabilities assumed from the target.

While we use our best estimates and assumptions as part of the purchase price allocation process to accurately value

assets acquired and liabilities assumed at the business acquisition date, our estimates and assumptions are inherently 
uncertain and subject to refinement. As a result, during the purchase price allocation period, which is generally no longer than 
one year from the business acquisition date, we record adjustments to the assets acquired and liabilities assumed, with the
corresponding offset to goodwill. 

51

For changes in the valuation of intangible assets between preliminary and final purchase price allocation, the related 
amortization is adjusted in the period it occurs. Subsequent to the purchase price allocation period any adjustment to assets
acquired or liabilities assumed is included in operating results in the period in which the adjustment is determined.  Should 
we issue shares of our common stock in an acquisition, we will be required to estimate the fair value of the shares issued.

Recently implemented accounting pronouncements 

Per the Company’s consolidated financial statements Note 2 – Significant Accounting Policies, we have implemented a

number of changes, as required by FASB.  See Note 2 for further details.

Recent accounting pronouncements

Per the Company’s consolidated financial statements Note 2 – Significant Accounting Policies, we may be

implementing a number of changes, as required by FASB.  See Note 2 for further details.

Interest rate risk 

Our exposure to interest rate risk is primarily associated with borrowing on revolving lines of credit denominated in 

both U.S. dollars and Euros.  We are exposed to the impact of interest rate changes primarily through our borrowing activities
for our variable rate borrowings. 

Concentration of credit risk

Financial instruments that potentially expose us to concentrations of credit risk consist principally of cash, cash 

equivalents and accounts receivable. We place our cash and cash equivalents with financial institutions with high credit 
quality. At December 31, 2020 and 2019, we had $6,316,921 and $5,185,321, respectively, of cash and cash equivalents on
deposit or invested with our financial and lending institutions.  In Germany, the deposit insurance is €100,000 per bank, per 
customer.  Bressner has funds on deposit in both Euro and U.S. dollar denominations of €669,160 (US$818,256) with banks 
in excess of the insurance limits.

We provide credit to our customers in the normal course of business. We perform ongoing credit evaluations of our 

customers’ financial condition and limit the amount of credit extended when deemed necessary. 

Foreign currency risk 

We operate primarily in the United States.  Foreign sales of products and services are primarily denominated in U.S. 
dollars.  We also conduct business outside the United States through our foreign subsidiary in Germany, where business is
largely transacted in non-U.S. dollar currencies particularly the Euro, which is subject to fluctuations due to changes in 
foreign currency exchange rates.  Accordingly, we are subject to exposure from changes in the exchange rates of local
currencies. Foreign currency transaction gains and losses are recorded in other income (expense), net in the consolidated 
statements of operations.

OSS GmbH operates as an extension of OSS’ domestic operations which acquired Bressner Technology GmbH in 
October 2018.  The functional currency of OSS GmbH is the Euro. Transactions denominated in currencies other than the
functional currency are remeasured to the functional currency at the average exchange rate in effect during the period.  At the 
end of each reporting period, monetary assets and liabilities are translated using exchange rates in effect at the balance sheet 
date. Non-monetary assets and liabilities are remeasured at historical exchange rates. Consequently, changes in the exchange
rates of the currencies may impact the translation of the foreign subsidiaries’ statements of operations into U.S. dollars, 
which may in turn affect our consolidated statement of operations. The resulting foreign currency translation adjustments are
recorded as a separate component of accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) in the consolidated statement of 
comprehensive income (loss).

Derivative financial instruments

We employ derivatives to manage certain currency market risks through the use of foreign exchange forward contracts.

We do not use derivatives for trading or speculative purposes. Our derivatives are designated as a hedge of a forecasted 
transaction or of the variability of cash flows to be received or paid related to a recognized asset or liability (cash flow
hedge). We hedge a portion of the exchange risk involved in anticipation of highly probable foreign currency-denominated 
transactions. In anticipation of these transactions, we enter into foreign exchange contracts to provide currency at a fixed rate.

52

Non-GAAP financial measures

Adjusted EBITDA

j

We believe that the use of adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or adjusted EBITDA, 

is helpful for an investor to assess the performance of the Company.  The Company defines adjusted EBITDA as income 
(loss) attributable to common stockholders before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, acquisition expense, impairment 
of long-lived assets, financing costs, fair value adjustments from purchase accounting, stock-based compensation expense
and expenses related to discontinued operations.

Adjusted EBITDA is not a measurement of financial performance under generally accepted accounting principles in
the United States, or GAAP. Because of varying available valuation methodologies, subjective assumptions and the variety of 
equity instruments that can impact a company’s non-cash operating expenses, we believe that providing a non-GAAP 
financial measure that excludes non-cash and non-recurring expenses allows for meaningful comparisons between our core 
business operating results and those of other companies, as well as providing us with an important tool for financial and 
operational decision making and for evaluating our own core business operating results over different periods of time.

Our adjusted EBITDA measure may not provide information that is directly comparable to that provided by other 

companies in our industry, as other companies in our industry may calculate non-GAAP financial results differently, 
particularly related to non-recurring and unusual items. Our adjusted EBITDA is not a measurement of financial performance
under GAAP, and should not be considered as an alternative to operating income or as an indication of operating 
performance or any other measure of performance derived in accordance with GAAP. We do not consider adjusted EBITDA
to be a substitute for, or superior to, the information provided by GAAP financial results.

For the Year
Ended December 31,

2020

2019

NNet loss attributable to common stockholders

$

(6,544) $

Depreciation and amortization
Amortization of deferred gain
Impairment of goodwill
Stock-based compensation expense
Interest income
Interest expense
Costs resulting from dissolution of SkyScale
Acquisition expenses (1)
(Benefit) provision for income taxes

Adjusted EBITDA

$

(1)

Expenses incurred in the acquisition of Bressner.

Adjusted EPS

j

1,606,532
(53,838)
-
724,378
(418,379)
550,774
-
-
(603,744)
1,799,179

$

(900,337)
1,655,288
(28,555)
1,697,394
649,469
(151,113)
165,560
(146,150)
4,075
237,252
3,182,883

Adjusted EPS excludes the impact of certain items and, therefore, has not been calculated in accordance with GAAP. 

We believe that exclusion of certain selected items assists in providing a more complete understanding of our underlying
results and trends and allows for comparability with our peer company index and industry. We use this measure along with 
the corresponding GAAP financial measures to manage our business and to evaluate our performance compared to prior 
periods and the marketplace. The Company defines non-GAAP (loss) income attributable to common stockholders as (loss) 
or income before amortization, stock-based compensation, expenses related to discontinued operations, and acquisition costs. 
Adjusted EPS expresses adjusted (loss) income on a per share basis using weighted average diluted shares outstanding.

Adjusted EPS is a non-GAAP financial measure and should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for 
financial information provided in accordance with GAAP. These non-GAAP financial measures may not be computed in the 
same manner as similarly titled measures used by other companies. We expect to continue to incur expenses similar to the
adjusted income from continuing operations and adjusted EPS financial adjustments described above, and investors should 
not infer from our presentation of these non-GAAP financial measures that these costs are unusual, infrequent or non-
recurring.

53

The following table reconciles net loss attributable to common stockholders and diluted earnings per share:

NNet loss attributable to common stockholders

Amortization of intangibles
Impairment of goodwill
Stock-based compensation expense
Cost resulting from dissolution of SkyScale
Acquisition expenses

NNon-GAAP net income attributable to common stockholders

NNon-GAAP net income per share attributable to
  common stockholders:

Basic
Diluted

Weighted average common shares outstanding:

Basic
Diluted

For the Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

(6,544) $

683,935
-
724,378
-
-
1,401,769

0.08
0.08

$

$
$

(900,337)
984,065
1,697,394
649,469
(146,150)
4,075
2,288,516

0.15
0.14

$

$

$
$

16,512,203
16,752,434

15,148,613
16,158,627

Free cash flow, a non-GAAP measure for reporting cash flow, is defined as cash provided by operating activities less 

capital expenditures for property and equipment, which includes capitalized software development costs. We believe free 
cash flow provides investors with an important perspective on cash available for investments and acquisitions after making
capital investments required to support ongoing business operations and long-term value creation.  We believe that trends in 
our free cash flow can be valuable indicators of our operating performance and liquidity.

Free cash flow is a non-GAAP financial measure and should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for 
financial information provided in accordance with GAAP. This non-GAAP financial measure may not be computed in the 
same manner as similarly titled measures used by other companies.

We expect to continue to incur expenditures similar to the free cash flow adjustments described above, and investors 

should not infer from our presentation of this non-GAAP financial measure that these expenditures reflect all of our 
obligations which require cash.  The following table reconciles cash provided by operating activities, the most directly 
comparable GAAP financial measure, to free cash flow:

Cash flow:
Cash (used in) provided by operating activities
Capital expenditures
Free cash flow

For the Year Ended December 31,

2020
(250,173) $
(820,336)
(1,070,509) $

2019
2,374,868
(2,386,227)

$

(11,359) $

Change
(2,625,041)
1,565,891
(1,059,150)

$

$

54

ITEM 7A.  QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK. 

Not Applicable.

ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA. 

See the financial statements included elsewhere in this report beginning at page F-1, which are incorporated herein by 

reference.

ITEM 9.  CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL
DISCLOSURE.

None.

ITEM 9A. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES.

Conclusion Regarding the Effectiveness of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

We maintain disclosure controls and procedures that are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed in 

our periodic and current reports that we file with the SEC is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time
periods specified in the SEC’s rules and forms, and that such information is accumulated and communicated to our 
management, including our principal executive officer and principal financial officer, as appropriate, to allow timely
decisions regarding required disclosure. In designing and evaluating the disclosure controls and procedures, management 
recognized that any controls and procedures, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable and not 
absolute assurance of achieving the desired control objectives. In reaching a reasonable level of assurance, management 
necessarily was required to apply its judgment in evaluating the cost-benefit relationship of possible controls and procedures. 
In addition, the design of any system of controls also is based in part upon certain assumptions about the likelihood of future 
events, and there can be no assurance that any design will succeed in achieving its stated goals under all potential future
conditions; over time, control may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or the degree of compliance with 
policies or procedures may deteriorate. Because of the inherent limitations in a cost-effective control system, misstatements 
due to error or fraud may occur and not be detected.

Our management, with the participation of our principal executive officer and principal financial officer, has evaluated 
the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or the Exchange Act, as of the end of the period covered by this Annual Report. Based 
on such evaluation, our principal executive officer and principal financial officer have concluded that as of such date, our 
disclosure controls and procedures were effective at the reasonable assurance level.

Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting

Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal controls over financial reporting, as 

such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) of the Exchange Act. Internal control over financial reporting is a 
process designed under the supervision and with the participation of our management, including our principal executive 
officer and principal financial officer, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and thet
preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with GAAP. Our internal control over financial
reporting includes those policies and procedures that: (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that in reasonable detail 
accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of our assets; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions 
are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with GAAP, and that our receipts and 
expenditures are being made only in accordance with authorizations of our management and directors; and (iii) provide
reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use or disposition of our assets 
that could have a material effect on our financial statements.  Because of its inherent limitations, internal controls over 
financial reporting may not prevent or detect all misstatements.  Therefore, even those systems determined to be effective can 
provide only reasonable assurance with respect to financial statement preparation and presentation.  We have conducted an 
evaluation of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting.  Based on our evaluation, management has
concluded that our internal control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2020. 

Attestation Report of the Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

This Annual Report on Form 10-K does not include an attestation report of our independent registered public 

accounting firm due to an exemption established by the JOBS Act for “emerging growth companies.”

55

Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting

There has been no change in our internal control over financial reporting during the quarter ended December 31,

2020 that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.

Management’s goal is to continue to improve upon our internal control environment as we refine our processes and 

procedures to address our growing business and operations in other geographies. As we continue to evaluate and take actions
to improve our internal control over financial reporting, we may determine to take additional actions to address control
deficiencies or determine to modify our plan based upon changes in our internal control environment.

ITEM 9B. OTHER INFORMATION. 

None.

56

PART III

ITEM 10. DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE.

Executive Officers and Directors 

The following table sets forth the names, ages, and positions of our executive officers and directors as of February 28, 
2021. There are no arrangements, agreements or understandings between non-management security holders and management 
under which non-management security holders may directly or indirectly participate in or influence the management of our 
affairs. There are no arrangements or understandings between any director and any other person pursuant to which any
director or executive officer was or is to be selected as a director or executive officer, as applicable. There currently are no
legal proceedings, and during the past ten years there have been no legal proceedings that are material to the evaluation of the
ability or integrity of any of our directors or director nominees.

Name
EExecutive Officers:
David Raun
John W. Morrison, Jr.
Jim Ison
NNon-Employee Directors:
Kenneth Potashner (1)(2)
Jack Harrison (1)(4)
Kimberly Sentovich (2)(3)
Sita Lowman(3)(4)
Gioia Messinger(2)(3)
Greg Matz (1)(3)(4)

Age

Position

President and Chief Executive Officer

59
63 Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Secretary
51 Chief Sales & Marketing Officer

63 Chairman
65 Director
53   Director
55 Director
58   Director
61 Director

(1) Member of the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. 
(2) Member of the Compensation Committee. 
(3) Member of the Audit Committee. 
(4) Member of the Risk Oversite Committee.

Executive Officers

David Raun served as our interim chief executive officer since his appointment on February 15, 2020 until June 24, 
2021, when he was appointed as the Company’s president and chief executive officer.  Mr. Raun formerly served as the audit 
chair on the One Stop Systems board of directors and serves as a director.  Mr. Raun was with PLX Technology, Inc., a 
publicly traded company on Nasdaq, from 2004-2014 where he eventually became president, chief executive officer and a
director. In this role, he led the company to an acquisition by Avago (now Broadcom) after driving the company to large PCI 
Express market share, record revenues and profits.  This PCIe switch leadership position at PLX makes him very familiar 
with the OSS markets and the components he defined and marketed to many of OSS products.  Mr. Raun also served as chief 
operations officer at Home Bay Technologies, an on-line technology based real estate company in 2019.  Prior to Home Bay, 
he was the president, COO and interim chief financial officer at ASSIA, Inc. a Silicon Valley-based SaaS providers from 
2016-2018.  Here he led a turnaround driving to record revenues and sizable operating margins.  Prior to these roles he had 
multiple VP of marketing, business development, corporate development and sales roles.  He was chairman of the board at 
Kilopass, a semiconductor IP supplier until they were acquired by Synopsys in 2019.  Mr. Raun holds a B.S. in computer and 
electrical engineering from University of California, Santa Barbara. David Raun has more than 24 years of experience at 
senior management and board levels in public and private companies including over 10 M&A/fund raising events which is a 
great benefit to OSS.

John W. Morrison, Jr. has served as our chief financial officer since September 1, 2017. Mr. Morrison is a CPA with 
more than 30 years’ experience in public accounting and all aspects of financial reporting and financing. From June 2014 to
September 2017, he served as the chief financial and operations officer for Carol Cole Company. Prior to Carol Cole, he 
served as a consultant to various private companies regarding their financial and operational affairs. From January 2013 to 
September 2013 he served as the chief financial officer of Gen-E, an information technology and services company. 
Mr. Morrison also served as the executive vice president and chief financial officer for the Kelley Blue Book Company for 
11 years. He began his career working 15 years for the public accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (now PwC) both in
the U.S. and Asia. Mr. Morrison holds a B.S. in accounting and business management and MACC in Accounting from 
Brigham Young University. 

57

Jim Ison, has been with OSS since 2004 and currently serves as the Chief Sales and Marketing Officer.  Mr. Ison has

28 years' combined sales, product management and marketing management experience in leading-edge large-scale electronic 
systems using breakthrough technologies. His expertise covers government, communications and HPC markets with
particular focus on AI applications in unique environments. Prior to OSS, Mr. Ison held senior sales and marketing positions 
for Ziatech and Rittal. During the 15 years in OSS management, he has led the technological evolution and integration of 
OSS' many mergers and acquisitions. Mr. Ison holds a bachelor's degree in Aeronautical Engineering from CalPoly SLO and 
an MBA from University of Florida.

Board of Directors

Kenneth Potashner has served as Chairman of our board of directors since May 2019.  Mr. Potashner has extensive

BOD experience in high growth, high technology global organizations. He has served as Chairman of Newport Corporation 
where he provided 18 years of service culminating in the sale of Newport in 2016 for $980 million.  Mr. Potashner was 
Chairman of Maxwell Technologies and directed it through a period of rapid expansion. He has also served on the BOD of 
California Micro Devices, SonicBlue Inc, and Singapore Technologies, all publicly traded companies.  Mr. Potashner is 
currently serving as the Executive Chairman of Home Bay Technologies.  He has also served on the Board of many private 
companies as well including DynaOptics, MyOffice.com, Underground Elephant, Lumedyne, Events.com,  and several 
others. Several of the private companies that Mr. Potashner has had affiliations with have achieved successful exits or 
significant financings.  Mr. Potashner has a BSEE from Lafayette College and an MSEE from SMU, Executive certifications
from Columbia and INSEAD in Lausanne, Switzerland. He also has an Advanced Professional Director certification from
American Board of Directors. 

Jack Harrison has served on our board of directors since December 2016. He was founder, president and chief 
executive officer of Aspen Integrated Technologies, a microelectronics and MEMS company, which he sold in 2011. Mr. 
Harrison is currently the president of Integrity Energy, an oil and gas company, and also serves as the chairman of the board 
of Reach Beyond: a non-profit charitable organization of which he has been affiliated for more than 20 years. Mr. Harrison
holds a BME degree from Wheaton College. He brings decades of experience in the microelectronics space and his business
and technical expertise represent important assets to OSS.

Kimberly Sentovich joined the board in February 2019 and is a seasoned merchandising, operations, IT and supply 
chain executive with 30 years of experience with multi-billion-dollar profit and loss responsibility.  From 2017 to 2019, Ms. 
Sentovich served as the Senior Vice President of Operations for Torrid, an apparel retailer.  From 2015 to 2017, Ms.
Sentovich was Executive Vice President of Stores and Logistics at Gymboree, responsible for all 1300 company owned 
stores in North America.  Ms. Sentovich previously spent seven years (2008-2015) at Walmart rising from Regional Vice 
President of Operations – California to Divisional Senior Vice President of Operations – Pacific Division and fifteen years at 
The Home Depot (1993-2008) rising to the level of Regional Vice President of Operations.  Ms. Sentovich obtained her 
MBA from The Paul Merage School of Business, University of California, Irvine and her B.A. in Philosophy and Political 
Science with a Minor in economics from Bryn Mawr College. Ms. Sentovich’s extensive executive and operations
experience, as well as her independence, judgment and exceptional leadership experience makes her a valuable addition to 
the Board.

Sita Lowman, joined the board in July 2020 and is a Fortune 500 executive that drives enterprise business

transformation. Her expertise for identifying market trends, for organizing multi-national diverse teams to quickly react to
these trends, and for leveraging partnerships to expand globally make her frequently called upon to lead new business 
ventures. Currently, Ms. Lowman serves as Vice President and General Manager for the Platform Services business of DXC 
Technologies, a multi-billion-dollar IT services Fortune 500 Company. At DXC, she is actively engaging in strategic 
partnerships with the world’s largest public cloud providers and Enterprise application providers, with responsibilities 
including P&L financial management, GTM and operations activities. From 2013 to 2017, Ms. Lowman was Senior Director, 
Enterprise Solutions on Demand Service Offering Management, Workload and Cloud for Hewlett Packard Enterprise. She
has also held General Manager roles at Nortel Networks and Texas Instruments (TI) Defense Group (acquired by Raytheon). 
Ms. Lowman holds a BSS of Electrical Engineering from Auburn University. Ms. Lowman’s extensive Fortune 500 
experience, including in the IT services, cloud enterprise and defense industries makes her well suited to serve in a director 
role with the Company.

58

Gioia Messinger, joined the board in July 2020 and is an accomplished venture-backed executive and founder focused 

on innovation and market disruption. She has years of experience in consumer electronics, Internet of Things (IoT),
robotics/AI and digital health as Founder/CEO, board member, consultant and venture capital advisor.  From 2012 to present, 
Ms. Messinger has been the founder and principal of LinkedObjects, Inc. a strategic advisory services business focused on
digital transformation brought about by AI and IoT. She is the past founder and CEO of Avaak, Inc. (NYSE:ARLO) that 
created Arlo, the award-winning smart video security system for home or business that defined the category and is now the 
market leader. She is a past founder and CEO of an early stage healthcare IT company and an early contributor to the
development of the PillCam™ (NASDAQ:GIVN). Ms. Messinger served on the Board of Vicon Industries (NYSE:VII), a
manufacturer of commercial video surveillance systems. She currently serves on the board of Kelzal (Qelzal Corporation), a
venture backed company in the AI space, and on the Council of Advisors of the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering. 
Ms. Messinger obtained her MBA from the Paul Merage School of Business at the University of California, Irvine and her 
B.S. in Computer Engineering from University of California, San Diego. Ms. Messinger’s technical skills and understanding, 
thought leadership and industry relationships make her an invaluable addition to the Board.

Greg Matz, CPA, joined the board in July 2020 and is an experienced financial executive serving in controller, Vice 

President and CFO roles for over 20 years. Now retired, Mr. Matz is currently serving as a member of the board of directors
and audit committee chair for Dare Bioscience, Inc. (NASDAQ:DARE), a public clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company. 
Mr. Matz also chairs the Dean’s Council for the University of San Francisco’s School of Management. From 2011 to 2016, 
he worked for The Cooper Companies, Inc. (NYSE:COO) holding roles as the Senior Vice President and Chief Financial 
Officer and Chief Risk Officer. From 2010 to 2011 Mr. Matz was the Chief Financial Officer for CooperVision, a business 
unit of The Cooper Companies, Inc. Prior to joining The Cooper Companies, Inc., he held key management roles in finance 
and marketing at Agilent Technologies and Hewlett Packard. He began his career at KPMG and is a CPA with an active 
certification. Mr. Matz graduated from the University of San Francisco with a B.S. in Business Administration and 
completed the University of Pennsylvania, The Wharton School’s Advanced Management Program. Mr. Matz is also a 
National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) Board Leadership Fellow.  Our board of directors believes Mr. Matz’s 
experience as a chief financial officer and chief risk officer of a public company and his corporate experience in financial
functions, risk management, capital markets and corporate strategy qualifies him to serve as a member of the board of 
directors.

Board Composition and Election of Directors 

Director Independence

Our board of directors currently consists of seven (7) members. Our board of directors has determined that Kenneth
Potashner, Jack Harrison, Kim Sentovich, Sita Lowman, Gioia Messinger and Greg Matz are all independent directors in 
accordance with the listing requirements of The Nasdaq Capital Market. The Nasdaq independence definition includes a 
series of objective tests, including that the director is not, and has not been for at least three years, one of our employees and 
that neither the director nor any of his family members has engaged in various types of business dealings with us. In addition, 
as required by Nasdaq rules, our board of directors has made a subjective determination as to each independent director that 
no relationships exist, which, in the opinion of our board of directors, would interfere with the exercise of independent 
judgment in carrying out the responsibilities of a director. In making these determinations, our board of directors reviewed 
and discussed information provided by the directors and us with regard to each director’s business and personal activities and 
relationships as they may relate to us and our management. 

Board Committees and Independence 

Our board of directors has established four standing committees – audit, compensation and nominating, corporate 
governance, and risk oversight – each of which operates under a charter that has been approved by our board of directors.

Audit Committee

The audit committee’s main function is to oversee our accounting and financial reporting processes and the audits of 

our financial statements. This committee’s responsibilities include, among other things:

•

•

•

selecting and retaining (subject to approval by the Company’s stockholders) our independent registered public 
accounting firm; 

setting the compensation of our independent registered public accounting firm; 

overseeing the work of our independent registered public accounting firm and pre-approving all audit services 
they provide; 

59

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

approving all permitted non-audit services performed by our independent registered public accounting firm;

establishing policies and procedures for engagement of our independent registered public accounting firm for 
permitted audit and non-audit services; 

evaluating the qualifications, independence and performance of our independent registered public accounting 
firm;

reviewing the design, implementation, adequacy and effectiveness of our internal accounting controls and our 
critical accounting policies; 

discussing with management and the independent registered public accounting firm the results of our annual 
audit and the review of our quarterly unaudited financial statements; 

reviewing the scope and plan of our independent registered public accounting firm and their effective use of audit 
resources; 

reviewing with management and independent auditors their significant audit findings, and assess the steps that 
management has taken or proposes to take to minimize significant risks or exposures facing the Company, and 
periodically review compliance with such steps;

establishing procedures for the Company’s confidential and anonymous receipt, retention and treatment of 
complaints regarding the Company’s accounting, internal controls and auditing matters, as well as for the
confidential, anonymous submissions by Company employees of concerns regarding questionable accounting or 
auditing matters;

obtaining the advice and assistance, as appropriate, of independent counsel and other advisors as necessary to
fulfill the responsibilities of the audit committee, and receive appropriate funding from the Company, as 
determined by the audit committee, for the payment of compensation to any such advisors; 

reviewing, overseeing and monitoring the integrity of our financial statements and our compliance with legal and 
regulatory requirements as they relate to financial statements or accounting matters; and 

reviewing and evaluating, at least annually, the performance of the audit committee and its members including 
compliance of the audit committee with its charter. 

The members of our audit committee are Ms. Sentovich, Ms. Lowman, Ms. Messinger and Mr. Matz. Ms. Sentovich 

serves as the chairwoman of the committee. All members of our audit committee meet the requirements for financial literacy 
under the applicable rules and regulations of the SEC and The Nasdaq Capital Market. Our board of directors has determined 
that Ms. Sentovich and Mr. Matz are “audit committee financial experts” as defined by applicable SEC rules and have the
requisite financial sophistication as defined under the applicable Nasdaq rules and regulations. Our board of directors has 
determined that Ms. Sentovich, Ms. Lowman, Ms. Messinger and Mr. Matz are independent under the applicable rules of the
SEC and The Nasdaq Capital Market.  We are currently in compliance with Nasdaq rules and Rule 10A-3 due to the fact that 
all members of our audit committee have been deemed independent by our board of directors. The audit committee operates 
under a written charter that satisfies the applicable standards of the SEC and The Nasdaq Capital Market. 

Compensation Committee

Our compensation committee approves, or recommends to our board of directors, policies relating to compensation and 

benefits of our officers and employees. The compensation committee approves, or recommends to our board of directors,
annual and long-term corporate goals and objectives relevant to the compensation of our chief executive officer and other 
executive officers, evaluates the performance of these officers in light of those goals and objectives and approves, or 
recommends to our board of directors, the compensation of these officers based on such evaluations. The compensation 
committee also approves, or recommends to our board of directors, the issuance of stock options and other awards under our 
equity plan. The compensation committee will review and evaluate, at least annually, the performance of the compensation 
committee and its members, including compliance by the compensation committee with its charter.

60

The members of our compensation committee are Mr. Potashner, Ms. Sentovich, and Ms. Messinger.  Mr. Potashner 
serves as the chairperson of the committee. Our board of directors has determined that Mr. Potashner, Ms. Sentovich, and 
Ms. Messinger are independent under the applicable rules and regulations of The Nasdaq Capital Market and all current 
members qualify as a “non-employee director” as defined in Rule 16b-3 promulgated under the Exchange Act. Our board of 
directors has determined that each of the members of our compensation committee is an “outside director” as that term is 
defined in Section 162(m) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or Section 162(m).  We are currently in
compliance with Nasdaq rules due to the fact that all members of our compensation committee have been deemed 
independent by our board of directors. The compensation committee operates under a written charter, which the
compensation committee will review and evaluate at least annually.

Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee

The nominating and corporate governance committee is responsible for assisting our board of directors in discharging 

the board of directors’ responsibilities regarding the identification of qualified candidates to become board members, the
selection of nominees for election as directors at our annual meetings of stockholders (or special meetings of stockholders at 
which directors are to be elected), and the selection of candidates to fill any vacancies on our board of directors and any 
committees thereof. In addition, the nominating and corporate governance committee is responsible for overseeing our 
corporate governance policies, reporting and making recommendations to our board of directors concerning governance
matters and oversight of the evaluation of our board of directors.  In February 2020, this committee added risk assessment 
and management to their charter.

The members of our nominating and corporate governance committee are Mr. Harrison, Mr. Potashner, and Mr. Matz. 

Mr. Harrison serves as the chairman of the committee. Our board of directors has determined that Mr. Harrison, 
Mr. Potashner, and Mr. Matz are independent under the applicable rules and regulations of The Nasdaq Capital Market 
relating to nominating and corporate governance committee independence.  We are currently in compliance with Nasdaq 
rules due to the fact that all members of our nominating and corporate governance committee have been deemed independent 
by our board of directors. The nominating and corporate governance committee operates under a written charter, which the
nominating and corporate governance committee will review and evaluate at least annually.

Risk Oversight Committee

The risk oversight committee is responsible for assisting our board of directors and overseeing and monitoring the 

Company’s senior management with carrying out its responsibilities such as identifying and assessing the material risks the 
Company faces, establishing a risk management, crisis management, and emergency response plan, overseeing financial
risks, strategic risks, market risks, and other risks the Company faces, if applicable, and approving the Company’s enterprise
wide risk management framework in conjunction with the board of directors. 

The members of our risk oversight committee are Mr. Matz, Ms. Lowman, and Mr. Harrison. Mr. Matz serves as the 

chairman of the committee. Our board of directors has determined that Mr. Matz, Ms. Lowman, and Mr. Harrison are 
independent. The risk oversight committee operates under a written charter, which the risk oversight committee will review 
and evaluate at least annually.

Board Diversity

Our nominating and corporate governance committee is responsible for reviewing with the board of directors, on an

annual basis, the appropriate characteristics, skills and experience required for the board of directors as a whole and its 
individual members. In evaluating the suitability of individual candidates (both new candidates and current members), the 
nominating and corporate governance committee, in recommending candidates for election, and the board of directors, in
approving (and, in the case of vacancies, appointing) such candidates, will take into account many factors, including the 
following:

•

•

•

•

•

personal and professional integrity, ethics and values;

experience in corporate management, such as serving as an officer or former officer of a publicly-held company;

experience as a board member or executive officer of another publicly-held company;

strong finance experience; 

diversity of expertise and experience in substantive matters pertaining to our business relative to other board 
members;

61

•

•

•

diversity of background and perspective, including, but not limited to, with respect to age, gender, race, place of 
residence and specialized experience; 

experience relevant to our business industry and with relevant social policy concerns; and 

relevant academic expertise or other proficiency in an area of our business operations. 

Currently, our board of directors evaluates each individual in the context of the board of directors as a whole, with the 

objective of assembling a group that can best maximize the success of the business and represent stockholder interests 
through the exercise of sound judgment using its diversity of experience in these various areas. 

Family Relationships

There are no family relationships between or among the directors, executive officers or persons nominated or chosen

by us to become directors or executive officers. 

Involvement in Certain Legal Proceedings

To the best of our knowledge, during the past ten years, none of the following occurred with respect to a present or 
former director, executive officer, or employee: (1) any bankruptcy petition filed by or against any business of which such
person was a general partner or executive officer either at the time of the bankruptcy or within two years prior to that time;
(2) any conviction in a criminal proceeding or being subject to a pending criminal proceeding (excluding traffic violations
and other minor offenses); (3) being subject to any order, judgment or decree, not subsequently reversed, suspended or 
vacated, of any court of competent jurisdiction, permanently or temporarily enjoining, barring, suspending or otherwise
limiting his or her involvement in any type of business, securities or banking activities; and (4) being found by a court of 
competent jurisdiction (in a civil action), the SEC or the Commodities Futures Trading Commission to have violated a 
federal or state securities or commodities law, and the judgment has not been reversed, suspended or vacated.

Code of Business Conduct and Ethics

We have adopted a written code of business conduct and ethics that applies to our directors, officers and employees, 

including our principal executive officer, principal financial and accounting officer, controller, or persons performing similar 
functions. Our code of business conduct and ethics is available under the Investors – Corporate Governance section of our 
website at www.onestopsystems.com. In addition, we post on our website all disclosures that are required by law or the
listing standards of The Nasdaq Capital Market concerning any amendments to, or waivers from, any provision of the code. 
The reference to our website address does not constitute incorporation by reference of the information contained at or 
available through our website, and should not consider it to be a part of this Annual Report. 

Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance

Under Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act, directors, executive officers and beneficial owners of 10% or more of our 

common stock, or reporting persons, are required to report to the SEC on a timely basis the initiation of their status as a 
reporting person and any changes with respect to their beneficial ownership of our common stock. Based solely on our 
review of copies of such forms that we have received, or written representations from reporting persons, we believe that 
during the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020, all executive officers, directors and greater than 10% stockholders complied 
with all applicable filing requirements, other than (i) James Reardon, David Raun, Jack Harrison, and Josef Bressner, each of 
who filed one (1) late report, (ii) John W. Morrison Jr. and Kenneth Potashner, each of who filed two (2) late reports, (iii) Jim
Ison, who filed three (3) late reports,  and (iv) Steve Cooper, who filed four (4) late reports.  There were no known failures to
file a required form.

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION. 

This section discusses the material components of the executive compensation program for our executive officers who 
are named in the “Summary Compensation Table” below. In 2020, our “named executive officers” and their positions were 
as follows:

•

•

•

•

David Raun,  President and Chief Executive Officer; 

Jim Ison, Chief Sales and Marketing Officer; and, 

John W. Morrison Jr., Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer and Secretary

Steve Cooper, Former President and Chief Executive Officer – terminated February 15, 2020

62

This discussion may contain forward-looking statements that are based on our current plans, considerations, 

expectations and determinations regarding future compensation programs. Actual compensation programs that we adopt in 
the future may differ materially from the currently planned programs summarized in this discussion.

Summary Compensation Table 

The following table provides information regarding the total compensation for services rendered in all capacities that 

was earned by each individual who served as our principal executive officer at any time in 2020 and 2019, and our two other 
most highly compensated executive officers who were serving as executive officers as of December 31, 2020 and 2019.  
David Raun became a named executive officers effective February 15, 2020.  Prior to February 15, 2020, Steve Cooper 
served as president and chief executive officer.  Other officers were names officers for both 2019 and 2020.

Name and Principal Position
David Raun (3)
President and Chief Executive Officer

Jim Ison
Chief Sales and Marketing Officer

John W. Morrison Jr.
Chief Financial Officer

Year
2020
2019

2020
2019

2020
2019

Salary ($)
$ 282,116
-
$

Bonus ($)
-
$
-
$

$ 264,816
$ 248,852

$ 74,973
$ 30,577

$ 285,574
$ 270,382

$ 113,194
$ 37,838

Steve Cooper (4)
Former President and Chief Executive 
Officer

2020

$

62,367

$ 245,992

2019

$ 337,314

$ 82,201

Option Awards
($) (1)
1,696,019
-

$
$

$
$

$
$

$

$

40,500
24,300

40,500
36,450

-

72,900

$
$

$
$

$
$

$

$

Non-Equity
Incentive Plan
Compensation
($)

All Other
Compensation
($) (2)

-
-

-
-

-
-

-

-

$
$

$
$

$
$

$

$

23,128
-

31,650
34,689

31,957
35,944

300,657

23,692

Total ($)
$ 2,001,263
-
$

$
$

$
$

$

$

411,938
338,418

471,224
380,614

609,015

516,107

(1) Amounts reflect the full grant-date fair value of stock awards granted during the relevant fiscal year computed in

accordance with ASC Topic 718, rather than the amounts paid to or realized by the named individual. We provide 
information regarding the assumptions used to calculate the value of all stock awards and option awards made to our 
officers in Note 9 to the audited consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2020 contained 
elsewhere in this Annual Report.

(2) Represents payment of health insurance premiums and 401(k) contributions.   For Mr. Cooper, it also includes 

severance benefits.

(3) Mr. Raun was appointed interim chief executive officer on February 15, 2020, and was appointed president and chief 

executive officer on June 24, 2020.

(4) Mr. Cooper was terminated on February 15, 2020.

Narrative Disclosure to Compensation Tables

Employment Agreements 

Executive Employment Agreement with David Raun

Mr. Raun is entitled to a base salary of $345,000, as approved by the Board of Directors on June 24, 2020, and 
subsequent annual increases as determined by the compensation committee and an annual bonus (paid out quarterly if targets
are met) in the amount of 50% of his then annual base salary. The bonus is based on Mr. Raun’s performance, as determined 
by the board of directors in its sole discretion, against fundamental corporate and/or individual objectives to be determined by 
the board of directors. Mr. Raun is eligible to participate in our 2017 Equity Incentive Plan subject to the discretion of the 
board of directors if and when the board of directors determines to make a grant to him.

Under the terms of the employment agreement with Mr. Raun, if we terminate his employment for other than good 

cause, or if Mr. Raun resigns for good reason, Mr. Raun is entitled to the following payments and benefits: (1) his fully 
earned but unpaid base salary through the date of termination at the rate then in effect, and any unreimbursed expenses 
and any unreimbursed expenses
incurred in accordance with Company policy
Mr. Raun’s then-current Base Salary (3) the continuation of Mr. Raun’s group health continuation coverage under the 
Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986 (“COBRA”) at OSS’ expense for a period of twelve (12) months 

; (2) severance payments in an aggregate amount up to twelve (12) months of 

63

following the termination date, and (4) unvested Restricted Stock Units (“RSU’s”) shall accelerate so that an additional 
accelerate so that an additional
twelve (12) months of RSU’s shall vest from the termination date
condition of receiving benefits (2)-(4) set forth in this paragraph. 

. Mr. Raun must provide a release and waiver to OSS as a 

Executive Employment Agreement with John Morrison 

Mr. Morrison is entitled to a base salary of $275,000, as approved by the Board of Directors on February 13, 2020, and 

subsequent annual increases as determined by the compensation committee and a target quarterly bonus in the amount of 
35% of his quarterly base salary. The target quarterly bonus is based on Mr. Morrison’s performance, as determined by the 
board of directors in its sole discretion, against fundamental corporate and/or individual objectives to be determined by the 
board of directors. Mr. Morrison is eligible to participate in our 2017 Equity Incentive Plan subject to the discretion of the
board of directors if and when the board of directors determines to make a grant to him.

Under the terms of the employment agreement with Mr. Morrison, if we terminate his employment without cause (as 
defined below) or he resigns for good reason (as defined below) at any time other than within three (3) months immediately
preceding or twelve (12) months immediately following the effective date of a change in control (as defined below), he is
entitled to the following payments and benefits: (1) his fully earned but unpaid base salary through the date of termination at 
the rate then in effect, plus all other amounts under any compensation plan or practice to which he is entitled; (2) severance 
payments in an aggregate amount up to six (6) months of Mr. Morrison’s then-current Base Salary, paid to Mr. Morrison on 
OSS’ regular paydays until the earlier of (i) the date that is six (6) months following his termination or (ii) the date as of 
which he commences employment with another employer, subject to standard payroll deductions and withholdings; (3) a
lump sum payment equal to Mr. Morrison’s then-current target bonus; (4) the continuation of Mr. Morrison’s group health
continuation coverage under COBRA at OSS’ expense for a period of six (6) months following the termination date; 
provided, however, that in the event Mr. Morrison becomes eligible for comparable group insurance coverage in connection 
with new employment, such COBRA premium payments by OSS shall terminate immediately; and (5) the automatic
acceleration of the vesting and exercisability of his equity awards and stock options. Mr. Morrison must provide a release and 
waiver to OSS as a condition of receiving benefits (2)-(5) set forth in this paragraph.

In the event Mr. Morrison’s termination without cause or resignation for good reason occurs within the three 
(3) months immediately preceding or twelve (12) months immediately following a change in control, he is entitled to the 
following payments and benefits: (1) a single lump-sum payment in an amount equal to six (6) months of Mr. Morrison’s 
then-current base salary, subject to standard payroll deductions and withholdings, payable within ten (10) business days of 
the date the release and waiver becomes effective; and (2) provided that Mr. Morrison timely elects such coverage, the 
continuation of Mr. Morrison’s group health continuation coverage under COBRA at OSS’ expense for a period of six 
(6) months following the termination date; provided, however, that in the event Mr. Morrison becomes eligible for 
comparable group insurance coverage in connection with new employment, such COBRA premium payments by OSS shall
terminate immediately; and (3) the vesting of the shares subject to each of Mr. Morrison’s equity awards and stock options
shall be accelerated such that one hundred percent (100%) of said shares shall be deemed fully-vested and, if applicable, 
immediately exercisable effective as of the date of such termination. 

If Mr. Morrison’s employment is terminated as a result of his death or following his permanent disability,

Mr. Morrison or his estate, as applicable, is entitled to the following payments and benefits: (1) his fully earned but unpaid 
base salary through the date of termination at the rate then in effect, plus all other amounts under any compensation plan, 
expense reimbursement or practice to which he is entitled; and (2) a lump sum cash payment in an amount equal to his 
“earned” bonus for the calendar quarter during which his date of termination occurs calculated as of the date of termination
(wherein “earned” means that he has met the applicable bonus metrics as of date of such termination, as determined by the 
board of directors), prorated for such portion of the calendar quarter during which such termination occurs that has elapsed 
through the date of termination. 

Executive Employment Agreement with Jim Ison

Mr. Ison is entitled to a base salary of $255,000, as approved by the Board of Directors on February 13, 2020, and 
subsequent annual increases as determined by the compensation committee and a target quarterly bonus in the amount of 
25% of his quarterly base salary. The target quarterly bonus is based on Mr. Ison’s performance, as determined by the board 
of directors in its sole discretion, against fundamental corporate and/or individual objectives to be determined by the board of 
directors. Mr. Ison is eligible to participate in our 2017 Equity Incentive Plan subject to the discretion of the board of 
directors if and when the board of directors determines to make a grant to him. 

64

Under the terms of the employment agreement with Mr. Ison, if we terminate his employment without cause (as 
defined below) or he resigns for good reason (as defined below) at any time other than within three (3) months immediately
preceding or twelve (12) months immediately following the effective date of a change in control (as defined below), he is
entitled to the following payments and benefits: (1) his fully earned but unpaid base salary through the date of termination at 
the rate then in effect, plus all other amounts under any compensation plan or practice to which he is entitled; (2) severance 
payments in an aggregate amount up to six (6) months of Mr. Ison’s then-current Base Salary, paid to Mr. Ison on OSS’ 
regular paydays until the earlier of (i) the date that is six (6) months following his termination or (ii) the date as of which heh
commences employment with another employer, subject to standard payroll deductions and withholdings; (3) a lump sum 
payment equal to Mr. Ison’s then-current target bonus; (4) the continuation of Mr. Ison’s group health continuation coverage
under COBRA at OSS’ expense for a period of six (6) months following the termination date; provided, however, that in the
event Mr. Ison becomes eligible for comparable group insurance coverage in connection with new employment, such 
COBRA premium payments by OSS shall terminate immediately; and (5) the automatic acceleration of the vesting and 
exercisability of his equity awards and stock options. Mr. Ison must provide a release and waiver to OSS as a condition of 
receiving benefits (2)-(5) set forth in this paragraph.

In the event Mr. Ison’s termination without cause or resignation for good reason occurs within the three (3) months 

immediately preceding or twelve (12) months immediately following a change in control, he is entitled to the following 
payments and benefits: (1) a single lump-sum payment in an amount equal to six (6) months of Mr. Ison’s then-current base 
salary, subject to standard payroll deductions and withholdings, payable within ten (10) business days of the date the release
and waiver becomes effective; and (2) provided that Mr. Ison timely elects such coverage, the continuation of Mr. Ison’s 
group health continuation coverage under COBRA at OSS’ expense for a period of six (6) months following the termination 
date; provided, however, that in the event Mr. Ison becomes eligible for comparable group insurance coverage in connection 
with new employment, such COBRA premium payments by OSS shall terminate immediately; and (3) the vesting of the
shares subject to each of Mr. Ison’s equity awards and stock options shall be accelerated such that one hundred percent 
(100%) of said shares shall be deemed fully-vested and, if applicable, immediately exercisable effective as of the date of such 
termination. 

If Mr. Ison’s employment is terminated as a result of his death or following his permanent disability, Mr. Ison or his 

estate, as applicable, is entitled to the following payments and benefits: (1) his fully earned but unpaid base salary through the
date of termination at the rate then in effect, plus all other amounts under any compensation plan, expense reimbursement or 
practice to which he is entitled; and (2) a lump sum cash payment in an amount equal to his “earned” bonus for the calendar 
quarter during which his date of termination occurs calculated as of the date of termination (wherein “earned” means that he
has met the applicable bonus metrics as of date of such termination, as determined by the board of directors), prorated for 
such portion of the calendar quarter during which such termination occurs that has elapsed through the date of termination. 

Defined Terms Applicable to Executive Employment Agreements

For purposes of executive employment agreements, “change in control” shall mean: 

(i) The direct or indirect sale or transfer, in a single transaction or a series of related transactions, by the stockholders of 
the Company of voting securities, in which the holders of the outstanding voting securities of the Company immediately prior 
to such transaction or series of transactions hold, as a result of holding Company securities prior to such transaction, in the 
aggregate, securities possessing less than fifty percent (50%) of the total combined voting power all outstanding voting 
securities of the Company or of the acquiring entity immediately after such transaction or series of related transactions; 

(ii) A merger or consolidation in which the Company is not the surviving entity, except for a transaction in which the 

holders of the outstanding voting securities of the Company immediately prior to such merger or consolidation hold as a 
result of holding Company securities prior to such transaction, in the aggregate, securities possessing more than fifty percent 
(50%) of the total combined voting power of all outstanding voting securities of the surviving entity (or the parent of the
surviving entity) immediately after such merger or consolidation; 

(iii) A reverse merger in which the Company is the surviving entity but in which the holders of the outstanding voting 

securities of the Company immediately prior to such merger hold as a result of holding Company securities prior to such 
transaction, in the aggregate, securities possessing less than fifty percent (50%) of the total combined voting power of all 
outstanding voting securities of the Company or of the acquiring entity immediately after such merger; 

65

(iv) The sale, transfer or other disposition (in one transaction or a series of related transactions) of all or substantially

all of the assets of the Company, except for a transaction in which the holders of the outstanding voting securities of the 
Company immediately prior to such transaction(s) receive as a distribution with respect to securities of the Company, in the
aggregate, securities possessing more than fifty percent (50%) of the total combined voting power of all outstanding voting 
securities of the acquiring entity immediately after such transaction(s); or 

(v) Any time individuals who, on the date this Plan is adopted by the board of directors, are members of the board of 
directors (the “Incumbent Board”) cease for any reason to constitute at least a majority of the members of the input/output;
provided, however, that if the appointment or election (or nomination for election) of any new board member was approved 
or recommended by a majority vote of the members of the Incumbent Board then still in office, such new member shall, for 
purposes of this Plan, be considered as a member of the Incumbent Board. 

For purposes of the executive employment agreements, “cause” means as determined in the sole discretion of the board 
of directors following written notice of the condition(s) believed to constitute cause, which notice shall briefly describe such 
condition(s), one or more of the following condition(s): (i) Executive’s failure to substantially perform Executive’s job duties 
(other than any such failure resulting from Executive’s incapacity due to physical or mental illness or any such actual or 
anticipated failure after his issuance of written notice of the occurrence of an event alleged by Executive to constitute good 
reason); (ii) Executive’s failure to comply with all material applicable laws in performing Executive’s job duties or in
directing the conduct of OSS’ business; (iii) Executive’s commission of any felony or intentionally fraudulent acts against 
OSS, its affiliates, executives, agents or customers; (iv) Executive’s participation in any activity that is directly competitive 
with or intentionally injurious to OSS or any of its affiliates or which violates the terms of Executive’s proprietary 
information and inventions agreement; (iv) Executive’s material breach of the terms of Executive’s proprietary information 
and inventions agreement; (v) Executive’s commission of any act of fraud, embezzlement or dishonesty against OSS or any 
of its affiliates, or use or intentional appropriation for Executive’s personal use or benefit of any funds or material properties
of OSS or any of its affiliates not authorized by the board of directors to be so used or appropriated; (vi) Executive’s breach
of any material provision of the employment agreement; and (vii) Executive’s gross negligence, insubordination or material
violation of any duty of loyalty to OSS or any other demonstrable material misconduct on the part of Executive; provided,
however, that, termination by OSS under subsections (i) or (vi) of this Section 3.8(c), shall only be deemed for “cause”
pursuant to the foregoing definition if Executive fails to remedy such condition(s) within thirty (30) days following delivery
of the notice of termination for cause. 

For purposes of the executive employment agreements, “good reason” means the occurrence of any of the following 

events without Executive’s consent: (i) a material adverse change in Executive’s duties, authority or responsibilities relative 
to the duties, authority or responsibilities in effect immediately prior to such reduction, or, as it relates to Mr. Cooper, the
removal of Executive as chief executive officer of OSS; provided, however, that a reduction in duties, position or 
responsibilities solely by virtue of OSS being acquired and made part of a larger entity (as, for example, when Executive 
retains a similar position with a subsidiary of the acquiring entity following a change in control, but Executive does not hold 
the same position in the acquiring entity) shall not constitute “good reason;” and, provided, further that Executive’s removal 
from the board of directors shall not constitute “good reason;” (ii) a material diminution in Executive’s base compensation; or 
(iii) a material breach by OSS of its obligations under this Agreement; provided, however, that, such termination by 
Executive shall only be deemed for “good reason” pursuant to the foregoing definition if: (A) Executive gives OSS written
notice of Executive’s intent to terminate for good reason within sixty (60) days following the first occurrence of the
condition(s) that Executive believes constitute(s) good reason, which notice shall describe such condition(s); (B) OSS fails to 
remedy such condition(s) within thirty (30) days following receipt of the written notice (the “Cure Period”); and 
(C) Executive voluntarily terminates Executive’s employment within sixty (60) days following the end of the Cure Period.

Annual Cash Bonus

For 2020 and 2019, Mr. Raun, Mr. Ison and Mr. Morrison were eligible for bonuses. The executives’ bonuses for 2020 

and 2019 were determined at the discretion of our board of directors based on its assessment of our corporate performance.
Based on this assessment, our board of directors determined not to award or pay Mr. Raun a bonus for 2020.  Mr. Ison 
received a bonus of $74,973 and $30,060, representing 28.3% and 12.3% of his paid salary for 2020 and 2019, respectively 
and Mr. Morrison received a bonus of $113,194 and $37,326, representing 39.6% and 14.0% of his paid salary for 2020 and 
2019, respectively. Mr. Cooper received bonuses of $245,992 and $82,201 representing 394.4% and 24.3% of his paid salary 
for 2020 and 2019, respectively.

66

Equity Compensation 

We primarily offer stock options to our named executive officers as the long-term incentive component of our 

compensation program. Our stock options allow employees to purchase shares of our common stock at a price per share equal 
to the fair market value of our common stock on the date of grant and may or may not be intended to qualify as “incentive 
stock options” for U.S. federal income tax purposes. In the past, our board of directors has determined the fair market value
of our common stock based upon inputs including valuation reports prepared by third-party valuation firms from time to
time. Generally, the stock options we grant vest over three years, subject to the employee’s continued employment with us on 
the vesting date.

On June 24, 2020, the Company entered into an employment agreement with Mr. Raun to serve as the Company’s

president and chief executive officer. Pursuant to the terms of the employment agreement, Mr. Raun is entitled to receive 
412,125 restricted stock units (“RSUs”) that shall vest over three years, with one third of the RSUs vesting following the one-
year anniversary of the date of grant, and the remaining RSUs vesting in four equal installments, commencing six months 
after the one-year anniversary of the date of grant and every six months thereafter until fully vested; and 412,125 Incentive
Stock Options (“ISOs”) pursuant to the Company’s 2017 Equity Incentive Plan, whereby the exercise price for the ISOs shall 
be no less than the fair market value of the Company’s common stock at the date of grant, ($2.14). 

The ISOs shall vest at the end of each the second and fourth quarters, the price of the Company’s common stock as of 
the end of quarter two or quarter four, as applicable, shall be determined using the ten-day trailing volume weighted average
price (“VWAP”) after reporting of quarter two and quarter four earnings, as applicable.  The date of each such determination 
shall be referred to as a “Determination Date.”  If on any Determination Date the Company’s stock price has increased from 
the prior Determination Date, then a portion of the ISOs shall become vested.  The number of ISOs that shall become vested 
on a Determinate Date is determined as follows:  ((Price at Determination Date – Price at prior Determination Date) x 100) *
1,177.52 = Vested ISOs.  If on any Determination Date the Company’s stock price is above $5.50 per share, all ISOs shall
immediately become vested.

On February 13, 2019, Mr. Ison received a restricted stock unit (RSU’s) grant of 10,000 shares of our common stock.   

The RSU’s vest over three years, with equal quarterly installments over a period of three years, subject to his continued 
employment with us on each vesting date.

On February 10, 2020, Mr. Ison received a restricted stock unit (RSU’s) grant of 15,000 shares of our common stock.   

The RSU’s vest over three years, with equal semi-annual installments over a period of three years, subject to his continued 
employment with us on each vesting date.

On February 13, 2019, Mr. Morrison received a restricted stock unit (RSU’s) grant of 15,000 shares of our common 

stock.   The RSU’s vest over three years, with equal quarterly installments over a period of three years, subject to his 
continued employment with us on each vesting date.

On February 10, 2020, Mr. Morrison received a restricted stock unit (RSU’s) grant of 15,000 shares of our common 

stock.   The RSU’s vest over three years, with equal semi-annual installments over a period of three years, subject to his
continued employment with us on each vesting date.

Stock awards granted to our named executive officers may be subject to accelerated vesting in certain circumstances. 

For additional discussion, please see “Employment Agreements” above and “Change in Control Benefits” below.

Prior to our initial public offering, we adopted a 2017 Equity Incentive Plan, in order to facilitate the grant of cash and 

equity incentives to directors, employees (including our named executive officers) and consultants of our company and 
certain of its affiliates to enable our company and certain of its affiliates to obtain and retain services of these individuals, 
which is essential to our long-term success. For additional information about the 2017 Equity Incentive Plan, please see the 
section titled “Incentive Award Plans” below. 

Other Elements of Compensation 

Retirement Plans

We have a 401(k) retirement plan. Under the terms of the plan, eligible employees may defer up to 20% of their pre-tax

earnings, subject to the Internal Revenue Service annual contribution limit. Additionally, the Plan allows for discretionary 
matching contributions by us. In 2020 and 2019, the matching contribution is 100% of the employee’s contribution up to a 

67

maximum of 5% of the employee’s annual compensation. However, matching contributions to the 401(k) plan were 
suspended in May 2020 as a component of the Company’s cost containment efforts.

Employee Benefits and Perquisites

Our named executive officers are eligible to participate in our health and welfare plans which include health, vision, 

dental, disability, flex-spending, life insurance and 401(k) plan. 

Change in Control Benefits

Our named executive officers may become entitled to certain benefits or enhanced benefits in connection with a change 

in control of our company. Each of our named executive officers’ employment agreements entitles them to accelerated 
vesting of all outstanding equity awards, as well as certain other benefits, upon a change in control of our company. For 
additional discussion, please see “Employment Agreements” above.

Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year End 

The following table summarizes the number of shares of common stock underlying outstanding equity incentive plan 

awards for each named executive officer as of December 31, 2020. 

Option Awards

Stock Awards

Number of
securities
underlying
unexercised
options (#)
exercisable

Number of
securities
underlying
unexercised
options (#)
unexercisable

Equity
Incentive
plan
awards:
Number of
securities
underlying
unexercised
unearned
options
(#)
10,000 $ 1.95 4/17/2027
412,125 $ 2.14 6/23/2030

Option
Exercise
Price
($)

Option
expiration
date

25,355
50,000
25,000
20,000

$ 0.76 9/30/2022
$ 0.46 7/15/2024
4/1/2026
$ 1.08
$ 1.95 4/17/2027

Equity
Incentive
plan
awards:
Market or
payout
value of
unearned
share,
units or
other right
that have
not
vested ($)

Equity
Incentive
plan
awards:
Number of
unearned
shares,
units or
other rights
that have
not
vested (#)

Market
value
of shares
of units
of stock
that have
not
vested ($)

Number
of shares
or units of
stock that
have not
vested (#)

10,000 $
8,634 $

40,000
34,536
412,125 $1,648,500

1,670 $
4,999 $
12,500 $

6,680
19,996
50,000

7,500 $
12,500 $

30,000
50,000

Name
David Raun

Jim Ison

Grant
Date
4/18/2017
6/24/2020
3/4/2020
6/24/2020
6/24/2020

10/1/2012
7/16/2014
4/2/2016
4/18/2017
4/11/2018
2/13/2019
2/10/2020

John W. Morrison
Jr.

2/13/2019
2/10/2020

Steve Cooper (1)

-

-

- $

-

- $

-

(1)  Mr. Cooper was terminated on February 15, 2020.  Mr. Cooper exercised all vested options prior to his departure on a net 
exercise basis.

68

Directors Compensation 

Mr. Raun who is our president and chief executive officer, received compensation for his service as a director until 
February 15, 2020. The compensation received by Mr. Raun as an officer for the year ended December 31, 2020 is presented 
in “Executive Compensation – Summary Compensation Table.”

The following table sets forth information for the year ended December 31, 2020, regarding the compensation awarded 

to, earned by or paid to our non-employee directors who served on our board of directors during 2020.  

Stock
awards ($)

Non-equity
incentive
plan
compensation ($)

Nonqualified
deferred
compensation
earnings ($)

All other
compensation
($)

Total ($)

Name
Ken Potashner
Jack Harrison
Kimberly Sentovich
Sita Lowman (1)
Gioia Messinger (1)
Greg Matz (1)
David Raun (2)
John Reardon (3)
Steve Cooper (3)

Fees
earned
or paid in
cash ($)

$ 40,000 $
$ 35,000 $
$ 35,000 $
$ 15,000 $
$ 15,000 $
$ 17,500 $
4,519 $
$
$ 12,775 $
8,736 $
$

RSU
awards ($)
- $ 20,800 $
- $ 20,800 $
- $ 20,800 $
- $ 15,287 $
- $ 15,287 $
- $ 15,287 $
- $ 20,800 $
- $ 20,800 $
- $
- $

- $
- $
- $
- $
- $
- $
- $
- $
- $

- $
- $
- $
- $
- $
- $
- $
- $
- $

- $ 60,800
- $ 55,800
- $ 55,800
- $ 30,287
- $ 30,287
- $ 32,787
- $ 25,319
- $ 33,575
8,736
- $

(1) New member effective July 1, 2020
(2)
(3) Messrs. Reardon and Cooper were not proposed on the slate for the board of director’s effective from June 3, 2020.

For the period January 1 – February 15, 2020

Stock Option Plans 

2017 Equity Incentive Plan

Our board of directors adopted our 2017 Equity Incentive Plan on October 10, 2017 (the “2017 Plan”). Our 2017 Plan
allows for the grant of a variety of equity vehicles to provide flexibility in implementing equity awards, including incentive
stock options, non-qualified stock options, restricted stock grants, unrestricted stock grants and restricted stock units.

Authorized Shares.  A total of 1,500,000 shares of common stock were authorized under the 2017 Plan. 

Plan Administration.  As permitted by the terms of the 2017 Plan, the board of directors has delegated administration 

of the 2017 Plan to the compensation committee. As used herein with respect to the 2017 Plan, the “Board of Directors” 
refers to any committee the Board of Directors appoints as well as to the Board of Directors itself. Subject to the provisions 
of the 2017 Plan, the Board of Directors has the power to construe and interpret the 2017 Plan and awards granted under it 
and to determine the persons to whom and the dates on which awards will be granted, the number of shares of common stock 
to be subject to each award, the time or times during the term of each award within which all or a portion of such award may 
be exercised, the exercise price, the type of consideration and other terms of the award. Subject to the limitations set forth 
below, the Board of Directors will also determine the exercise price of options granted under the 2017 Plan and, with the 
consent of any adversely affected option holder, may reduce the exercise price of any outstanding option, cancel an 
outstanding option in exchange for a new option covering the same or a different number of shares of common stock or 
another equity award or cash or other consideration, or any other action that is treated as a repricing under generally accepted 
accounting principles. All decisions, determinations and interpretations by the Board of Directors regarding the 2017 Plan 
shall be final and binding on all participants or other persons claiming rights under the 2017 Plan or any award. 

Options.  Options granted under the 2017 Plan may become exercisable in cumulative increments (“vest”) as 
determined by the Board of Directors. Such increments may be based on continued service to the Company over a certain 
period of time, the occurrence of certain performance milestones, or other criteria. Options granted under the 2017 Plan may
be subject to different vesting terms. The Board of Directors has the power to accelerate the time during which an option may 
vest or be exercised. In addition, options granted under the 2017 Plan may permit exercise prior to vesting, but in such event 
the participant may be required to enter into an early exercise stock purchase agreement that allows the Company to 
repurchase unvested shares, generally at their exercise price, should the participant’s service terminate before vesting. To the

69

extent provided by the terms of an option, a participant may satisfy any federal, state or local tax withholding obligation 
relating to the exercise of such option by a cash payment upon exercise, by authorizing the Company to withhold a portion of 
the stock otherwise issuable to the participant, or by such other method as may be set forth in the option agreement. The 
maximum term of options under the 2017 Plan is 10 years, except that in certain cases the maximum term of certain incentive 
stock options is five years. Options under the 2017 Plan generally terminate three months after termination of the 
participant’s service. Incentive stock options are not transferable except by will or by the laws of descent and distribution, 
provided that a participant may designate a beneficiary who may exercise an option following the participant’s death. Non-
statutory stock options are transferable to the extent provided in the option agreement. 

Stock Bonuses and Restricted Stock Awards.  Subject to certain limitations, the consideration, if any, for restricted 

stock unit awards must be at least the par value of our common stock. The consideration for a stock unit award may be 
payable in any form acceptable to the Board of Directors and permitted under applicable law. The Board of Directors may
impose any restrictions or conditions upon the vesting of restricted stock unit awards, or that delay the delivery of the 
consideration after the vesting of stock unit awards, that it deems appropriate. Restricted stock unit awards are settled in
shares of the Company’s common stock. Dividend equivalents may be credited in respect of shares covered by a restricted 
stock unit award, as determined by the Board of Directors. At the discretion of the Board of Directors, such dividend 
equivalents may be converted into additional shares covered by the restricted stock unit award. If a restricted stock unit award 
recipient’s service relationship with the Company terminates, any unvested portion of the restricted stock unit award is 
forfeited upon the recipient’s termination of service. 

Certain Adjustments.  Transactions not involving receipt of consideration by the Company, such as a merger,
consolidation, reorganization, recapitalization, reincorporation, reclassification, stock dividend, dividend in property other 
than cash, stock split, liquidating dividend, combination of shares, exchange of shares, or a change in corporate structure may 
change the type(s), class(es) and number of shares of common stock subject to the 2017 Plan and outstanding awards. In that 
event, the 2017 Plan will be appropriately adjusted as to the type(s), class(es) and the maximum number of shares of common 
stock subject to the 2017 Plan and the Section 162(m) Limitation, and outstanding awards will be adjusted as to the type(s),
class(es), number of shares and price per share of common stock subject to such awards.

2015 Stock Option Plan 

Our board of directors adopted, and our stockholders approved, our 2015 Stock Option Plan in December 2015 (the

“2015 Plan”). Our 2015 Plan allows for the grant of incentive stock options, within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code, 
to our employees and our parent and subsidiary corporations’ employees, and for the grant of non-statutory stock options to 
our employees, directors and consultants and our parent and subsidiary corporations’ employees, directors and consultants. 

Authorized Shares.  A total of 1,500,000 shares of common stock were authorized for grant under the 2015 Plan. Our 

2015 Plan was terminated by the board of directors on October 10, 2017, and accordingly, no shares are available for 
issuance under the 2015 Plan. Our 2015 Plan will continue to govern outstanding awards granted thereunder. 

Plan Administration.  Our board of directors or a committee of our board (the administrator) administers our 2015 Plan.
Subject to the provisions of the 2015 Plan, the administrator has the full authority and discretion to take any actions it deems 
necessary or advisable for the administration of the 2015 Plan. The administrator has the power to construe and interpret the 
terms of our 2015 Plan and awards granted under it, to prescribe, amend and rescind rules relating to our 2015 Plan, including 
rules and regulations relating to sub-plans, and to determine the terms and conditions of the awards, including the exercise 
price, the number of shares of our common stock subject to each such award, any vesting acceleration or waiver of forfeiture
restrictions, and any restrictions or limitations regarding awards or the shares relating thereto. All decisions, interpretations 
and other actions of the administrator are final and binding on all participants in the 2015 Plan. 

Options.   Stock options may be granted under our 2015 Plan. The exercise price per share of all options must equal at 

least 100% of the fair market value per share of our common stock on the date of grant, as determined by the administrator.
The term of a stock option may not exceed 10 years. With respect to any participant who owns 10% of the voting power of 
all classes of our outstanding stock as of the grant date, the term of an incentive stock option granted to such participant must 
not exceed five years and the exercise price per share of such incentive stock option must equal at least 110% of the fair 
market value per share of our common stock on the date of grant, as determined by the administrator. 

After termination of an employee, director or consultant, he or she may exercise his or her option for the period of time

as specified in the applicable option agreement. If termination is due to death or disability, the option generally will remain 

70

exercisable for at least twelve months. In all other cases, the option will generally remain exercisable for at least 90 days. 
However, an option generally may not be exercised later than the expiration of its term. 

Transferability of Options.  Unless our administrator provides otherwise, our 2015 Plan generally does not allow for 

the transfer or assignment of options, except by will or by the laws of descent and distribution. 

Certain Adjustments.  In the event of certain changes in our capitalization, in order to prevent diminution or 
enlargement of the benefits or potential benefits intended to be made available under the 2015 Plan, the administrator will 
adjust the number and class of shares that may be delivered under our 2015 Plan and/or the number, class and price of shares 
covered by each outstanding award. 

2011 Stock Option Plan 

Our board of directors adopted, and our stockholders approved, our 2011 Stock Option Plan in December 2011 (the

“2011 Plan”). Our 2011 Plan allows for the grant of incentive stock options, within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code, 
to our employees and our parent and subsidiary corporations’ employees, and for the grant of non-statutory stock options to 
our employees, directors and consultants and our parent and subsidiary corporations’ employees, directors and consultants. 

Authorized Shares.  A total of 1,500,000 shares of common stock were authorized for grant under the 2011 Plan. Our 

2011 Plan was terminated by the board of directors on October 10, 2017, and accordingly, no shares are available for 
issuance under the 2011 Plan. Our 2011 Plan will continue to govern outstanding awards granted thereunder. 

Plan Administration.  Our board of directors administers our 2011 Plan. Subject to the provisions of the 2011 Plan, the 

board of directors has the full authority and discretion to take any actions it deems necessary or advisable for the 
administration of the 2011 Plan. The board of directors has the power to construe and interpret the terms of our 2011 Plan
and awards granted under it, to prescribe, amend and rescind rules relating to our 2011 Plan, including rules and regulations 
relating to sub-plans, and to determine the terms and conditions of the awards, including the exercise price, the number of 
shares of our common stock subject to each such award, any vesting acceleration or waiver of forfeiture restrictions, and any
restrictions or limitations regarding awards or the shares relating thereto. All decisions, interpretations and other actions of 
the board of directors are final and binding on all participants in the 2011 Plan. 

Options.  Stock options may be granted under our 2011 Plan. The exercise price per share of all options must equal at 

least 100% of the fair market value per share of our common stock on the date of grant, as determined by the board of 
directors. The term of a stock option may not exceed 10 years. With respect to any participant who owns 10% of the voting 
power of all classes of our outstanding stock as of the grant date, the term of an incentive stock option granted to such 
participant must not exceed five years and the exercise price per share of such incentive stock option must equal at least 
110% of the fair market value per share of our common stock on the date of grant, as determined by the board of directors.

After termination of an employee, director or consultant, he or she may exercise his or her option for the period of time

as specified in the applicable option agreement. If termination is due to death or disability, the option generally will remain 
exercisable for at least twelve months. In all other cases, the option will generally remain exercisable for at least 90 days. 
However, an option generally may not be exercised later than the expiration of its term. 

Transferability of Options.   Unless our board of directors provides otherwise, our 2011 Plan generally does not allow 

for the transfer or assignment of options, except by will or by the laws of descent and distribution. Notwithstanding the 
foregoing, to the extent permitted by the board of directors, in its discretion, a non-statutory option shall be assignable or 
transferable subject to the applicable limitations, if any, described in Rule 701 under the Securities Act. 

Certain Adjustments.   In the event of certain changes in our capitalization, in order to prevent diminution or 
enlargement of the benefits or potential benefits intended to be made available under the 2011 Plan, the board of directors
will adjust the number and class of shares that may be delivered under our 2011 Plan and/or the number, class and price of 
shares covered by each outstanding award.

2000 Stock Option Plan 

Our board of directors adopted, and our stockholders approved, our 2000 Stock Option Plan (the “2000 Plan”). Our 

2000 Plan allows for the grant of incentive stock options, within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code, to our employees 
and our parent and subsidiary corporations’ employees, and for the grant of non-statutory stock options to our employees, 
directors and consultants and our parent and subsidiary corporations’ employees, directors and consultants. 

71

Authorized Shares.  A total of 1,500,000 shares of common stock were authorized for grant under the 2000 Plan. In 

November 2008, the 2000 Plan was increased to allow for an aggregate of 3,000,000 shares authorized under the plan. Our 
2000 Plan expired on its terms in 2010, and accordingly, no shares are available for issuance under the 2000 Plan. Our 2000 
Plan will continue to govern outstanding awards granted thereunder. 

Plan Administration.  Our board of directors administers our 2000 Plan. Subject to the provisions of the 2000 Plan, the 

board of directors has the full authority and discretion to take any actions it deems necessary or advisable for the 
administration of the 2000 Plan. The board of directors has the power to construe and interpret the terms of our 2000 Plan
and awards granted under it, to prescribe, amend and rescind rules relating to our 2000 Plan, including rules and regulations 
relating to sub-plans, and to determine the terms and conditions of the awards, including the exercise price, the number of 
shares of our common stock subject to each such award, any vesting acceleration or waiver of forfeiture restrictions, and any
restrictions or limitations regarding awards or the shares relating thereto. All decisions, interpretations and other actions of 
the board of directors are final and binding on all participants in the 2000 Plan. 

Options.   Under the 2000 Plan, the exercise price per share of all options must equal at least 100% of the fair market 

value per share of our common stock on the date of grant, as determined by the board of directors. The term of a stock option
may not exceed 10 years. With respect to any participant who owns 10% of the voting power of all classes of our outstanding 
stock as of the grant date, the term of an incentive stock option granted to such participant must not exceed five years and the
exercise price per share of such incentive stock option must equal at least 110% of the fair market value per share of our 
common stock on the date of grant, as determined by the board of directors. 

After termination of an employee, director or consultant, he or she may exercise his or her option for the period of time

as specified in the applicable option agreement. If termination is due to death or disability, the option generally will remain 
exercisable for at least twelve months. In all other cases, the option will generally remain exercisable for at least 90 days. 
However, an option generally may not be exercised later than the expiration of its term. 

Transferability of Options.  Unless our board of directors provides otherwise, our 2000 Plan generally does not allow 

for the transfer or assignment of options, except by will or by the laws of descent and distribution. Notwithstanding the 
foregoing, to the extent permitted by the board of directors, in its discretion, a non-statutory option shall be assignable or 
transferable subject to the applicable limitations, if any, described in Rule 701 under the Securities Act. 

Certain Adjustments.  In the event of certain changes in our capitalization, in order to prevent diminution or 
enlargement of the benefits or potential benefits intended to be made available under the 2000 Plan, the board of directors
will adjust the number and class of shares that may be delivered under our 2000 Plan and/or the number, class and price of 
shares covered by each outstanding award.

S-8 Registration Statement:

On October 3, 2018, the Company filed a Form S-8 Registration Statement relating to 3,432,525 shares of the 

Company’s common stock, par value $0.0001 per share issuable to the employees, officers, directors, consultants and 
advisors of the Company under the Company’s 2017 Plan, 2015 Plan, 2011 Plan, and 2000 Plan.

ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND
RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS. 

The following table sets forth information regarding beneficial ownership of our common stock, as of February 28,

2021, by:

•

•

•

•

each person, or group of affiliated persons, known by us to be the beneficial owner of more than 5% of our 
common stock; 

each of our named executive officers; 

each of our directors; and 

all of our executive officers and directors as a group.

We have determined beneficial ownership in accordance with SEC rules. The information does not necessarily indicate 

beneficial ownership for any other purpose. Under these rules, the number of shares of common stock deemed outstanding 
includes shares issuable upon exercise of stock options or warrants held by the respective person or group that may be
exercised or converted within 60 days after February 28, 2021. For purposes of calculating each person’s or group’s

72

percentage ownership, stock options and warrants exercisable within 60 days after February 28, 2021 are included for that 
person or group but not for any other person or group.

Applicable percentage ownership is based on 16,912,312 shares of common stock outstanding at February 28, 2021.

Unless otherwise indicated and subject to applicable community property laws, to our knowledge, each stockholder 

named in the following table possesses sole voting and investment power over the shares listed. Unless otherwise noted 
below, the address of each person listed on the table is c/o One Stop Systems, Inc., 2235 Enterprise Street, #110, Escondido,
CA 92029. 

Name and Address of Beneficial Owner
5% or greater stockholders:
Steve Cooper (11)
James Reardon (12)
Bard & Associate (13)

NNamed Executive Officer and Directors:

David Raun (1)
Ken Potashner (2)
Jack Harrison (3)
Kimberly Sentovich (4)
Sita Lowman (5)
Gioia Messinger (6)
Greg Matz (7)
Jim Ison (8)
John Morrison (9)
All executive officers and directors as a group (9 persons) (10)

Number of Shares of
Common Stock
Beneficially
Owned

Percent of
Common Stock
Beneficially
Owned

3,042,675
1,139,312
974,255

105,497
362,057
60,218
17,500
6,164
6,924
8,664
152,592
69,611
789,227

18.0%
6.7%
5.8%

*
2.1%
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
4.57%

Less than 1%.

*
(1) Consists of (i) 81,544 shares of common stock held by Mr. Raun, (ii) 10,000 shares of common stock Mr. Raun has the

right to acquire or receive from us within 60 days of February 28, 2021, and (iii) 13,953 shares of common stock that 
Mr. Raun has the right to exercise within 60 days of February 28, 2021 pursuant to common stock warrants. Mr. Raun
is our president and chief executive officer.  

(2) Consists of (i) 169,200 shares of common stock held by Mr. Potashner, (ii) 47,857 shares of common stock that Kenco, 
Inc. has the right to exercise within 60 days of February 28, 2021 (pursuant to common stock warrants, and (iii) 
145,000 shares of common stock that Mr. Potashner has the right to acquire or receive from us within 60 days of 
February 28, 2021 pursuant to the exercise of stock options. Mr. Potashner has sole voting and investment control over 
Kenco, Inc. Mr. Potashner is the chairman of the board of directors. 

(3) Consists of (i) 30,451 shares of common stock held by Mr. Harrison, and (ii) 19,767 shares of common stock that Mr. 

Harrison has the right to exercise within 60 days of February 28, 2021 pursuant to common stock warrants, and (iii) 
10,000 shares of common stock that Mr. Harrison has the right to acquire from us within 60 days of February 28, 2021 
pursuant to the exercise of stock options.  Mr. Harrison is a member of the board of directors. 

(4) Consists of 17,500 shares of common stock held by Ms. Sentovich. Ms. Sentovich is a member of the board of 

directors.

(5) Consists of 6,164 shares of common stock held by Ms. Lowman.  Ms. Lowman is a member of the board of directors. 
(6) Consists of 6,924 shares of common stock held by Ms. Messinger. Ms. Messinger is a member of the board of directors.
(7) Consists of 8,664 shares of common stock held by Mr. Matz.  Mr. Matz is a member of the board of directors.
(8) Consists of (i) 31,400 shares of common stock held by Mr. Ison, and (ii) 120,355 shares of common stock and (iii) 837 
RSU’s that Mr. Ison has the right to acquire or receive from us within 60 days of February 28, 2021 pursuant to the 
exercise of stock options. Mr. Ison is the chief sales and marketing officer of the company. 

(9) Consists of (i) 69,611 shares of common stock held by Mr. Morrison.  Mr. Morrison is the chief financial officer of the 

(10)

company.
Includes (i) 421,458 shares beneficially owned by our current named executive officers and directors, (ii) 366,932
shares subject to options, warrants or convertible securities, and (iii) 837 RSU’s that are either exercisable or such 
person has a right to receive within 60 days of February 28, 2021, as set forth in the previous footnotes.

73

(11) Consists of 3,042,675shares of common stock held by The Cooper Revocable Trust dated April 25, 2001.  Mr. Cooper 
shares joint voting and investment control of The Cooper Revocable Trust dated April 25, 2001 with his wife Lori 
Cooper. Mr. Cooper served as our chief executive officer and president until February 15, 2020.  

(12) Consists of (i) 1,119,312 shares of common stock held by Mr. Reardon, and (ii) 20,000 shares of common stock that 

Mr. Reardon has the right to acquire from us within 60 days of February 28, 2021 pursuant to the exercise of stock 
options. Mr. Reardon is a VP of sales of the Company.
(13) Schedule 13G filed with the SEC on February 12, 2021.

Equity Compensation Plan Information:

The following table provides information as of December 31, 2020, regarding our equity compensation plans:

Plan Category

2017 Stock Option Plan
2015 Stock Option Plan
2011 Stock Option Plan
Warrants

Number of securities to
be issued upon exercise
of outstanding options,
warrants and rights

Weighted-average
exercise price of
outstanding options,
warrants and rights

1,667,630
424,610
309,895
505,946

$
$
$
$

1.52
1.74
0.63
5.00

Number of securities
remaining available
for future issuance
under equity compensation
plans (excluding securities
reflected in column (a))
26,235
-
-
-

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE. 

We describe below the transactions and series of similar transactions, since January 1, 2019, to which we were a party

or will be a party, in which: 

•

•

the amounts involved exceeded or will exceed $120,000; and 

any of our directors, executive officers, holders of more than 5% of our capital stock or any member of their 
immediate family had or will have a direct or indirect material interest, other than equity and other compensation, 
termination, change in control and other arrangements with directors and executive officers, which are described 
where required under the section above titled “Executive Compensation.” 

Convertible Note and Warrant Financing 

In April 2019, certain members of the Company’s Board of Directors executed definitive agreements to commit funds 
of up to $4,000,000 as a credit facility. The Company initially borrowed $1,150,000 from members of the Board of Directors
for a two-year period at an interest rate of 9.5% which requires the Company to make monthly principal and interest 
payments of $52,900 per month. In connection with these loans, the Company issued to these note holders warrants to
purchase shares of the Company’s common stock equal to 10% of the original principal as a price per share equal to $2.15 
per share.  Accordingly, the Company issued to these note holders warrants to purchase 53,490 shares of the Company’s
common stock.  The relative fair value of the warrants issued was $46,121.

Management Services Agreement 

Effective August 1, 2016, we entered into a management services agreement with a company owned by the former 

chief executive officer of Magma. The agreement calls for payments of $180,000 per year for the first two years paid in
monthly installments. In the third year, the amount is reduced to $37,500 for the year paid in monthly installments. 
Additionally, we granted 30,000 non-statutory stock options in conjunction with execution of this agreement with an exercise 
price of $1.78 per share. Payments for the year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 were $0 and $21,875, respectively.  Such
management services agreement has been fully completed.

Investors’ Rights Agreement 

We entered into a second amended and restated investors’ rights agreement in January 2007 with the holders of our 

preferred stock, including entities with which certain of our directors are affiliated. This agreement provides for certain rights
relating to the registration of their shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of their preferred stock, a right of first 
refusal for certain holders of preferred stock to purchase future securities sold by us and certain additional covenants made by

74

us. Except for the registration rights (including the related provisions pursuant to which we have agreed to indemnify the 
parties to the investors’ rights agreement), all rights under this agreement terminated upon closing of our initial public 
offering. The registration rights will continue and will terminate two years following the closing of our initial public offering,
or for any particular holder with registration rights, at such time when such holder may sell all of such shares pursuant to 
Rule 144(b)(1) under the Securities Act. Our common holders also have certain rights to “piggyback” onto the registration 
rights provided to our former holders of preferred stock. See “Description of Capital Stock—Registration Rights” for 
additional information. 

Executive Compensation and Employment Arrangements 

Please see “Item 11 Executive Compensation” for information on compensation arrangements with our executive 
officers and agreements with our executive officers containing compensation and termination provisions, among others. 

Director and Officer Indemnification and Insurance 

We have entered into indemnification agreements with each of our directors and executive officers, and we maintain

directors’ and officers’ liability insurance. These agreements, among other things, require us to indemnify each director and 
executive officer to the fullest extent permitted by Delaware law, including indemnification of expenses such as attorneys’ 
fees, judgments, fines and settlement amounts incurred by the director or executive officer in any action or proceeding, 
including any action or proceeding by or in right of us, arising out of the person’s services as a director or executive officer.

Our certificate of incorporation and our amended and restated bylaws provide that we will indemnify each of our 
directors and officers to the fullest extent permitted by the Delaware General Corporation Law. Further, we have entered into
indemnification agreements with each of our directors and officers, and we have purchased a policy of directors’ and officers’
liability insurance that insures our directors and officers against the cost of defense, settlement or payment of a judgment 
under certain circumstances. For further information, see “Executive Compensation—Limitations of Liability and 
Indemnification Matters.” 

Board Committees and Independence

Our board of directors has established four standing committees – audit, compensation, nominating and corporate 
governance, and risk oversight – each of which operates under a charter that has been approved by our board of directors.

Policies and Procedures Regarding Related Party Transactions 

Our board of directors has adopted a written related person transaction policy setting forth the policies and procedures 
for the review and approval or ratification of related-person transactions. This policy covers, with certain exceptions set forthrr
in Item 404 of Regulation S-K under the Securities Act, any transaction, arrangement or relationship, or any series of similar 
transactions, arrangements or relationships in which we were or are to be a participant, where the amount involved exceeds 
$120,000 and a related person had or will have a direct or indirect material interest, including, without limitation, purchases 
of goods or services by or from the related person or entities in which the related person has a material interest, indebtedness, 
guarantees of indebtedness and employment by us of a related person. In reviewing and approving any such transactions, our 
audit committee is tasked to consider all relevant facts and circumstances, including, but not limited to, whether the
transaction is on terms comparable to those that could be obtained in an arm’s length transaction and the extent of the related 
person’s interest in the transaction. All of the transactions described in this section occurred prior to the adoption of this 
policy.

ITEM 14. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES. 

The Audit Committee of the Board has selected Haskell & White LLP (“H&W”) as our independent registered public 

accounting firm for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020.  H&W has audited our consolidated financial statements for the 
years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019. 

75

Principal Accountant Fees and Services

The aggregate fees for professional services rendered to us by Haskell &White LLP, (H&W), our independent 

registered public accounting firm which performed our audits for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, and for other 
services were as follows: 

Audit fees (1)
Audit-Related fees (2)
Tax fees
Other fees

Total fees

2020

2019

$

$

207,500
-
-
-
207,500

$

$

201,400
24,075
-
-
225,475

(1)

Includes fees for (i) audits of our consolidated financial statements for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2020 and 
2019, and (ii) reviews of our interim period financial statements for fiscal year 2020 and 2019. 

(2)

Included fees related to the initial and subsequent review of our registration statement on Form S-3 in 2019.

Pre-Approval Policies and Procedures

The Audit Committee pre-approves all auditing services and the terms of non-audit services provided by our 
independent registered public accounting firm, but only to the extent that the non-audit services are not prohibited under 
applicable law and the committee determines that the non-audit services do not impair the independence of the independent 
registered public accounting firm. 

In situations where it is impractical to wait until the next regularly scheduled quarterly meeting, the chairman of the 

committee has been delegated authority to approve audit and non-audit services to be provided by our independent registered 
public accounting firm. Fees payable to our independent registered public accounting firm for any specific, individual service 
approved by the chairman pursuant to the above-described delegation of authority may not exceed $25,000, and the chairman 
is required to report any such approvals to the full committee at its next scheduled meeting. In addition, the Audit Committee 
has pre-approved a list of acceptable services and fees payable to H&W in an aggregate amount of up to $12,500 per quarter 
for such services, including without limitation audit and allowable non-audit and tax consulting.  This pre-approval is for 
small projects needing quick reaction and judged by the Audit Committee not to raise any independence issues with H&W.
Such projects and fees are required to be presented in detail at the next Audit Committee meeting.  Fees that were incurred in 
2020 and 2019 were pre-approved by the Audit Committee.

The Audit Committee has considered and determined that the provision of the non-audit services described is 

compatible with maintaining the independence of our registered public accounting firm. 

76

ITEM 15.  EXHIBIT AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES.

1. 

Financial Statements. 

PART IV 

The financial statements of One Stop Systems, Inc., together with the report thereon of Haskell & White LLP, an

independent registered public accounting firm, are included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. 

2. 

Financial Statement Schedules. 

All schedules are omitted because they are not applicable or the required information is shown in the financial 

statements or notes thereto.

3. 

Exhibits

A list of exhibits is set forth on the Exhibit Index immediately preceding the signature page of this Annual Report on 

Form 10-K and is incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 16.  FORM 10-K SUMMARY.

Not applicable.

77

[THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK]

INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

Consolidated Balance Sheets as of December 31, 2020 and 2019

Consolidated Statements of Operations for the Years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019

Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) for the Years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019

Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity for the Years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

F-2

F-3

F-4

F-5

F-6

F-8

F-10

F-1

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of
One Stop Systems, Inc.

Opinion on the Consolidated Financial Statements

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of One Stop Systems, Inc. (the “Company”) as of 
December 31, 2020 and 2019, the related consolidated statements of operations, comprehensive income (loss),  stockholders’
equity, and cash flows for each of the years then ended, and the related notes (collectively, the “consolidated financial 
statements”).  In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the consolidated 
financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, and the consolidated results of its operations and its
cash flows for each of the years then ended, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles.

Basis for Opinion

These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express 
an opinion on the Company’s consolidated financial statements based on our audits.  We are a public accounting firm
registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (“PCAOB”) and are required to be 
independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and 
regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform 
the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free of material 
misstatement, whether due to error or fraud.  The Company is not required to have, nor were we engaged to perform, an audit 
of its internal control over financial reporting. As part of our audits, we are required to obtain an understanding of internal
control over financial reporting but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company’s
internal control over financial reporting.  Accordingly, we express no such opinion.

Our audits included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial 
statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks.  Such procedures included 
examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements. Our 
audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as 
evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable 
basis for our opinion.

/s/ Haskell & White LLP
HASKELL & WHITE LLP

We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2017.

Irvine, California
March 25, 2021

F-2

ONE STOP SYSTEMS, INC. (OSS)

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

ASSETS
Current assets

Cash and cash equivalents
Accounts receivable, net
Inventories, net
Prepaid expenses and other current assets

Total current assets

Property and equipment, net
Deposits and other
Deferred tax assets, net
Goodwill
Intangible assets, net

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
Current liabilities

Accounts payable
Accrued expenses and other liabilities
Current portion of notes payable, net of debt discount of $2,047 and
$7,019, respectively  (Note 8)
Current portion of related-party notes payable, net of debt discount
of $6,726 and $23,060, respectively  (Note 8)
Current portion of senior secured convertible note, net of debt discounts of 
$256,242 (Note 8)

Total current liabilities

NNotes payable, net of current portion and debt discount of $0 and  $2,047,
  respectively  (Note 8)
Related-party notes payable, net of current portion and debt discount
  of $0 and $6,726, respectively  (Note 8)
Senior secured convertible note, net of current portion and debt discounts of 
$14,107 (Note 8)
Paycheck protection program note payable  (Note 8)

Total liabilities

Commitments and contingencies (Note 11)
Stockholders’ equity

Common stock, $.0001 par value; 50,000,000 shares authorized;
   16,684,424 and 16,121,747 shares issued and outstanding, respectively
Additional paid-in capital
Noncontrolling interest
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)
Accumulated deficit

Total stockholders’ equity

December 31,
2020

December 31,
2019

$

$

$

$

6,316,921
7,458,383
9,647,504
655,708
24,078,516
3,487,178
81,709
3,698,593
7,120,510
662,257
39,128,763

976,420
3,481,444

$

$

$

5,185,321
11,667,157
7,369,356
453,938
24,675,772
3,568,564
47,146
3,019,823
7,120,510
1,346,192
39,778,007

4,115,977
4,607,432

1,365,204

1,377,751

199,943

561,441

1,789,212
7,812,223

-
10,662,601

-

-

531,347
1,499,360
9,842,930

149,301

199,943

-
-
11,011,845

1,668
30,758,354
-
287,547
(1,761,736)
29,285,833
39,128,763

$

1,612
30,537,015
500
(17,773)
(1,755,192)
28,766,162
39,778,007

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements

F-3

ONE STOP SYSTEMS, INC. (OSS)

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

`

For the Year Ended December 31,
2019
2020

Revenue
Cost of revenue

Gross profit
Operating expenses:

General and administrative
Impairment of goodwill
Marketing and selling
Research and development

Total operating expenses

Loss from operations
Other (expense) income:
Interest income
Interest expense
Other (expense) income, net

Total other (expense) income, net

Loss before income taxes
(Benefit) provision for income taxes

Net loss

NNet loss per share:

Basic
Diluted

Weighted average common shares outstanding:

Basic
Diluted

$

$

$
$

$

51,895,388
35,460,774
16,434,614

8,418,358
-
4,120,778
4,319,759
16,858,895
(424,281)

418,379
(550,774)
(53,612)
(186,007)
(610,288)
(603,744)
(6,544)

(0.00)
(0.00)

$

$
$

58,308,019
38,905,756
19,402,263

8,501,572
1,697,394
5,138,762
4,843,554
20,181,282
(779,019)

151,113
(165,560)
130,381
115,934
(663,085)
237,252
(900,337)

(0.06)
(0.06)

16,512,203
16,512,203

15,148,613
15,148,613

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements

F-4

ONE STOP SYSTEMS, INC. (OSS)

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)

NNet loss
Other comprehensive income (loss):

Reclassification adjustment from unrealized to realized gain
Currency translation adjustment, net
Unrealized gain on forward contracts
Total other comprehensive income (loss)

Comprehensive income (loss)

For the Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

(6,544) $

(900,337)

-
305,320
-
305,320
298,776

$

(19,999)
(72,819)
53,904
(38,914)
(939,251)

$

$

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements

F-5

l
a
t
o
T

'
s
r
e
d
l
o
h
k
c
o
t
S

y
t
i
u
q
E

d
e
t
a
l
u
m
u
c
c
A

t
i
c
i
f
e
D

d
e
t
a
l
u
m
u
c
c
A

r
e
h
t
O

e
v
i
s
n
e
h
e
r
p
m
o
C

)
s
s
o
l
(

e
m
o
c
n
i

g
n
i
l
l
o
r
t
n
o
c
n
o
N

t
s
e
r
e
t
n
I

l
a
n
o
i
t
i
d
d
A

l
a
t
i
p
a
C
-
n
i
-
d
i
a
P

k
c
o
t
S
n
o
m
m
o
C

t
n
u
o
m
A

s
e
r
a
h
S

2
6
1
,
6
6
7
,
8
2

$

)
2
9
1
,
5
5
7
,
1
(

$

)
3
7
7
,
7
1
(

$

0
0
5

$

5
1
0
,
7
3
5
,
0
3

$

2
1
6
,
1

$

7
4
7
,
1
2
1
,
6
1

)
0
0
5
(

8
7
3
,
4
2
7

2
9
8
,
1
8
1

)
4
4
5
,
6
(

)
5
7
8
,
4
8
6
(

0
2
3
,
5
0
3

-

-

-

-

-

)
4
4
5
,
6
(

-

-

-

-

-

0
2
3
,
5
0
3

3
3
8
,
5
8
2
,
9
2

$

)
6
3
7
,
1
6
7
,
1
(

$

7
4
5
,
7
8
2

$

-

-

)
0
0
5
(

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

8
7
3
,
4
2
7

6
3
8
,
1
8
1

)
5
7
8
,
4
8
6
(

-

6
5

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

7
7
6
,
2
6
5

$

4
5
3
,
8
5
7
,
0
3

$

8
6
6
,
1

$

4
2
4
,
4
8
6
,
6
1

s
t
n
e
m
e
t
a
t
s

l
a
i
c
n
a
n
i
f

d
e
t
a
d
i
l
o
s
n
o
c

o
t

s
e
t
o
n

g
n
i
y
n
a
p
m
o
c
c
a

e
e
S

)
S
S
O

(

.

C
N
I

,

S
M
E
T
S
Y
S
P
O
T
S
E
N
O

Y
T
I
U
Q
E

’
S
R
E
D
L
O
H
K
C
O
T
S
F
O
S
T
N
E
M
E
T
A
T
S
D
E
T
A
D
I
L
O
S
N
O
C

0
2
0
2

,
1
3

r
e
b
m
e
c
e
D
d
e
d
n
E
r
a
e
Y
e
h
t

r
o
F

s
t
n
a
r
r
a
w
d
n
a

'

s
U
S
R

,
s
n
o
i
t
p
o

k
c
o
t
s

f
o
e
s
i
c
r
e
x
E

e
l
a
c
S
y
k
S
f
o

n
o
i
t
u
l
o
s
s
i
d

n
o
p
u

l
a
t
i
p
a
c

f
o

n
r
u
t
e
R

k
c
o
t
s

e
e
y
o
l
p
m
e

f
o

e
c
n
a
u
s
s
i

t
e
n

n
o

d
i
a
p

s
e
x
a
T

n
o
i
t
a
s
n
e
p
m
o
c

d
e
s
a
b
-
k
c
o
t

S

0
2
0
2

,
1

y
r
a
u
n
a
J

,
e
c
n
a
l
a
B

t
n
e
m
t
s
u
j
d
a

n
o
i
t
a
l
s
n
a
r
t

y
c
n
e
r
r
u
C

0
2
0
2

,
1
3

r
e
b
m
e
c
e
D

,
e
c
n
a
l
a
B

s
s
o
l

t
e
N

s
n
o
i
t
p
o

F-6

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
D
E
U
N
I
T
N
O
C

-

Y
T
I
U
Q
E

’
S
R
E
D
L
O
H
K
C
O
T
S
F
O
S
T
N
E
M
E
T
A
T
S
D
E
T
A
D
I
L
O
S
N
O
C

9
1
0
2

,
1
3

r
e
b
m
e
c
e
D
d
e
d
n
E
r
a
e
Y
e
h
t

r
o
F

l
a
t
o
T

'
s
r
e
d
l
o
h
k
c
o
t
S

y
t
i
u
q
E

d
e
t
a
l
u
m
u
c
c
A

t
i
c
i
f
e
D

d
e
t
a
l
u
m
u
c
c
A

r
e
h
t
O

e
v
i
s
n
e
h
e
r
p
m
o
C

)
s
s
o
l
(

e
m
o
c
n
I

g
n
i
l
l
o
r
t
n
o
c
n
o
N

t
s
e
r
e
t
n
I

l
a
n
o
i
t
i
d
d
A

l
a
t
i
p
a
C
-
n
i
-
d
i
a
P

k
c
o
t
S
n
o
m
m
o
C

t
n
u
o
m
A

s
e
r
a
h
S

2
2
3
,
2
7
5
,
6
2

$

)
5
5
8
,
4
5
8
(

$

2
4
1
,
1

$

0
0
5

$

3
1
1
,
4
2
4
,
7
2

$

2
2
4
,
1

$

8
2
3
,
6
1
2
,
4
1

4
3
3
,
7
4

9
6
4
,
9
4
6

8
5
1
,
0
6

)
7
1
0
,
2
3
1
(

)
9
1
8
,
2
7
(

4
0
9
,
3
5

)
7
3
3
,
0
0
9
(

8
4
1
,
8
8
4
,
2

-

-

-

-

-

)
7
3
3
,
0
0
9
(

-

-

-

-

)
9
1
8
,
2
7
(

4
0
9
,
3
5

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

9
9
2
,
7
4

9
6
4
,
9
4
6

8
5
1
,
0
6

)
7
1
0
,
2
3
1
(

3
9
9
,
7
8
4
,
2

-

5
3

-

-

-

-

5
5
1

-

-

7
8
5
,
0
5
3

-

-

-

2
3
8
,
4
5
5
,
1

2
6
1
,
6
6
7
,
8
2

$

)
2
9
1
,
5
5
7
,
1
(

$

)
3
7
7
,
7
1
(

$

0
0
5

$

5
1
0
,
7
3
5
,
0
3

$

2
1
6
,
1

$

7
4
7
,
1
2
1
,
6
1

s
t
n
e
m
e
t
a
t
s

l
a
i
c
n
a
n
i
f

d
e
t
a
d
i
l
o
s
n
o
c

o
t

s
e
t
o
n

g
n
i
y
n
a
p
m
o
c
c
a

e
e
S

s
e
t
o
n

h
t
i

w
d
e
u
s
s
i

s
t
n
a
r
r
a
w

f
o

e
u
l
a
v
r
i
a
f

e
v
i
t
a
l
e
R

s
e
i
t
r
a
p

d
e
t
a
l
e
r

o
t

e
l
b
a
y
a
p

s
e
t
o
n

d
n
a

e
l
b
a
y
a
p

s
t
n
a
r
r
a

W
d
n
a

'

s
U
S
R

,
s
n
o
i
t
p
o

k
c
o
t
s

f
o
e
s
i
c
r
e
x
E

k
c
o
t
s

e
e
y
o
l
p
m
e

f
o

e
c
n
a
u
s
s
i

t
e
n

n
o

d
i
a
p

s
e
x
a
T

s
n
o
i
t
p
o

e
c
n
a
u
s
s
i

f
o

t
e
n

,
k
c
o
t
s

f
o

e
c
n
a
u
s
s
i

m
o
r
f

s
d
e
e
c
o
r
P

n
o
i
t
a
s
n
e
p
m
o
c

d
e
s
a
b
-
k
c
o
t

S

9
1
0
2

,
1

y
r
a
u
n
a
J

,
e
c
n
a
l
a
B

t
n
e
m
t
s
u
j
d
a

n
o
i
t
a
l
s
n
a
r
t

y
c
n
e
r
r
u
C

t
c
a
r
t
n
o
c

d
r
a
w
r
o
f

n
o

n
i
a
G

6
6
5
,
2
1
2
$

f
o

s
t
s
o
c

9
1
0
2

,
1
3

r
e
b
m
e
c
e
D

,
e
c
n
a
l
a
B

s
s
o
l

t
e
N

F-7

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
ONE STOP SYSTEMS, INC. (OSS)
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

Cash flows from operating activities:

Net loss
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash (used in) provided by
   operating activities:

Deferred benefit for income taxes
Loss (gain) on disposal of property and equipment
Provision for bad debt, net
Impairment of goodwill
Warranty reserves
Amortization of deferred gain
Depreciation
Amortization
Inventory reserves
Amortization of debt discount
Stock-based compensation expense
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:

Accounts receivable
Inventories
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
Accounts payable
Accrued expenses and other liabilities

Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities

For the Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$

(6,544) $

(900,337)

(663,772)
11,586
18,141
-
(28,031)
(53,838)
922,597
683,935
623,159
376,004
724,378

4,286,294
(2,630,149)
(246,310)
(3,148,762)
(1,118,861)
(250,173)

(112,740)
(1,785)
702
1,697,394
14,348
(28,555)
671,223
984,065
301,302
21,303
649,469

(1,165,596)
(1,008,980)
211,325
424,567
617,163
2,374,868

Cash flows from investing activities:

Purchases of property and equipment, including capitalization of labor
   costs for test equipment and ERP
Proceeds from sales of property and equipment
Net cash used in investing activities

(820,336)
1,542
(818,794)

(2,386,227)
1,050
(2,385,177)

Cash flows from financing activities:

Proceeds from exercise of stock options and warrants
Payment of payroll taxes on net issuance of employee stock options
Proceeds from issuance of common stock
Stock issuance costs
Net repayments on bank lines of credit
Borrowings from related-party notes payable
Borrowings from notes payable
Repayments of related-party notes payable
Repayments of notes payable
Proceeds from senior secured convertible note, net
Repayments of senior secured convertible note
Proceeds from paycheck protection program (PPP) note payable

Net cash provided by financing activities

181,892
(684,875)
-
-
(99,410)
-
-
(584,502)
(177,866)
2,383,726
(409,090)
1,499,360
2,109,235

NNet change in cash and cash equivalents
Effect of exchange rates on cash
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year
Cash and cash equivalents, end of year

1,040,268
91,332
5,185,321
6,316,921

$

$

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements

F-8

47,334
(132,017)
2,700,714
(212,566)
(513,590)
1,150,000
350,000
(410,931)
(56,843)
-
-
-
2,922,101

2,911,792
1,273
2,272,256
5,185,321

ONE STOP SYSTEMS, INC. (OSS)
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS - CONTINUED

Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:

Cash paid during the year for interest
Cash paid during the year for income taxes

Supplemental disclosure of non-cash transactions:

Original issue discount on senior secured convertible note
Reclassification of inventories to property and equipment
Forward foreign currency contracts
Relative fair value of warrants issued in connection with notes and
   related-party notes payable

For the Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$
$

$
$
$

$

301,214
344,184

300,000
164,856
-

-

$
$

$
$
$

$

129,547
8,780

-
106,502
53,904

60,158

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements

F-9

ONE STOP SYSTEMS, INC. (OSS)

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

For the Years Ended December 31, 2020 and 2019

NOTE 1 – THE COMPANY AND BASIS OF PRESENTATION

Nature of Operations

p

One Stop Systems, Inc. (“we,” “our,” “OSS,” or the “Company”) was originally incorporated as a California 

corporation in 1999 after initially being formed as a California limited liability company in 1998. On December 14, 2017, the
Company was reincorporated as a Delaware corporation in connection with its initial public offering.  The Company designs, 
manufactures, and markets industrial grade computer systems and components that are based on industry standard computer 
architectures. The Company markets its products to manufacturers of automated equipment used for media and 
entertainment, medical, industrial and military applications.     

During the year ended December 31, 2015, the Company formed a wholly-owned subsidiary in Germany, One Stop 
Systems, GmbH (“OSS GmbH”).  During July 2016, the Company acquired Mission Technologies Group, Inc. (“Magma”) 
and its operations.

In April 2017, the Company and a related entity formed a joint venture named SkyScale, LLC in the State of California

(“SkyScale”).  In accordance with the Contribution Agreement, each member contributed $750,000 and received a 50%
interest in the joint venture.  The purpose of SkyScale was to engage in the business of providing high performance 
computing capabilities as cloud services.  As a result of changes in the competitive landscape and downward pressure on
pricing from large competitors, the members of the SkyScale joint venture agreement agreed to dissolve SkyScale and ceased 
operations as of December 31, 2018.

On August 31, 2018, the Company acquired Concept Development Inc. (“CDI”) located in Irvine, California.  CDI 

specializes in the design and manufacture of custom high-performance computing systems for airborne in-flight 
entertainment and networking systems.  CDI has been fully integrated into the core operations of OSS as of June 1, 2020.

On October 31, 2018, OSS GmbH acquired 100% of the outstanding stock of Bressner Technology GmbH, a Germany 

limited liability company located near Munich, Germany (“Bressner”).  Bressner provides standard and customized servers, 
panel PCs, and PCIe expansion systems.  Bressner also provides manufacturing, test, sales and marketing services for 
customers throughout Europe.

Liquidity, Going Concern Considerations and Management Plans

y,

q

g

g

Given our recurring operating losses, the Company’s primary sources of liquidity have been provided by (i) the 

Company’s February 2018 initial public offering (net proceeds were approximately $16,100,000); (ii) March 2019 notes
payable from members of the Board of Directors and others of $1,500,000; (iii) the July 2019 sale of 1,554,546 shares of the
Company’s common stock for net cash proceeds of $2,488,148; (iv) the April 24, 2020 sale of $3,000,000 of Senior Secured 
Convertible Promissory Notes issued at a 10% original issue discount and (v) receipt of approximately $1,500,000 on April 
28, 2020 of government loan proceeds under the Paycheck Protection Program, and (vi) a receipt of approximately
$9,250,000 on March 3, 2021 in a registered direct offering.

As of December 31, 2020, the Company’s cash and cash equivalents were $6,316,921 and working capital was
$16,266,293.  Cash and cash equivalents held by Bressner totaled $1,062,818 (USD) at December 31, 2020.  Bressner’s debt 
covenants do not permit the use of these funds by its parent company.

During the year ended December 31, 2020, the Company experienced an operating loss of $424,281, with cash used in 

operating activities of $250,173.  Our largest customer, engaged in the media and entertainment industry, is having 
significant financial hardships attributable to the COVID-19 pandemic with aged outstanding accounts receivables. The 
Company has formulated a plan whereby extended payment terms have been made available, and our customer is presently 
honoring those terms.

F-10

The Company’s revenue growth during the year has slowed due to the effects of COVID-19.   However, resulting from

a reduction in force and strict cost containment, the Company has been able to mitigate the effects, to some degree, of the 
reduced revenue attributable to the economic impact of COVID-19.

In March 2020, the World Health Organization declared the outbreak of COVID-19, a global pandemic and the United 
States federal government declared it a national emergency. COVID-19 continues to impact worldwide economic activity. A 
public health pandemic, including COVID-19, poses the risk that we or our employees, contractors, customers, suppliers, and 
other partners may be prevented from conducting business activities for an indefinite period of time, including due to 
shutdowns that may be requested or mandated by governmental authorities.  

More generally, COVID-19 raises the possibility of an extended global economic downturn, which could affect 
demand for our products and services and impact our results and financial condition even after the pandemic is contained and 
remediation/restriction measures are lifted. For example, we may be unable to collect receivables from customers that are 
significantly impacted by COVID-19. Also, a decrease in orders in a given period could negatively affect our revenues in 
future periods. COVID-19 may also have the effect of heightening many of the other risks described in the “Risk Factors” 
section of our Annual Report on this Form 10-K, including risks associated with our customers and supply chain. We will
continue to evaluate the nature and extent of the impact of COVID-19 to our business.

Presently, it is clear the global economy has been negatively impacted by COVID-19, and demand for some of our 
products and services have been reduced due to uncertainty and the economic impact of COVID-19. For example, customers 
in certain of the industries most impacted by COVID-19, have requested, and we expect will continue to request, relief to 
existing contracts or payment obligations, and the impact of those is uncertain. Furthermore, some customers are delaying 
payments owed to the Company while they address immediate financial crises in their operations due to COVID-19. In 
particular, in the media and entertainment industry, demand for the use of outdoor media equipment has been impacted due to 
restrictions on public gatherings. Until such restrictions improve, we expect that demand for certain of our clients’ products 
and services will be limited, and may not return to prior levels, and thus, may impact our financial results and operations. 

Specifically, our business has also begun to be negatively affected by a range of external factors related to COVID-
19 that are not within our control. For example, numerous measures have been implemented by governmental authorities 
across the globe to contain the virus, including travel bans and restrictions, quarantines, shelter-in-place orders, restrictions 
and limitations of public gatherings, and business limitations and shutdowns. Many of our customers’ businesses have been 
severely impacted by these measures and some have been required to reduce employee headcount as a result. If a significant 
number of our customers are unable to continue as a going concern, this would have an adverse impact on our business and 
financial condition. In addition, many of our customers are working remotely, which may delay the timing of new business 
and implementations of our services. If COVID-19 continues to have a substantial impact on our partners, customers, or 
suppliers, our results of operations and overall financial performance will be harmed. 

Though management has been proactively managing through the current known impacts, if the situation further 
deteriorates or the outbreak results in further restriction on supply and demand factors, our cash flows, financial position and 
operating results for fiscal year 2020 and beyond will be negatively impacted. Neither the length of time nor the magnitude of 
the negative impacts can be presently determined.

The longer the COVID-19 pandemic persists, the greater the potential for significant adverse impact to our business 

operations.  Quarantines, travel restrictions, prohibitions on non-essential gatherings, shelter-in-place orders and other similar 
directives and policies intended to reduce the spread of the disease, may reduce our productivity and that of the third parties
on which we rely and may disrupt and delay many aspects of our business.

The Company is complying with state mandated requirements for safety in the workplace to ensure the health, safety 
and welling-being of our employees.  These measures included personal protective equipment, social distancing, cleanliness
of the facilities and daily monitoring of the health of employees in our facilities.  We have not developed a specific and 
comprehensive contingency plan designed to address the challenges and risks presented by the COVID-19 pandemic and,
even if and when we do develop such a plan, there can be no assurance that such plan will be effective in mitigating the 
potential adverse effects on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

Management’s plans with respect to the above is to continue its efforts towards responding to the changing economic
landscape attributable to COVID-19, to continue to reduce costs, conserve cash, strengthen margins, and improve company-
wide execution.  Specific actions already implemented by management include a reduction in force, a limited freeze on 
hiring, reduced work week, minimizing overtime, travel and entertainment, and contractor costs.  On April 7, 2020, the

F-11

Company implemented a cost reduction plan which included the termination of certain employees and elimination of certain 
costs.  Savings from this effort are estimated to be $2.5 million on an annual basis. 

While management expects these actions to result in prospective cost reductions, management is also committed to
securing debt and/or equity financing to ensure that liquidity will be sufficient to meet the Company’s cash requirements 
through at least a period of the next twelve months. Management believes potential sources of liquidity include at least the
following:     

(cid:3)

In May 2019, the Company filed a Form S-3 prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Commission which
became effective on June 19, 2019, and allows the Company to offer up to $100,000,000 aggregate dollar 
amount of shares of its common stock, preferred stock, debt securities, warrants to purchase its common stock, 
preferred stock or debt securities, subscription rights to purchase its common stock, preferred stock or debt 
securities and\or units consisting of some or all of these securities, in any combination, together or separately, in
one of more offerings, in amounts, at prices and on the terms that the Company will determine at the time of the 
offering and which will be set forth in a prospectus supplement and any related free writing prospectus. 

(cid:3) On April 24, 2020, the Company completed a $6.0 million debt financing on a non-interest bearing convertible 
note with a 10% original issue discount.  The first tranche of $3.0 million was received on April 27, 2020, with 
an additional $3.0 million available seven months from the date of closing at the option of the Company 
conditioned upon meeting certain requirements which have been satisfied.  The note is repayable in twenty-two 
installments beginning three months after closing in cash or shares of the Company’s common stock.

(cid:3) On March 1, 2021, the Company entered into a definitive agreement with an institutional investor for the 
purchase and sale of 1,497,006 shares of common stock at a purchase price of $6.68 in a registered direct 
offering priced At-The-Market under Nasdaq rules.  Total estimated proceeds are $9,250,000 after commissions
and offering costs (see Note 16).

As a result of management’s cost reduction plans, the Company’s sources of liquidity and management’s most recent 

cash flow forecasts, management believes that the Company has sufficient liquidity to satisfy its anticipated cash
requirements for at least the next twelve months. However, there can be no assurance that management’s cost reduction 
efforts will be effective, the forecasted cash flows will be achieved, or that external sources of financing, including the
issuance of debt and/or equity securities, will be available at times and on terms acceptable to the Company, or at all. 

Basis of Presentation

The accompanying financial statements have been prepared on an accrual basis of accounting in accordance with 
United States Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“U.S. GAAP”), as set forth in the Financial Accounting Standards 
Board’s (“FASB”) Accounting Standards Codification (“ASC”).  

Principles of Consolidation

p

The accompanying consolidated financial statements include the accounts of OSS, which include the acquisition of 

Concept Development Inc., its wholly-owned subsidiary, OSS GmbH, which also includes the acquisition of Bressner 
Technology GmbH.  Intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

NOTE 2 – SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

Use of Estimates

The preparation of consolidated financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the 
United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets,
liabilities, revenues and expenses, and disclosures of contingent assets, liabilities, and expenses at the date of the consolidated 
financial statements and during the reporting period.  

Significant estimates made by management include, among others, the fair value of acquired net assets of CDI in 
August 2018 with reevaluation in April 2019, and Bressner Technology GmbH in October 2018,  the allowance for doubtful 
accounts, fair value of stock options, recoverability of inventories and long-lived assets, and realizability of deferred tax 
assets.  Actual results could differ from those estimates.

F-12

Concentration Risks

At times, deposits held with financial institutions may exceed the amount of insurance provided by the Federal Deposit 

Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) and Securities Investor Protection Corporation (“SIPC”), of which both provide basic
deposit coverage with limits up to $250,000 per owner.  As of December 31, 2020, the Company had $4,816,433 in excess of 
the insurance limits.  The Company has not experienced any such losses in these accounts.  In Germany, the deposit 
insurance is €100,000 per bank, per customer.  Bressner has funds on deposit in both Euro and U.S. dollar denominations of 
€669,160 (US$818,256) with banks in excess of the insurance limits.

In the years ended December 31, 2020 and December 31, 2019, approximately 24%, and 41%, respectively, of net sales 

represent customers which are each greater than 10% of our consolidated annual revenue.  This concentration is with two 
customers, disguise and Raytheon.  As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, approximately 64% and 72%, respectively, of net 
trade accounts receivables represent customer balances which are each greater than 10% of our consolidated trade accounts 
receivable balance.  As a result of the recent worldwide economic impact attributable to COVID-19, disguise has been 
experiencing a slowdown in its business as the entertainment and media markets have been required to scale back or cancel
large group gatherings.  As a result, during the year, we experienced delays in receipt of scheduled payments and agreed to 
requests during the year for a modified payment schedule.  Disguise has systematically paid down their outstanding balance
and, as of March 2021, is current on their payments and outstanding balances are in accordance with pre-established credit 
policies and limits.

The Company made purchases from a certain supplier which represented greater than 10% of the Company’s vendor 

purchases on an annual basis.  This vendor represented approximately 18.3% and 11.0% of purchases for the years ended 
December 31, 2020, and 2019, respectively.  

Cash and Cash Equivalents

q

Cash and cash equivalents consist of cash on deposit and money market accounts.  The Company considers all highly 

liquid temporary cash investments with an initial maturity of three months or less when acquired to be cash equivalents. 
Management believes that the carrying amounts of cash equivalents approximate their fair value because of the short maturity 
period.

Accounts Receivable

Accounts receivable are presented at net realizable value.  This value includes an appropriate allowance for estimated 

uncollectible accounts to reflect any loss anticipated on the trade accounts receivable and unbilled receivables.   Unbilled 
receivables include cost and gross profit earned in excess of billings.  The allowance for doubtful accounts is an estimate to 
cover the losses resulting from the inability of customers to make payments on their outstanding balances and unbilled 
receivables.  In estimating the required allowance, management considers the overall quality and aging of the accounts 
receivable, specific customer circumstances, current economic trends, and historical experience with collections.  At 
December 31, 2020 and 2019, the allowance for doubtful accounts is $32,120 and $14,000, respectively. 

Revenues earned in excess of related billings are recorded as an asset on the consolidated balance sheet as unbilled 

receivables.  Unbilled receivables as of December 31, 2020 and 2019 were $106 and $25,432, respectively.

Inventories

Inventories are valued at the lower of cost or net realizable value.  The Company uses the average cost method for 

purposes of determining cost, which approximates the first-in, first-out method.

The Company establishes reserves on its inventories to write-down the carrying value of its estimated obsolete or 
excess inventories to estimated net realizable value based upon observations of historical usage and assumptions about future
demand and market conditions.  In addition, the Company considers changes in the market value of components in
determining the net realizable value of its inventory.  Inventory reserves are not typically reversed until the specific
inventories are sold or otherwise disposed.

Actual demand, product mix and alternative usage may be lower than those that we project and this difference could 

have a material adverse effect on our gross margin if inventory write-downs beyond those initially recorded become

F-13

necessary.  Alternatively, if actual demand, product mix and alternative usage are more favorable than those we estimated at 
the time of such a write-down, our gross margin could be favorably impacted in future periods. 

Property and Equipment

q p

y

p

Property and equipment, other than leasehold improvements, are recorded at cost and depreciated using the straight-
line method over the estimated useful lives of the assets, generally from two to seven years. Leasehold improvements are
recorded at cost and are amortized using the straight-line method over the shorter of the remaining lease term or the estimated 
useful life of the related asset.  Tooling and test equipment includes capitalized labor costs associated with the development 
of the related tooling and test equipment.  Costs incurred for maintenance and repairs are expensed as incurred, and 
expenditures for major replacements and improvements are capitalized. Upon retirement or sale, the cost and related 
accumulated depreciation and amortization of disposed assets are removed from the accounts and any resulting gain or loss is
included in other (expense) income, net.

Goodwill

Goodwill represents the excess of the purchase price paid over the fair value of the net assets acquired in business

combinations. Goodwill is not amortized but is tested for impairment at least annually and when we deem that a triggering 
event has occurred.  The Company reviews goodwill for impairment annually on December 31st.  The Company completed 
its annual assessment for goodwill impairment and determined that goodwill is not impaired as of December 31, 2020 and no 
adjustment was required.

In April 2019, the Company performed an interim impairment test of goodwill, as a result of a short-fall in the actual

overall financial performance of CDI as compared to plan, a recurring need for working capital, and a decrease in the
Company’s stock price.  As a result of this interim evaluation, the Company recorded an impairment loss to goodwill of 
$1,697,394, which was charged to operating expenses during the year ended December 31, 2019. 

Intangible Assets and Long-lived Assets

g

g

We evaluate our intangible and long-lived assets for impairment when events or circumstances arise that indicate our 

intangible and long-lived assets may be impaired. Indicators of impairment include, but are not limited to, a significant 
deterioration in overall economic conditions, a decline in our market capitalization, the loss of significant business, significant 
decreases in funding for our contracts, or other significant adverse changes in industry or market conditions. The Company 
completed its qualitative assessment for impairment in December 2020 and determined that there was no impairment as of 
December 31, 2020. Though there were indicators of impairment attributable to the COVID-19 pandemic that directly
impacted our business, as a result of management’s cost containment efforts, raising cash, minimizing working capital
requirements and a focus on profitability, during the year the Company improved its financial stability and thus determined 
that there is no impairment of its intangible and long-lived assets.  There can be no assurance; however, that market 
conditions will not change or demand for the Company’s products will continue, which could result in an impairment of 
intangible and long-lived assets in the future.

Fair Value Measurements

The Company uses a three-tier fair value hierarchy to classify and disclose all assets and liabilities measured at fair 

value on a recurring basis, as well as assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis, in periods
subsequent to their initial measurement.  These tiers include:

•

•

•

Level 1, defined as quoted market prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities; 

Level 2, defined as inputs other than Level 1 that are observable, either directly or indirectly, such as quoted 
prices for similar assets or liabilities, quoted prices in markets that are not active, model-based valuation
techniques for which all significant assumptions are observable in the market, or other inputs that are observable 
or can be corroborated by observable market data for substantially the full term of the assets or liabilities; and

Level 3, defined as unobservable inputs that are not corroborated by market data. 

F-14

The carrying value of financial instruments including cash and cash equivalents, accounts receivable, and accounts 

payable and accrued expenses, and other liabilities approximate fair value due to the short-term nature of these instruments.  
Assets and liabilities assumed in the acquisition of  the Ion software, Concept Development Inc., and Bressner Technology
GmbH were recorded at fair value based upon the Company’s market assumptions which approximated carrying value 
(except for acquired intangible assets – Note 3) due to the short-term nature of the instruments.  The carrying amounts of the
Company’s notes payable and Bressner’s existing lines of credit and notes payable approximate their fair values at the stated 
interest rates and are reflective of the prevailing market rates.

Revenue Recognition

g

On January 1, 2019, the Company adopted the new accounting standard update ASC 606, Revenue from Contracts with

Customers, which superseded nearly all existing revenue recognition guidance under GAAP, to all contracts using the
modified retrospective method. The comparative information has not been restated and continues to be reported under the
accounting standards in effect for those periods.  

The Company’s performance obligations are satisfied over time as work is performed or at a point in time. The

majority of the Company’s revenue is recognized at a point in time when products ship and control is transferred to the 
customer. The Company determines revenue recognition through the following steps: (i) identification of the contract with a 
customer; (ii) identification of the performance obligations in the contract; (iii) determination of the transaction price; (iv) 
allocation of the transaction price to the performance obligations in the contract; and (v) recognition of revenue when, or as, a
performance obligation is satisfied.

The Company’s contracts are executed through a combination of written agreements along with purchase orders with 

all customers including certain general terms and conditions. Generally, purchase orders entail products, quantities and 
prices, which define the performance obligations of each party and are approved and accepted by the Company. The 
Company’s contracts with customers typically do not include extended payment terms. Payment terms vary by contract type
and type of customer and generally range from 30 to 60 days from invoice. Additionally, taxes assessed by a governmental 
authority that are both imposed on and concurrent with a specific revenue-producing transaction, that are collected by the
Company from a customer and deposited with the relevant government authority, are excluded from revenue.

The transaction price is determined based on the consideration to which the Company will be entitled in exchange for 
transferring goods or services to the customer adjusted for estimated variable consideration, if any.  Variable consideration 
may include discounts, rights of return, refunds, and other similar obligations. The Company allocates the transaction price to 
each distinct product and service based on its relative standalone selling price. The standalone selling price for products
primarily involves the cost to produce the deliverable plus the anticipated margin and for services is estimated based on the 
Company’s approved list price.

In the normal course of business, the Company does not accept product returns unless the items are defective as
manufactured. The Company establishes provisions for estimated returns and warranties. In addition, the Company does not 
typically provide customers with the right to a refund and does not transact for noncash consideration.

Customer agreements include one vendor managed inventory program. The Company recognizes revenue under this 

arrangement when all of the following criteria are met: (i) the goods have been identified separately as belonging to the
customer; (ii) the goods are ready for physical shipment to the customer; (iii) the Company does not have the ability to direct 
the goods to another customer; and (iv) the arrangement was requested by the customer and that the customer has sufficiently 
explained a substantial business purpose for the arrangement.  Management also considers whether the customer's custodial
risks are insured and whether modifications to the Company's normal billing and credit terms were required.

The Company recorded revenue from product sales that are held in vendor managed inventory under this agreement of 

$6,692,752 and $10,075,756 for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively. As of December 31, 2020 and 
2019, $1,482,186 and $459,893 respectively, of product sold through those dates were held by the Company in the vendor 
management program.

F-15

Revenues on certain fixed-price contracts where we provide engineering services, prototypes and completed products 

are recognized based upon milestones delivered that are provided during the period and compared to milestone goals to be 
provided over the entire contract. These services require that we perform significant, extensive and complex design, 
development, modification or implementation of our customers’ systems. Performance will often extend over long periods of 
time, and our right to receive future payment depends on our future performance in accordance with the agreement.  If 
changes occur in delivery, productivity or other factors used in developing the estimates of costs or revenues, we revise our 
cost and revenue estimates, which may result in increases or decreases in revenues and costs, and such revisions are reflected 
in earnings in the period in which the revision becomes known. 

The Company’s operating segment revenues disaggregated by primary geographic market, which is determined based 

on a customer’s geographic location, for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 is as follows:

Entity:
Customized computers and flash arrays
In-flight entertainment & connectivity
Value-added reseller with minimal customization

y
Warranty Reserve

For the Year Ended December 31, 2020
International
$ 10,611,133
216,821
18,152,859
$ 28,980,813

Total
$ 32,309,533
1,340,485
18,245,370
$ 51,895,388

Domestic
$ 21,698,400
1,123,664
92,511
$ 22,914,575

For the Year Ended December 31, 2019
International
$ 18,081,290
506,738
17,779,122
$ 36,367,150

Total
$ 37,518,074
2,537,334
18,252,611
$ 58,308,019

Domestic
$ 19,436,784
2,030,596
473,489
$ 21,940,869

The Company offers product warranties that extend for one or two years from the date of sale. Such warranties are

considered assurance-type warranties; therefore, they would not be deemed to be a separate performance obligation under 
ASC 606.  Such warranties require the Company to repair or replace defective product returned to the Company during the
warranty period at no cost to the customer. The Company records an estimate for warranty-related costs based on its 
historical and estimated future product return rates and expected repair or replacement costs (Note 7). 

While such costs have historically been within management’s expectations and the provisions established, unexpected 

changes in failure rates could have a material adverse impact on the Company, requiring additional warranty reserves and 
could adversely affect the Company’s gross profit and gross margins.

The Company offers customers extended warranties beyond the standard one-year warranty on the product.  The

extended warranties are considered service-type warranties and would be considered as a separate performance obligation
under ASC 606.  The Company is the primary obligor and, revenue is recognized on a gross basis ratably over the term of the 
extended warranty.  The customer can purchase extended warranties from one to five years, in the bronze, silver or gold 
categories.  This entails hardware repair or replacement, shipping methods on how the warranties will be returned / delivered,
response times and hours of operations to receive support.  The amount of warranties sold for years ended December 31, 
2020 and 2019 were $373,847 and $377,768, respectively.

The revenue that was recognized for the warranties sold for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 were
$401,915 and $392,532, respectively. The Company does have recourse with some of its suppliers that offer more than a one-
year guarantee on parts, but this is not standard.  The few that offer greater than a year warranty, the Company may be able to 
recover the cost of the part from the manufacturer for the failed part.  The amounts of these costs vary in a wide range, but are 
not material, due to the infrequency of failure.  As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, deferred revenue totaled $407,768 and 
$394,571, respectively.  The Company expects to recognize $407,768 of unearned revenue amounts from 2020 through 
2024.    

Shipping and Handling Costs

pp g

g

The Company's shipping and handling costs are included in cost of goods sold for all periods presented.

y
Foreign Currency 

g

We operate primarily in the United States.  Foreign sales of products and services are primarily denominated in U.S. 
dollars.  We also conduct business outside the United States through our foreign subsidiary in Germany, where business is
largely transacted in non-U.S. dollar currencies particularly the Euro, which is subject to fluctuations due to changes in
foreign currency exchange rates.  Accordingly, we are subject to exposure from changes in the exchange rates of local
currencies. Foreign currency transaction gains and losses are recorded in other income (expense), net in the consolidated 
statements of operations.

F-16

OSS GmbH operates as an extension of OSS’ domestic operations.  The functional currency of OSS GmbH is the Euro. 

Transactions denominated in currencies other than the functional currency are remeasured to the functional currency at the
average exchange rate in effect during the period.  At the end of each reporting period, monetary assets and liabilities are
remeasured using exchange rates in effect at the balance sheet date. Non-monetary assets and liabilities are remeasured at 
historical exchange rates. Consequently, changes in the exchange rates of the currencies may impact the translation of the 
foreign subsidiaries’ statements of operations into U.S. dollars, which may in turn affect our consolidated statement of 
operations. The resulting foreign currency translation adjustments are recorded as a separate component of accumulated other 
comprehensive income (loss) in the consolidated balance sheets.

Derivative Financial Instruments

We employ derivatives to manage certain currency market risks through the use of foreign exchange forward contracts.

We do not use derivatives for trading or speculative purposes. Our derivatives are designated as a hedge of a forecasted 
transaction or of the variability of cash flows to be received or paid related to a recognized asset or liability (cash flow
hedge). We hedge a portion of the exchange risk involved in anticipation of highly probable foreign currency-denominated 
transactions. In anticipation of these transactions, we enter into foreign exchange contracts to provide currency at a fixed rate.
As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, Bressner had no foreign exchange contract outstanding.  

Unrealized gains on derivatives designated as cash flow hedges are recorded at fair value as assets, and unrealized 

losses on derivatives designated as cash flow hedges are recorded at fair value as liabilities. For derivative instruments
designated as cash flow hedges, the effective portion is reported as a component of accumulated OCI until reclassified into 
interest expense in the same period the hedged transaction affects earnings. The gain or loss on the ineffective portion is 
recognized as “Other (expense) income, net” in the consolidated statements of operations in each period. 

Stock-Based Compensation

p

The Company accounts for employee and director share-based compensation in accordance with the provisions of ASC 
Topic 718 “Compensation – Stock Compensation”.  Under ASC 718, share-based compensation cost is measured at the grant 
date, based on the calculated fair value of the award, and is recognized as an expense over the employee’s requisite service 
period (generally the vesting period of the equity grant). 

All transactions in which goods or services are the consideration received for the issuance of equity instruments to non-

employees are accounted for based on the equivalent fair value of the consideration received or the fair value of the equity 
instrument issued, whichever is more reliably measurable on the grant date.  The measurement date used to determine the
estimated fair value of the equity instrument issued is the earlier of the date on which the third-party performance is complete or 
the date on which it is probable that performance will occur. 

Employee and director stock-based compensation expense recognized during the period is based on the value of the portion 
of stock-based payment awards that is ultimately expected to vest during the period.  Given that stock-based compensation expense
recognized in the accompanying consolidated statements of operations is based on awards ultimately expected to vest, it has been 
reduced for estimated forfeitures. The Company’s estimated average forfeiture rates are based on historical forfeiture experience
and estimated future forfeitures.

Compensation cost for stock awards, which include restricted stock units (“RSUs”), is measured at the fair value on the

grant date and recognized as expense, net of estimated forfeitures, over the related service period. The fair value of stock 
awards is based on the quoted price of our common stock on the grant date.

The estimated fair value of common stock option awards is calculated using the Black-Scholes option pricing model. 

The Black-Scholes model requires subjective assumptions regarding future stock price volatility and expected time to 
exercise, along with assumptions about the risk-free interest rate and expected dividends, all of which affect the estimated fair 
values of the Company’s common stock option awards.  Given a lack of historical stock option exercises, the expected term
of options granted is calculated as the average of the weighted vesting period and the contractual expiration date of the 
option.  This calculation is based on a method permitted by the Securities and Exchange Commission in instances where the
vesting and exercise terms of options granted meet certain conditions and where limited historical exercise data is available.  The
expected volatility is based on the historical volatility of the common stock of comparable public companies that operate in 
similar industries as the Company.

The risk-free rate selected to value any particular grant is based on the U.S. Treasury rate that corresponds to the
expected term of the grant effective as of the date of the grant. The expected dividend assumption is based on the Company’s 
history and management’s expectation regarding dividend payouts. Compensation expense for common stock option awards 

F-17

with graded vesting schedules is recognized on a straight-line basis over the requisite service period for the last separately 
vesting portion of the award, provided that the accumulated cost recognized as of any date at least equals the value of the 
vested portion of the award.

If there are any modifications or cancellations of the underlying vested or unvested stock-based awards, the Company 

may be required to accelerate, increase or cancel any remaining unearned stock-based compensation expense, or record 
additional expense for vested stock-based awards. Future stock-based compensation expense and unearned stock- based 
compensation may increase to the extent that the Company grants additional common stock options or other stock-based 
awards.

Business Combinations

We utilize the acquisition method of accounting for business combinations and allocate the purchase price of an 

acquisition to the various tangible and intangible assets acquired and liabilities assumed based on their estimated fair values. We
primarily establish fair value using the income approach based upon a discounted cash flow model. The income approach 
requires the use of many assumptions and estimates including future revenues and expenses, as well as discount factors and 
income tax rates. Other estimates include:

•

•

•

estimated step-ups or write-downs for fixed assets and inventory;

estimated fair values of intangible assets; and 

estimated income tax assets and liabilities assumed from the target.

While we use our best estimates and assumptions as part of the purchase price allocation process to accurately value

assets acquired and liabilities assumed at the business acquisition date, our estimates and assumptions are inherently 
uncertain and subject to refinement. As a result, during the purchase price allocation period, which is generally one year from 
the business acquisition date, we record adjustments to the assets acquired and liabilities assumed, with the corresponding 
offset to goodwill. 

For changes in the valuation of intangible assets between preliminary and final purchase price allocation, the related 
amortization is adjusted in the period it occurs. Subsequent to the purchase price allocation period any adjustment to assets
acquired or liabilities assumed is included in operating results in the period in which the adjustment is determined.  Should 
we issue shares of our common stock in an acquisition, we will be required to estimate the fair value of the shares issued. See 
Note 3.

Debt Discounts

Debt discounts, which originate from the relative fair value of warrants issued in connection with notes payable and 

related-party notes payable, are recorded against the noted payable and related-party notes payable in the accompanying 
consolidated balance sheets.

Amortization of the debt discounts are calculated using the straight-line method over the term of the applicable notes 

which approximates the effective interest method and are recorded in interest expense in the accompanying consolidated 
statements of operations. Amortization of debt discounts of $376,006 and $21,303 was recognized as interest expense for the
years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively.  

Advertising Costs

g

Advertising costs are expensed as incurred and included in marketing and selling expense in the accompanying

consolidated statements of operations.  Advertising costs for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 were $377,105 and 
$352,080, respectively.

Research and Development Expenses

p

p

Research and development expenditures are expensed in the period incurred.  Research and development expenses

primarily consist of salaries, benefits and stock-based compensation, as well as consulting expenses and allocated facilities
and other overhead costs. Research and development activities include the development of new technologies, features and 
functionality in support of the Company’s products and customer needs.

F-18

Income Taxes

The Company utilizes the asset and liability method of accounting for income taxes. Under this method, deferred tax 

assets and liabilities are determined based on the difference between the consolidated financial statement and tax bases of 
assets and liabilities using enacted tax rates in effect for the year in which the differences are expected to affect taxable 
income. Valuation allowances are established when necessary to reduce deferred tax assets to the amounts expected to be
realized.

Under ASC Topic 740, the impact of an uncertain income tax position on the income tax return must be recognized at 

the largest amount that is more-likely-than-not to be sustained upon audit by the relevant taxing authority.  An uncertain 
income tax position will not be recognized if it has less than a 50% likelihood of being sustained.  Additionally, ASC Topic
740 provides requirements for derecognition, classification, interest and penalties, accounting in interim periods, disclosure 
and transition.  The Company’s policy is to recognize interest and/or penalties related to income tax matters in income tax 
expense.  

The Company files income tax returns in the U.S. federal jurisdiction, California and various other state jurisdictions, 

and Germany.  The Company has elected to treat the tax effect of Global Intangible Low Tax Income (“GILTI”) as a current-
period expense when occurred.  The Company does not foresee material changes to its gross liability of uncertain tax positions 
within the next twelve months.

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) was 

signed into law in March 2020. The CARES Act lifts certain deduction limitations originally imposed by the Tax Cuts and 
Jobs Act of 2017 (2017 Tax Act). Corporate taxpayers may carryback net operating losses (NOLs) originating during 2018
through 2020 for up to five years, which was not previously allowed under the 2017 Tax Act. The CARES Act also 
eliminates the 80% of taxable income limitations by allowing corporate entities to fully utilize NOL carryforwards to offset 
taxable income in 2018, 2019 or 2020. Taxpayers may generally deduct interest up to the sum of 50% of adjusted taxable 
income plus business interest income (30% limit under the 2017 Tax Act) for tax years beginning January 1, 2019 and 2020. 
The CARES Act allows taxpayers with alternative minimum tax credits to claim a refund in 2020 for the entire amount of the 
credits instead of recovering the credits through refunds over a period of years, as originally enacted by the 2017 Tax Act.

In addition, the CARES Act raises the corporate charitable deduction limit to 25% of taxable income and makes 

qualified improvement property generally eligible for 15-year cost-recovery and 100% bonus depreciation. The enactment of 
the CARES Act resulted in two adjustments to our income tax provision for the year ended December 31, 2020, relating to a 
projected 2018 NOL utilization and tax benefits from NOL carrybacks. We have recorded a benefit of $41,561 in our income
tax provision for the year ended December 31, 2020 related to the CARES Act.

Interest Expense

p

Interest expense consists primarily of interest associated with the Company’s issued debt including the amortization of 

debt discounts.  The Company recognizes the amortization of debt discounts and the amortization of interest costs using a
straight-line method which approximates the effective interest method.

Net Loss Per Share 

Basic net loss per share is calculated by dividing net loss by the weighted-average common shares outstanding during

the period.  Diluted net loss per share is calculated by dividing the net loss by the weighted-average shares and dilutive
potential common shares outstanding during the period. Dilutive potential shares consist of dilutive shares issuable and the
exercise or vesting of outstanding stock options, restricted stock units and warrants, respectively, computed using the treasury
stock method. During a period where a net loss is incurred, dilutive potential shares are excluded from the computation of 
dilutive net loss per share, as inclusion is anti-dilutive.

g
Recent Accounting Pronouncements

In February 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-02, Leases (“ASU 2016-02”).  Under ASU 2016-02, lessees will be 
required to recognize the following for all leases (with the exception of short-term leases) at the commencement date: a lease 
liability, which is a lessee’s obligation to make lease payments arising from a lease, measured on a discounted basis; and a 
right-of-use asset, which is an asset that represents the lessee’s right to use, or control the use of, a specified asset for the
lease term.  ASU 2016-02 is effective for the Company for fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2021, and interim
periods within fiscal year 2023.  Early application is permitted.  Lessees must apply a modified retrospective transition 

F-19

approach for leases existing at, or entered into after, the beginning of the earliest comparative period presented in the 
financial statements.  The modified retrospective approach would not require any transition accounting for leases that expired 
before the earliest comparative period presented.  Lessees may not apply a full retrospective transition approach.  The 
Company is currently evaluating the impact of adopting ASU 2016-02 on its consolidated financial statements and 
disclosures.  Based on our preliminary analysis, management expects the Company’s assets and liabilities to increase by the 
present value of the lease payments disclosed in Note 11.

In June 2016, the FASB issued ASU 2016-13, Financial Instruments-Credit Losses (Topic 326): Measurement of 
Credit Losses on Financial Instruments. ASU 2016-13 amends the guidance on the impairment of financial instruments. This 
update adds an impairment model (known as the current expected credit losses model) that is based on expected losses rather 
than incurred losses. Under the new guidance, an entity recognizes, as an allowance, its estimate of expected credit losses. In 
November 2019, ASU 2016-13 was amended by ASU 2019-10 that changed the effective date of ASU 2016-13 to fiscal
years beginning after December 15, 2022, with early adoption permitted. Further, the ASU clarifies that operating lease
receivables are not within the scope of ASC Subtopic 326-20 and should instead be accounted for under the new leasing 
standard, ASC 842. The Company is currently evaluating the impact of adopting ASU 2016-13 on its consolidated financial 
statements and related disclosures.

Recently Implemented Accounting Pronouncements 

y

p

g

In September 2018, the FASB issued ASU No. 2018-07, Stock-based Compensation: Improvements to Nonemployee

Share-based Payment Accounting, which amends the existing accounting standards for share-based payments to
nonemployees. This ASU aligns much of the guidance on measuring and classifying nonemployee awards with that of 
awards to employees. Under the new guidance, the measurement of nonemployee equity awards is fixed on the grant date. 
This ASU became effective for the year ended December 31, 2020 (and interim periods in 2021).  ASU 2018-07 did not 
materially impact the Company’s consolidated financial statements.

In May 2014, the FASB issued Accounting Standards Update (“ASU”) No. 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with 

Customers (“ASU 2014-09”). ASU 2014-09 supersedes the revenue recognition requirements in FASB Topic 605, Revenue 
Recognition. ASU 2014-09 implements a five-step process for customer contract revenue recognition that focuses on transfer 
of control, as opposed to transfer of risk and rewards.  This guidance provides a single, comprehensive accounting model for 
revenue arising from contracts with customers. This guidance supersedes most of the existing revenue recognition guidance, 
including industry-specific guidance. Under this model, revenue is recognized at an amount that a company expects to be 
entitled to upon transferring control of goods or services to a customer, as opposed to when risks and rewards transfer to a 
customer. The new guidance also requires additional disclosures about the nature, timing and uncertainty of revenue and cash 
flow arising from customer contracts, including significant judgments and changes in judgments. We adopted this standard 
beginning January 1, 2019 and used the modified retrospective method of adoption. Under the new guidance, based on the 
nature of our contracts, we continued to recognize revenue in a similar manner as with the former guidance. Additionally, we 
expect the unit of accounting, that is, the identification of performance obligations, will be consistent with current revenue 
guidance. Accordingly, the adoption of this standard did not significantly impact our revenues.  

In August 2016, the FASB issued ASU No. 2016-15, Statement of Cash Flows (Topic 230): Classification of Certain
Cash Receipts and Cash Payments (“ASU 2016-15”), which is intended to reduce the existing diversity in practice in how 
certain cash receipts and cash payments are classified in the statement of cash flows. ASU 2016-15 is effective for fiscal 
years beginning after December 15, 2018, with early adoption permitted, provided that all of the amendments are adopted in 
the same period. The Company’s adoption of this guideline did not have a material effect on the Company’s consolidated 
financial statements.

  In July 2017, the FASB issued Accounting Standards Update No. 2017-11, Accounting for financial instruments with
down rounds features (“ASU 2017-11”), which addressed (I) accounting for certain financial instruments with down round 
features, and (II) replacement of the indefinite deferral for mandatorily redeemable financial instruments of certain nonpublic
entities and certain mandatorily redeemable non-controlling interests with a scope exception. The main provisions of Part I 
of ASU 2017-11 is to change the classification analysis of certain equity-linked financial instruments and embedded features 
with down round features. When determining whether certain financial instruments should be classified as liabilities or equity 
instruments, a down round feature no longer precludes equity classification when assessing whether the instrument is indexed 
to an entity’s own stock. The amendments also clarify existing disclosure requirements for equity-classified instruments. As a
result, a freestanding equity-linked financial instrument or embedded conversion option no longer would be accounted for as 
a derivative liability at fair value as a result of the existence of a down round feature. For freestanding equity classified 
financial instruments, the amendments require entities that present earnings per share (EPS) to recognize the effect of the

F-20

down round feature when it is triggered. That effect is treated as a dividend and as a reduction of income available to 
common shareholders in basic EPS. Under previous US GAAP, the existence of down round features often result in an 
accounting conclusion that the evaluated feature or instrument is not indexed to the entity’s own stock, which results in
classification as a derivative liability. ASU 2017-11 was adopted early by the Company on April 1, 2020, with no
adjustments. The Company’s April 2020 convertible note payable described in Note 8 possesses down round features.

In December 2019, the FASB issued ASU 2019-12, Income Taxes (Topic 740): Simplifying the Accounting for Income 

Taxes (“ASU 2019-12”), an amendment to the guidance on income taxes, which is intended to simplify the accounting for 
income taxes. The amendment eliminates certain exceptions related to the methodology for calculating income taxes on an 
interim period, the approach for intraperiod tax allocation, and the recognition of deferred tax liabilities for outside basis
differences. The amendment also clarifies existing guidance related to the recognition of franchise tax, the evaluation of a 
step up in the tax basis of goodwill, and the effects of enacted changes in tax laws or rates in the effective tax rate 
computation, among other clarifications. The effective date of the standard is annual periods beginning after December 15,
2021, and interim periods within fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2022, with early adoption permitted. The 
Company elected to early adopt ASU 2019-12 prospectively as of July 1, 2020, which did not have a material impact on the 
consolidated financial statements, except for the elimination of the rule that limited the interim tax benefit to the tax benefit ff
expected for the year. The early adoption resulted in the Company recording an additional interim tax benefit of $446,099 for 
the three months ended September 30, 2020.  The adoption did not impact the Company’s annual income tax benefit or 
expense for the year ended December 31, 2020 or the amount of net deferred income tax assets as of December 31, 2020. The 
Company made the election to early adopt because, consistent with the FASB, it believes that it will reduce the time and cost 
associated with income tax accounting and reporting, while not adversely altering the information provided to stakeholders 
on an interim basis. 

NOTE 3 – LONG LIVED INTANGIBLE ASSETS

Concept Development Inc.

p

p

On August 31, 2018, the Company acquired 100% of the outstanding common stock of Concept Development Inc. 
(“CDI”).  The Company paid cash of $646,759 and issued 1,266,364 shares of the Company’s common stock to the CDI
Stockholder for 100% of CDI outstanding common stock. The fair value assigned to the shares of common stock was 
$4,194,673, which was based upon the closing price of OSS’ stock on August 31, 2018 of $3.63 less a discount of 8.75% for 
lack of marketability for a one-year period.  

This transaction was accounted for using the acquisition method pursuant to ASC Topic 805, Business Combinations. 

Accordingly, goodwill was measured as the excess of the total consideration over the amounts assigned to the identifiable
assets acquired and liabilities assumed.

The preliminary determination of fair value for the identifiable net assets acquired in the acquisition was initially 

determined by management after consideration of the results of a third-party appraisal.  At the time of acquisition, 
management preliminarily assessed the value and recorded goodwill of $3,100,361 and other intangible assets of $1,770,000.

Subsequently in April 2019, and within the one year finalization period prescribed by ASC Topic 805, management 

finalized the purchase price allocation, including certain assumptions in the initial financial models used for the 
determination of intangible asset values.  As a result, identified intangible assets were reduced from $1,770,000 to $575,000 
with the difference of $1,195,000 being allocated to goodwill.  The change in identified intangible assets is as follows:

Customer lists and relationships
Trade name
NNon-compete

Preliminary
Valuation

Revised
Valuation

$

$

1,470,000
100,000
200,000
1,770,000

$

$

470,000
90,000
15,000
575,000

$

$

Change
(1,000,000)
(10,000)
(185,000)
(1,195,000)

F-21

 Additionally, as a result of a short-fall in the actual overall financial performance of CDI as compared to plan, a
recurring need for working capital, and a decrease in the Company’s stock price, the Company performed an interim test of 
impairment of goodwill as there was indication that the carrying value of the assets may not be recoverable.  To evaluate 
whether goodwill is impaired, the Company compares the estimated fair value of CDI to CDI’s carrying value, including 
goodwill.  The Company determined that the carrying value of CDI exceeded its estimated fair value thereby requiring the
measurement of the impairment loss.  After consideration of the results of an additional third-party appraisal, it was 
determined by management that the goodwill associated with CDI was impaired by $1,697,394.  As a result, the Company
recognized a charge to operating expenses which is included in the 2019 accompanying consolidated statements of 
operations.

Definite lived intangible assets related to acquisitions are as follows as of December 31, 2020:

Customer lists and relationships
Drawings and technology
Trade name, trademarks & other
NNon-compete

Expected
Life
36 to 60 months
36 months
24 to 36 months
36 months

Remaining
Months
10 to 32 months
0 months
10 months
10 months

Gross
Intangible
Assets
$ 2,084,515
760,207
447,274
246,797
$ 3,538,793

Accumulated
Amortization
$ (1,578,178) $
(760,207)
(355,742)
(182,409)
$ (2,876,536) $

Net
Intangible
Assets
506,337
-
91,532
64,388
662,257

Definite lived intangible assets related to acquisitions are as follows as of December 31, 2019:

Customer lists and relationships
Drawings and technology
Trade name, trademarks & other
NNon-compete

Expected
Life
36 to 60 months
36 months
24 to 36 months
36 months

Remaining
Months
22 to 44 months
0 months
8 to 22 months
22 months

Gross
Intangible
Assets
$ 2,084,515
760,207
447,274
246,797
$ 3,538,793

Accumulated
Amortization
$ (1,109,681) $
(760,207)
(217,570)
(105,143)

Net
Intangible
Assets
974,834
-
229,704
141,654
$ (2,192,601) $ 1,346,192

The amortization expense of the definite lived intangible assets for the years remaining is as follows:

2021

2022

2023

Total

$

556,872

$

63,231

$

42,154

$

662,257

Amortization expense recognized during the year ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 was $683,935 and $984,065, 

respectively.

NOTE 4 – ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE 

Accounts receivable, net consists of the following at December 31: 

Accounts receivable
Unbilled receivables

Less:  allowance for doubtful accounts

December 31,
2020

December 31,
2019

7,491,397
106
7,491,503
(33,120)
7,458,383

$

$

11,655,725
25,432
11,681,157
(14,000)
11,667,157

$

$

Unbilled receivables include amounts associated with percentage of completion and milestone billing accounting,
which includes cost and gross profit earned in excess of billing, not currently billable due to contractual provisions.  The
provision for bad debt expense related to accounts receivable was $20,000 and $7,263 for the years ended December 31,
2020 and 2019, respectively.

F-22

NOTE 5 – INVENTORIES

Inventories, net consist of the following at December 31: 

December 31,
2020

December 31,
2019

Raw materials
Sub-assemblies
Work-in-process
Finished goods

Less:  reserves for obsolete and slow-moving inventories

$

$

5,210,327
255,699
407,328
4,424,603
10,297,957
(650,453)
9,647,504

NOTE 6 – PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT

Q

Property and equipment, net consists of the following at December 31: 

Computers and computer equipment
Furniture and office equipment
Manufacturing equipment and engineering tools
Software implementation
Leasehold improvements
Vehicles

Less:  accumulated depreciation and amortization

December 31,
2020

748,392
329,725
2,710,784
2,203,484
943,194
4,315
6,939,894
(3,452,716)
3,487,178

$

$

$

$

$

$

2,478,882
1,857,004
493,276
3,087,529
7,916,691
(547,335)
7,369,356

December 31,
2019

633,546
340,801
2,501,020
1,709,125
892,097
-
6,076,589
(2,508,025)
3,568,564

During the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, the Company incurred $922,597 and $671,223 of depreciation 

and amortization expense related to property and equipment, respectively.

NOTE 7 – ACCRUED EXPENSES AND OTHER LIABILITIES

Accrued expenses and other liabilities consist of the following at December 31: 

Accrued compensation and related liabilities
Deferred revenue and customer deposits
Warranty reserve
Deferred rent
Other accrued expenses

NOTE 8 – DEBT

Bank Lines of Credit 

December 31,
2020

December 31,
2019

932,988
1,096,672
425,636
312,909
713,239
3,481,444

$

$

1,621,177
1,260,126
424,011
373,354
928,764
4,607,432

$

$

Bressner Technology GmbH has two revolving lines of credit with German institutions totaling €2,200,000 

(US$2,690,184).  Borrowing under the lines of credit bear interest at a variable rate of Euribor plus a stated rate.  The current 
rates for the lines of credit are 3.89% and 4.0%. One million euros of the credit line expires in January 2024, with the
remaining balance being open indefinitely or until occurrence of a defined change of control event.  There were no
outstanding line of credit balances as of December 31, 2020 and 2019.

F-23

Foreign Debt Obligations 

g

g

Bressner Technology GmbH has three term loans outstanding as of December 31, 2020 with a total balance outstanding

of €1,066,446 (US$1,304,063) as follows:

On April 9, 2020, Bressner converted €500,000 of its line of credit from UniCredit Bank to a one year term loan at 

1.9% interest with a balloon payment of principal and interest due upon maturity.  The balance outstanding as of December 
31, 2020 is €500,000 (US$611,406);

Bressner entered into a note payable in June 2019 in the amount of €500,000 (US$586,189) which bears interest at 
1.70% and matured on June 25, 2020 with a balloon payment of principal and interest.  This loan was subsequently extended 
to June 18, 2021, with an interest rate of 1.87% The amount outstanding as of December 31, 2020 and 2019 is €500,000 
(US$611,406) and €508,679 (US$571,095), respectively; 

Bressner entered into a note payable in April 2019 in the amount of €500,000 (US$586,189) which bears interest at 

2.25% and matures on March 30, 2021 with monthly payments of principal and interest of €22,232 (US$24,960). The
balance outstanding as of December 31, 2020 and 2019 is €66,446 (US$81,251) and €328,525 (US$368,835), respectively;

Bressner entered into a note payable in September 2019 in the amount of €300,000 (US$336,810) which bore interest 

at 1.65% and matured on March 24, 2020, with a balloon payment of principal and interest.  The outstanding balance was 
paid in full as of March 31, 2020.  At December 31, 2019, the outstanding balance was €301,650 (US$338,663); and

Bressner entered into a note payable in September 2017, in the amount of €400,000 (US$436,272) which bore interest 
at 2.125% and matured on January 31, 2020 and has been paid in full.  Quarterly principal payments of €25,000 (US$28,068) 
were due in January, April, July and November of 2019.  The balance outstanding as of December 31, 2019 was €25,000 
(US$28,068).

Notes Payable

y

In April 2019, the Company borrowed $350,000 from three individuals for a two-year period at an interest rate of 9.5%

which requires the Company to make monthly principal and interest payments of $16,100 per month.  These loans are 
secured by the assets of the Company.  In connection with these loans, the Company issued to the noteholders warrants to
purchase shares of the Company’s common stock equal to 10% of the original principal at a price per share equal to $2.15 per 
share.  Accordingly, the Company issued to the noteholders warrants to purchase 16,276 shares of the Company’s common
stock at an exercise price of $2.15 per share. The relative fair value of each warrant was $0.90.  The relative fair value of 
warrants was estimated using Black-Scholes with the following weighted-average assumptions: fair value of the Company’s
common stock at issuance of $2.15 per share; five year contractual term; 44.60% volatility; 0.0% dividend rate; and a risk-
free interest rate of 2.307%.  The total relative fair value of the warrants issued is $14,037.  The balance outstanding as of 
December 31, 2020 and 2019 is $63,188 and $241,054, respectively.

Notes Payable – Related Parties

y

In April 2019, the Company borrowed $1,150,000 from three individuals who serve on the Company’s board of 
directors for a two year period at an interest rate of 9.5% which requires the Company to make monthly principal and interest 
payments of $52,900 per month.  These loans are secured by the assets of the Company.  In connection with these loans, the
Company issued to the noteholders warrants to purchase shares of the Company’s common stock equal to 10% of the original
principal at a price per share equal to $2.15 per share.  Accordingly, the Company issued to the noteholders warrants to 
purchase 53,490 shares of the Company’s common stock at an exercise price of $2.15 per share. The relative fair value of 
each warrant was $0.90.  The relative fair value of warrants was estimated using Black-Scholes with the following weighted-
average assumptions: fair value of the Company’s common stock at issuance of $2.15 per share; five year contractual term; 
42.60% volatility; 0.0% dividend rate; and a risk-free interest rate of 2.3067%.  The relative fair value of warrants issued is
$46,121. The balance outstanding as of December 31, 2020 and 2019 is $206,669 and $791,170, respectively.

Paycheck Protection Program Loan

y

g

On April 28, 2020, One Stop Systems, Inc. received authorization pursuant to the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP)
of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (the “CARES Act”) as administered by the U.S. Small Business
Administration (the “SBA”) for a “PPP” loan. On May 11, 2020, the Loan was funded and the Company received proceeds in 
the amount of $1,499,360 (the “PPP Loan”).

F-24

The PPP Loan, which took the form of a two-year promissory note (the “PPP Note”), matures on April 28, 2022 and 

bears interest at a rate of 1.0% per annum. Monthly principal and interest payments, less the amount of any potential 
forgiveness (discussed below), was initially to commence on October 28, 2020. The Company did not provide any collateral 
or guarantees for the PPP Loan, nor did the Company pay any facility charge to obtain the PPP Loan. The PPP Note provides
for customary events of default, including, among others, those relating to failure to make payment, breaches of any term,
obligation, covenant or condition contained in the PPP Note and payment of unauthorized expenses or use of proceeds 
contrary to CARES Act rules. The Company may prepay the principal of the PPP Loan at any time without incurring any
prepayment charges.

Under the original rules, all or a portion of the PPP Loan may be forgiven by the SBA and lender upon application by
the Company beginning 60 days but not later than 120 days after loan approval and upon documentation of expenditures in 
accordance with the SBA requirements. Under the CARES Act, loan forgiveness is available for the sum of documented 
payroll costs, covered rent payments, and covered utilities during the eight-week period beginning on the date of loan 
approval. For purposes of the CARES Act, payroll costs exclude compensation of an individual employee in excess of 
$100,000, prorated annually. Not more than 25% of the forgiven amount may be for non-payroll costs. Forgiveness is 
reduced if full-time headcount declines, or if salaries and wages for employees with salaries of $100,000 or less annually are 
reduced by more than 25%. In the event the PPP Loan, or any portion thereof, is forgiven pursuant to the PPP, the amount 
forgiven is applied to outstanding principal.

However, the original rules governing loans granted under the PPP have been subsequently updated.  The time period 
to spend the received funds has been extended from the original eight weeks to twenty-four weeks.  Payroll is only required 
to be 60%, and the commencement date for the repayment has also been extended accordingly.  The Company has submitted 
an application with the lender to forgive the PPP Loan, in accordance with SBA Procedural Notice, Control No. 5000-20057,
effective as of October 2, 2020 and is awaiting notice of receipt of forgiveness.  Because the Company expects the PPP loan 
to be forgiven in full, all related amounts have been presented as noncurrent liabilities.

Senior Secured Convertible Note:

On April 20, 2020, the Company entered into a Securities Purchase Agreement with an institutional investor, providing 

for the issuance of the Company’s Senior Secured Convertible Promissory Notes with a principal face amount of up to 
$6,000,000.   The notes are, subject to certain conditions, convertible into shares of the Company’s common stock, par value
$0.0001 per share, at an initial conversion price per share of $2.50. The notes will be issued with a 10% original issue 
discount.

At the initial closing of this offering, the Company issued notes of $3,000,000, and can consummate additional closings

of up to $3,000,000, subject to the prior satisfaction of certain closing conditions which have been satisfied. The initial 
investor purchased the notes for an aggregate purchase price of $2,700,000 at the initial closing.  The notes bear no interest 
rate (except upon event of default) and, unless earlier converted or redeemed, will mature on April 1, 2022.

The Notes are convertible at any time, in whole or in part, at the option of the investors, into shares of common stock at 

the initial conversion price of $2.50 per share. The conversion price is subject to adjustment for issuances of securities below
the conversion price then in effect and for stock splits, combinations or similar events. If immediately following the close of 
business on the six month anniversary of the issuance date of each note, the conversion price then in effect exceeds 135% of 
the volume weighted average price VWAP (the “Market Price”), the initial conversion price under any such note will be 
automatically lowered to the Market Price.

Commencing July 1, 2020, the Company has made monthly amortization payments equal to 1/22nd of the initial
principal, any accrued and unpaid interest and late charges and any deferred or accelerated amount, of such note, which may
be satisfied in cash at a redemption price equal to 105% of such installment amount (110% of such installment amount on 
notes issued at additional closings).  As of December 31, 2020, the holder has elected to defer receipt of three installment 
payments as allowed per the agreement.

Subject to the satisfaction of certain equity conditions set forth in the notes, installment amounts may be satisfied in

shares of our common stock, with such installment conversion at a conversion price equal to the lower of (i) the conversion 
price then in effect and (ii) the greater of (x) the floor price of $1.00 (80% of the Nasdaq market price at date of purchase 
agreement) and (y) the lower of (I) 82.5% the volume weighted average price of our common stock on the trading day 
immediately before the applicable installment date and (II) 82.5% of the quotient of (A) the sum of the volume weighted 
average price of our common stock for each of the three (3) trading days with the lowest volume weighted average price of 
our common stock during the twenty (20) consecutive trading day period ending and including the trading day immediately

F-25

prior to the applicable installment date, divided by (B) three (3). Shares of our common stock to be issued with respect to any 
such installment will be pre-delivered on the second trading day after the applicable installment notice date (as defined in the
notes) with a true-up on the applicable installment date. The market value of any installment amount below the floor price 
will be cash settled on the applicable installment date.

Management evaluated the embedded conversion feature to determine whether bifurcation was required as a separate 
derivative liability.  Management first determined that the conversion feature was not within the scope of ASC 480. It then 
determined that the embedded derivative should be separated from the host instrument and accounted for as a derivative 
instrument because it met the criteria of ASC 815-15-25-1, primarily because the contract provides for delivery of an asset 
that puts the recipient in substantially the same position as net settlement.  However, in part due to the Company’s adoption
of ASC 2017-11 on April 1, 2020, which allowed management to disregard the down round provisions of the conversion 
feature, management determined that a scope exception to derivative accounting existed by satisfying the additional 
conditions necessary for equity classification specified by ASC 815-10-15-74 and ASC 815-40-25.  As a result of 
management’s analysis, the conversion feature was not accounted for separately from the debt instrument and the Company 
will recognize the contingent beneficial conversion feature when, or if, such is triggered.

The original issue discount of 10% on the Senior Secured Convertible Note was recorded as a debt discount, decreasing 
the note payable.  This debt discount is amortized to interest expense using the effective interest rate method over the term of 
the loan.  For the year ended December 31, 2020, total debt discount amortization was $168,395, and such amount is 
included in interest expense in the accompanying consolidated statements of operations.

Debt issuance costs in the amount of $316,274 related to this indebtedness were deducted from the face value of the 
note.  Such costs are amortized to interest expense using the effective interest rate method over the term of the loan.  Total 
debt issuance costs amortized during the year ended December 31, 2020 was $177,530, and such amount is included in
interest expense in the accompanying consolidated statements of operations.

Debt Discount 

The relative fair value of warrants issued in connection with the notes payable described above were recorded as debt 

discount, decreasing notes payable and related-party notes payable and increasing additional paid-in-capital on the 
accompanying consolidated balance sheets.  The debt discounts are being amortized to interest expense over the term of the 
corresponding notes payable using the straight-line method which approximates the effective interest method.

For the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, total debt discount amortization was $30,079 and $21,303, 
respectively, and such amounts are included in interest expense in the accompanying consolidated statements of operations.

A summary of outstanding debt obligations as of December 31, 2020 is as follows:

Loan Description
Domestic:

Notes payable - third party
Related party notes payable
Convertible senior secured
   note
PPP loan

Foreign:

Uni Credit Bank AG
Uni Credit Bank AG
Uni Credit Bank AG

Current
Interest Rate

Maturity
Date

Balance (€)

Balance ($)

Current
Portion

Long-term
Portion

9.50%
9.50%

10% OID
1.00%

1.87%
2.25%
1.90%

April-21
April-21

April-22
April-22

June-21
March-21
April-21

€€

€€

€€

€€

-
-

-
-
-

500,000
66,446
500,000
1,066,446

$

$

$

$

$

63,188
206,669

2,590,908
1,499,360
4,360,125

611,406
81,251
611,406
1,304,063

5,664,188

$

$

$

$

$

63,188
206,669

2,045,454
-
2,315,311

611,406
81,251
611,406
1,304,063

3,619,374

$

$

$

$

$

-
-

545,454
1,499,360
2,044,814

-
-
-
-

2,044,814

F-26

Outstanding debt obligations as of December 31, 2020 consist of the following:

Year Ended December 31, 2020
Current portion:
Principal
Less discount
Less loan origination costs

Net liability

Long-term portion:
Principal
Less discount
Less loan origination costs

Net liability

Total:

Principal
Less discount
Less loan origination costs

Net liability

$

$

$

$

$

$

Related
Parties

Third
Parties

Convertible
Note

PPP Loan

Foreign

Total

206,669
(6,726)
-
199,943

-
-
-
-

206,669
(6,726)
-
199,943

$

$

$

$

$

$

63,188
(2,047)
-
61,141

-
-
-
-

63,188
(2,047)
-
61,141

$

$

$

$

$

$

2,045,454
(124,738)
(131,504)
1,789,212

545,454
(6,867)
(7,240)
531,347

2,590,908
(131,605)
(138,744)
2,320,559

$

$

$

$

$

$

-
-
-
-

1,499,360
-
-
1,499,360

1,499,360
-
-
1,499,360

$

$

$

$

$

$

1,304,063
-
-
1,304,063

-
-
-
-

1,304,063
-
-
1,304,063

$

$

$

$

$

$

3,619,374
(133,511)
(131,504)
3,354,359

2,044,814
(6,867)
(7,240)
2,030,707

5,664,188
(140,378)
(138,744)
5,385,066

Total future payments under the notes payable and related notes payable described above as of December 31, 2020 are 

as follows:

Year Ending December 31,
2021
2022

Total minimum payments
Current portion of notes
   payable

Notes payable, net of
   current portion

$

$

Related
Parties

Third
Parties

$

206,669
-
206,669

63,188
-
63,188

$

Convertible
Note
2,045,454
545,454
2,590,908

PPP Loan

Foreign

$

$

-
1,499,360
1,499,360

1,304,063
-
1,304,063

$

Total
3,619,374
2,044,814
5,664,188

Discount / 
Loan 
Original 
Costs

$

(265,015)
(14,107)
(279,122)

(206,669)

(63,188)

(2,045,454)

-

(1,304,063)

(3,619,374)

265,015

-

$

-

$

545,454

$

1,499,360

$

-

$

2,044,814

$

(14,107)

NOTE 9 – STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY 

Q

The Company’s amended and restated certificate of incorporation filed on December 14, 2017, authorizes the 

Company to issue 10,000,000 shares of preferred stock and 50,000,000 shares of common stock.   

Common Stock

The voting, dividend and liquidation rights of the holders of the common stock are subject to rights of preferred 
stockholders, if any, as designated by the Board of Directors.  Common stockholders have voting rights at all meetings of 
stockholders and are entitled to one vote for each share held subject to certain limitations otherwise required by law.  
Dividends may be declared and paid on the common stock as and when determined by the Board of Directors subject to any
preferential dividend or other rights of preferred stockholders.  The Company does not anticipate declaring any dividends in 
the foreseeable future.  Upon the dissolution or liquidation of the Company, common stockholders are entitled to receive all 
assets of the Company, subject to any preferential or other rights of preferred stockholders.

Preferred Stock

Preferred Stock may be issued from time to time in one or more series, each of these series to have such terms as stated 

or expressed in resolutions providing for the issue of such series adopted by the Board of Directors. There is no outstanding
preferred stock. 

F-27

Regarding unissued preferred stock, the Board of Directors is authorized to determine or alter any or all of the rights,
preferences, privileges and restrictions granted to or imposed upon wholly unissued series of preferred stock, and to fix or 
alter the number of shares comprising any such series and the designation thereof, or any of them, and to provide for rights
and terms of redemption or conversion of the shares of any such series.

Stock Options

p

The Company maintained a stock option plan that was established in 2000 (“2000 Plan”).  In November 2008, the 
Company increased the maximum number of shares of the Company's common stock that were issuable under the 2000 Plan
to 3,000,000 shares of the Company's common stock.  The 2000 Plan has expired, and no future grants may be awarded 
under the 2000 Plan. 

In December 2011, the Company adopted a stock option plan (“2011 Plan”) under which the Company may issue up to 

1,500,000 shares of the Company’s common stock and, as of December 31, 2020, the Company had 240,000 shares of 
common stock remaining unissued under the 2011 Plan. The 2011 Plan was terminated by the Board of Directors on 
October 10, 2017, and accordingly, no shares are available for issuance under the 2011 Plan. The 2011 Plan will continue to 
govern outstanding awards granted thereunder.

In December 2015, the Company adopted a stock option plan (“2015 Plan”) under which the Company may issue up to 

1,500,000 shares of the Company’s common stock and, as of December 31, 2020, the Company had 790,000 shares of 
common stock remaining unissued under the 2015 Plan. The 2015 Plan was terminated by the Board of Directors on 
October 10, 2017, and accordingly, no shares are available for issuance under the 2015 Plan. The 2015 Plan will continue to 
govern outstanding awards granted thereunder.

The terms of the 2011 Plan and 2015 Plan provided for the grant of incentive options to employees and non-statutory 

options to employees, directors and consultants of the Company.   

The Board of Directors adopted the 2017 Equity Incentive Plan on October 10, 2017 (the “2017 Plan”). The 2017 Plan
allows for the grant of a variety of equity vehicles to provide flexibility in implementing equity awards, including incentive 
stock options, non-qualified stock options, restricted stock grants, unrestricted stock grants and restricted stock units and 
stock bonuses and performance-based awards.  On December 18, 2017, the Company stockholders approved the “2017 Plan” 
under which the Company may issue up to 1,500,000 shares of the Company’s common stock.  The Company has 26,235
shares of common stock remaining unissued under the 2017 Plan.

The exercise price per share for options under the 2011 Plan, 2015 Plan and 2017 Plan is determined by the Company’s 
Board of Directors, for incentive stock options the exercise price shall not be less than the fair market value of the Company's 
common stock on the date of grant, except that for incentive options granted to an owner/employee with a greater than 10%
ownership interest in the Company, the exercise price shall not be less than 110% of the fair market value of the Company's 
common stock on the date of grant.

Options under the plans expire no more than ten years after the date of grant and/or within five years after the date of 

the grant for incentive options granted to an owner/employee with a greater than 10% ownership interest in the Company.
Effective June 24, 2020, the Company entered into an employment agreement with Mr. Raun to serve as the 

Company’s president and chief executive officer. Pursuant to the terms of the employment agreement, Mr. Raun is entitled to 
receive 412,125 restricted stock units (“RSUs”) that shall vest over three years, with one third of the RSUs vesting following 
the one-year anniversary of the date of grant, and the remaining RSUs vesting in four equal installments, commencing six 
months after the one-year anniversary of the date of grant and every six months thereafter until fully vested; and 412,125
Incentive Stock Options (“ISOs”) pursuant to the Company’s 2017 Equity Incentive Plan, whereby the exercise price for the 
ISOs shall be no less than the fair market value of the Company’s common stock at the date of grant, ($2.14). 

The ISOs shall vest at the end of each the second and fourth quarters, the price of the Company’s common stock as of 
the end of quarter two or quarter four, as applicable, shall be determined using the ten-day trailing volume weighted average
price (“VWAP”) after reporting of quarter two and quarter four earnings, as applicable.  The date of each such determination 
shall be referred to as a “Determination Date.”  If on any Determination Date the Company’s stock price has increased from 
the prior Determination Date, then a portion of the ISOs shall become vested.  The number of ISOs that shall become vested 
on a Determinate Date is determined as follows:  ((Price at Determination Date – Price at prior Determination Date) x 100) *
1,177.52 = Vested ISOs.  If on any Determination Date the Company’s stock price is $5.50 per share, all ISOs shall
immediately become vested.

F-28

In the event that Mr. Raun’s employment agreement is terminated for a reason other than “good cause” or for “good 

reason”, Mr. Raun, upon executing an effective waiver and release of claims, unvested RSUs shall accelerate so that an
additional twelve (12) months of RSUs shall vest from the termination date. 

A summary of stock option activity under the plans during the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 are as 

follows:

Stock Options Outstanding
Weighted
Average
Remaining
Contractual
Life
(in years)

Weighted
Average
Exercise
Price

Outstanding at January 1, 2019

Granted
Forfeited / Canceled
Exercised

Outstanding at December 31, 2019

Granted
Forfeited / Canceled
Exercised

Outstanding at December 31, 2020
Exercisable at December 31, 2020
Vested and expected to vest at December 31, 2020

Number of
Shares
$
2,018,747
$
106,000
(62,000) $
(376,303) $
$
1,686,444
$
432,125
(38,197) $
(760,105) $
$
1,320,267
$
842,871
$
1,305,945

1.13
2.14
2.04
0.46
1.13
2.17
2.32
0.88
1.81
1.56
1.81

Aggregate
Intrinsic
Value
$ 2,013,516

4.08

4.84

$ 2,013,516

6.43
4.81
6.40

$ 2,889,274
$ 2,060,542
$ 2,864,412

The following table summarizes information about common stock options outstanding as of December 31, 2020: 

Plan
2011
2015
2017

Exercise Price
Range
$0.46-$0.80
$1.78-$1.95
$2.14-$4.09

Stock Options Outstanding
Weighted
Average
Remaining
Contractual
Life
(in years)

Stock Options Exercisable
Weighted
Average
Remaining
Contractual
Life
(in years)

Number of
Shares
Exercisable

Weighted
Average
Exercise
Price

Weighted
Average
Exercise
Price

2.15
6.00
9.01

$
$
$

0.63
1.74
2.49

309,895
423,881
109,095
842,871

2.15
6.00
7.73

$
$
$

0.63
1.74
3.48

Number of
Shares
Outstanding
309,895
424,610
585,762
1,320,267

The following table presents details of the assumptions used to calculate the weighted-average grant date fair value of 

common stock options granted by the Company:

Expected term (in years)
Expected volatility
Risk-free interest rate
Weighted average grant date fair value per share
Grant date fair value of options vested
Intrinsic value of options exercised

For the Year Ended December 31,

2020

5.04
43.5 - 47.8%

0.33%
0.83
554,575
2,370,491

$
$
$

$
$
$

2019

4.6 - 5.9
43.7 - 44.4 %
2.30 - 2.49%
1.09
706,417
559,237

As of December 31, 2020, the amount of unearned stock-based compensation estimated to be expensed from 2020 
through 2029 related to unvested common stock options is $325,414, net of estimated forfeitures. The weighted-average 
period over which the unearned stock-based compensation is expected to be recognized is 2.18 years.

If there are any modifications or cancellations of the underlying unvested awards, the Company may be required to 

accelerate, increase or cancel any remaining unearned stock-based compensation expense or calculate and record additional 

F-29

expense.  Future stock-based compensation expense and unearned stock-based compensation will increase to the extent that 
the Company grants additional common stock options or other stock-based awards.

Exercise of Stock Options

p

During the year ended December 31, 2020, the Company issued 314,236 shares of common stock for proceeds of 

$86,892 in cash related to the exercise of stock options.  Of the total shares issued, 240,381 shares of common stock were
issued as a cashless exercise of stock options.

During the year ended December 31, 2019, the Company issued 350,587 shares of common stock for proceeds of 

$47,334, in cash related to the exercise of stock options.  Of the total shares issued, 273,600 shares of common stock were
issued as a cashless exercise of stock options.

Restricted Stock Units

Restricted stock units may be granted at the discretion of the compensation committee of the Board of Directors under 
the 2017 Plan in connection with the hiring and retention of personnel and are subject to certain conditions.  Restricted stock 
units generally vest quarterly over a period of three years and are typically forfeited if employment is terminated before the
restricted stock unit vest.  The compensation expense related to the restricted stock units is calculated as the fair value of the
common stock on the grant date and is amortized to expense over the vesting period and is adjusted for estimated forfeitures.

The Company’s restricted stock unit activity for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 is as follows:

Unvested at January 1, 2019

Granted
Vested
Canceled

Unvested at December 31, 2019

Granted
Vested
Canceled

Unvested at December 31, 2020

Restricted Stock Units

Number of
Shares

Weighted
Average Grant
Date Fair Value

$
173,335
$
167,500
(116,665) $
(7,500) $
$
216,670
$
554,251
(151,251) $
(43,748) $
$
575,922

4.13
2.43
(3.86)
(2.34)
3.02
2.63
3.16
2.43
2.65

During the year ended December 31, 2020, the Company issued 123,440 restricted stocks units, net of 27,811 units
retained for income tax purposes.  As of December 31, 2020, there was $918,475 of unrecognized compensation cost related 
to unvested restricted stock units which is expected to be recognized over a weighted average period of 2.22 years.

Stock-based compensation expense for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 was comprised of the following:

Stock-based compensation classified as:

General and administrative
Production
Marketing and selling
Research and development

Warrants 

For the Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

556,935
65,631
65,580
36,232
724,378

$

$

469,714
70,243
59,486
50,026
649,469

$

$

  In connection with the issuance of notes payable and related notes payable in April 2019, the Company issued 

warrants to debt holders’ share of common stock at an exercise price of $2.15 per share.  See Note 8.

F-30

The following table summarizes the Company’s warrant activity during the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019: 

Warrants outstanding – January 1, 2019

Warrants granted
Warrants exercised

Warrants outstanding – December 31, 2019

Warrants granted
Warrants exercised

Warrants outstanding – December 31, 2020

NOTE 10 – EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLAN

Number of
Warrants

Weighted
Average
Exercise Price

578,996
$
$
69,766
(17,815) $
$
630,947
$
-
(125,001) $
$
505,946

4.32
2.15
1.40
4.16
-
0.76
5.00

The Company has a 401(k) retirement plan. Under the terms of the plan, eligible employees may defer up to 20% of 
their pre-tax earnings, subject to the Internal Revenue Service annual contribution limit. Additionally, the plan allows for 
discretionary matching contributions by the Company.  In 2020 and 2019, the matching contributions were 100% of the 
employee's contribution up to a maximum of 5% of the employee’s annual compensation.  During the years ended December 
31, 2020 and 2019, the Company contributed $124,993 and $376,878, respectively to the 401(k) Plan.  As of May 2020, the 
Company suspended matching contributions to the 401(k) as part of its cost containment program.

NOTE 11 – COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

Legalg

We are subject to litigation, claims, investigations, and audits arising from time to time in the ordinary course of our
r 

bbusiness.

On September 29, 2020, the Company’s former Chief Executive Officer, Stephen D. Cooper, commenced an action

p

p

entitled Stephen D. Cooper v. One Stop Systems, Inc. et al, in San Diego County Superior Court, Case No. 37-2020-
00034492-CU-BC-CTL.  Mr. Cooper alleges claims for (1) breach of written contract and (2) violation of California Labor 
Code Sections 201 and 203 in connection with the Company’s alleged failure to pay unpaid wages and an earned bonus
following the Company’s termination of Mr. Cooper’s employment with the Company in February 2020. Mr. Cooper seeks 
unspecified compensatory damages and statutory penalties.

p y

,

The Company has denied Mr. Cooper’s allegations. On December 8, 2020, the Company filed a cross-complaint 
(“Cross Complaint”) against Mr. Cooper for (1) breach of contract (in connection with a binding commitment letter and Mr.
Cooper’s employment agreement), (2) intentional misrepresentation, (3) negligent misrepresentation, and (4) breach of 
fiduciary duty. The Company is seeking compensatory damages, punitive damages, pre-judgment interest, attorneys’ fees, 
and the cost of suit incurred in connection with Mr. Cooper’s complaint and the Cross Complaint. The Company intends to
vigorously defend all allegations. 

Guarantees and Indemnities

The Company has made certain indemnities, under which it may be required to make payments to an indemnified 

party, in relation to certain transactions.  The Company indemnifies its directors, officers, employees and agents to the 
maximum extent permitted under the laws of the State of Delaware.  In connection with its facility lease, the Company has 
indemnified its lessor for certain claims arising from the use of the facilities.  Also, in connection with the terms of 
Bressner’s credit agreements (Note 8), the Company has agreed to indemnify its lender and others related to the use of the 
proceeds and other matters.  The duration of the indemnities varies, and in many cases is indefinite.  These indemnities do not 
provide for any limitation of the maximum potential future payments the Company could be obligated to make.  Historically, 
the Company has not been obligated to make any payments for these obligations and no liabilities have been recorded for 
these indemnities in the accompanying consolidated balance sheets.

F-31

Leases 

The Company leases its offices, manufacturing, and warehouse facility in San Diego County under a non-cancelable 

operating lease. Our corporate headquarters are in a leased space comprising of approximately 29,342 square feet in 
Escondido, California under a lease that was modified in February 2019 and expires in August 2024.  The Company also 
lease a 3,208 square foot facility in Salt Lake City, Utah that houses our Ion software development team. The Company is the 
lessee of 12,880 square feet located in Irvine, California with the lease expiring in June 2021.  Bressner Technology leases
space comprising of 8,073 square feet on a month-to-month basis.  

For the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, rent expense was $673,089 and $692,158, respectively.  

Future annual minimum rental commitments under operating leases as of December 31, 2020 are as follows:

Year Ending December 31,
2021
2022
2023
2024
Thereafter
Total minimum lease payments

$

$

Amount payable

526,339
302,362
311,433
211,734
-
1,351,868

NOTE 12 – RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS 

In April 2019, certain members of the Company’s Board of Directors executed definitive agreements to commit funds
of up to $4,000,000 as a credit facility. The Company initially borrowed $1,150,000 from members of the Board of Directors
and $350,000 from other shareholders for a two year period at an interest rate of 9.5% which requires the Company to make
monthly principal and interest payment of $69,000 per month. In connection with these loans, the Company issued to these
note holders warrants to purchase shares of the Company’s common stock equal to 10% of the original principal as a price 
per share equal to $2.15 per share.  Accordingly, the Company issued to these note holders warrants to purchase 69,766 share 
of the Company’s common stock.  The relative fair value of the warrants issued was $60,158.  Additionally, the Company 
paid a 1% loan origination fee and a monthly commitment fee of 0.25% on unused committed funds through the term of the
loan.

The Company engages an advertising firm whose president was a member of the Board of Directors of the Company 

during 2019 and though June 3, 2020. Amounts paid to this company are included in marketing and selling expense in the
accompanying consolidated statements of operations and for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, totaled $33,000 
and $40,006, respectively. 

The Company has appointed certain stockholders to the Board of Directors.  Director fees paid by the Company, 
including stock-based compensation, for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 totaled $271,200 and $160,726, 
respectively, and are included in general and administrative expenses in the accompanying consolidated statements of 
operations.

The Company has engaged a related-party law firm (a principal of that firm owns shares in the Company) to provide

legal services. Legal fees paid to this firm for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 totaled $9,000 and $37,800, 
respectively, and are included in general and administrative expenses in the accompanying consolidated statements of 
operations.  

Interest expense on all related-party notes payable for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 totaled $50,298 

and $67,197, respectively.

Effective August 1, 2016, the Company entered into a management services agreement with a company owned by the 

former Chief Executive Officer of Magma.  The agreement calls for payments of $180,000 per year for the first two years 
paid in monthly installments.  In year three, the amount is reduced to $37,500 for the year paid in monthly installments.  
Additionally, the Company granted 30,000 options in conjunction with execution of this agreement.  Payments for the year 
ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 were $0 and $21,875, respectively.

F-32

NOTE 13 – INCOME TAXES

For the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, pre-tax income (loss) was attributed to the following jurisdictions:

Domestic operations
Foreign operations

For the Years Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$

$

(760,603) $
150,315
(610,288) $

(947,350)
284,265
(663,085)

Set forth below is the (benefit) provision for income taxes for the years ended December 31:

Current:

Federal
State
International

Deferred:

Federal
State
International

Total (benefit) provision for income taxes

For the Years Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$

$

(26,951) $
16,058
149,958
139,065

(563,107)
(180,059)
357
(742,809)
(603,744) $

-
19,676
439,662
459,338

(164,662)
(57,424)
-
(222,086)
237,252

The reconciliation of the (benefit) provision for income taxes computed at federal statutory rates to the (benefit)

provision for income taxes for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 are as follows:

Provision at federal statutory rates (21% applied to earnings before income
  taxes)
State income taxes, net of federal benefit
Other permanent items
Research and development credits
Stock based compensation
Amortization and impairment
Uncertain tax positions
Other

For the Years Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$

$

(128,161) $
7,685
(164,300)
(364,843)
(178,552)
132,934
48,492
43,001

(603,744) $

(200,212)
38,764
320,208
(510,568)
(48,499)
550,454
54,452
32,653
237,252

F-33

Deferred income taxes reflect the net tax effect of temporary differences between the carrying amount of assets and 
liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for income tax purposes.  Significant components of deferred 
taxes as of December 31, 2020 and 2019 were as follows:

Deferred tax assets:

Reserves
Deferred compensation
Stock compensation
Deferred revenue
Inventories
Credits and loss carryforward

Total deferred tax assets before valuation allowance
Less:  valuation allowance
Total deferred tax assets

Deferred tax liabilities:

Property and equipment
Intangible assets
Other

Total deferred tax liabilities

Deferred tax assets
Valuation allowance

Net deferred assets

For the Years Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$

$

23,735
166,740
183,742
132,814
212,226
4,314,653
5,033,910
-
5,033,910

(229,042)
(602,277)
(327,288)
(1,158,607)
3,875,303
(176,710)
3,698,593

$

$

21,677
66,460
191,855
126,428
182,189
3,794,279
4,382,888
(178,593)
4,204,295

(369,004)
(527,447)
(288,021)
(1,184,472)
3,019,823
-
3,019,823

The ultimate realization of deferred tax assets is dependent upon the generation of future taxable income during the

periods in which those differences become deductible.  Management considers the scheduled reversals of deferred tax 
liabilities, projected future taxable income and tax planning strategies in making this assessment.  Management believes that 
it is more likely than not that the Company will realize the benefits of the net deferred tax assets as of December 31, 2020 
and 2019.

The Company files income tax returns in the U.S. federal jurisdiction, California, Arizona, Idaho, Massachusetts, 

Texas, and Utah and Germany and has open tax statutes for U.S. federal taxes for the years ended December 31, 2016 
through 2020.  For California, the open tax statutes are for years December 31, 2017 through 2020, and for Germany, the
open years include December 31, 2017 through 2020.

The Company has Pre-2017 Federal net operating loss (“NOL”) carryforwards of $1,111,176.  The Company may use

these NOL carryforwards to offset Federal taxable income in future years through 2037, when the last (Pre-2017) NOL 
carryforwards expire.  The Company also has a Post-2017 Federal NOL carryforward as of December 31, 2020 and 2019, of 
$4,916,876 and $3,934,533, respectively.  The Company may use these Post-2017 NOL carryforwards indefinitely to offset 
80% of Federal taxable income in future years.  In addition, the Company has state NOL carryforwards of $2,366,620.  State
NOLs will carry forward through at least 2038 and may be used to offset future state taxable income.

F-34

As of December 31, 2020 and 2019, the Company has $1,706,344 and $1,430,122, respectively, of Federal tax credit 

carryforwards which begin to expire in 2026 and state credit carryforwards of $1,479,256 and $1,290,046, respectively,
which carryforward indefinitely. 

As of December 31, 2020, unrecognized tax benefits associated with uncertain tax positions was $371,688, and such

amount is included in other accrued expenses and other liabilities in the accompanying consolidated balance sheets.  If 
recognized, this would affect the Company’s effective tax rate.  

A reconciliation of the beginning and ending amount of unrecognized tax benefits is as follows:

Unrecognized tax benefits balance at December 31, 2018
Gross increases for tax positions of the current year
Unrecognized tax benefits balance at December 31, 2019
Gross increases for tax positions of the current year
Unrecognized tax benefits balance at December 31, 2020

$

$

262,784
54,452
317,236
54,452
371,688

The liability for uncertain tax positions is reviewed quarterly and adjusted as events occur that affect potential 
liabilities for additional taxes, such as lapsing of applicable statutes of limitations, proposed assessments by tax authorities, 
negotiations with taxing authorities, identification of new issues, and enactment of new legislation, regulations or 
promulgation of new case law.  Management believes that adequate amounts of tax and related interest, if any, have been 
provided for any adjustments that may result from these examinations of uncertain tax positions.  The Company does not 
expect the liability for uncertain tax positions to change significantly over the next year.  The Company’s practice is to 
recognize interest and/or penalties related to income tax matters in income tax expense.

As of December 31, 2020, we had $3,698,593 in net deferred tax assets (DTAs). These DTAs include $3,185,600 of 

tax credit carryforwards and $1,474,896 related to net operating loss carryforwards that can be used to offset taxable income
in future periods and reduce our income taxes payable in those future periods.  At this time, we consider it more likely than 
not that we will have sufficient taxable income in the future that will allow us to realize these DTAs. However, it is possible
that economic conditions may decrease the likelihood that we will have sufficient taxable income in the future. Therefore,
unless we are able to generate sufficient taxable income from our operations, a substantial valuation allowance to reduce our 
U.S. DTAs may be required, which would materially increase our noncash income tax expenses in the period the allowance is 
recognized and materially adversely affect our consolidated results of operations and financial condition.

NOTE 14 –NET LOSS PER SHARE

Basic and diluted net loss per share was calculated as follows for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019:

Basic and diluted net loss per share:

Numerator:
Net loss
Denominator:

Weighted average common shares outstanding - basic
Effect of dilutive securities
Weighted average common shares outstanding - diluted

NNet loss per common share:

Basic
Diluted

For the Year Ended December 31,

2020

2019

$

(6,544)

$

(900,337)

16,512,203
-
16,512,203

15,148,613
-
15,148,613

$
$

(0.00)
(0.00)

$
$

(0.06)
(0.06)

NOTE 15 – SEGMENT AND GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION 

The Company operates in two reportable segments: the design and manufacture of high-performance customized 
computers and flash arrays, in-flight entertainment & connectivity and value-added reseller with minimal customization. The 
Company evaluates financial performance on a company-wide basis. 

F-35

Segment detail for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019 is as follows:

Revenues
Cost of revenues
Gross profit
Gross profit %

Total operating expenses
(Loss) income from 
operations

For the Year Ended December 31, 2020
Bressner
$ 18,245,369
(14,378,987)
3,866,382

OSS
$ 33,650,019
(21,081,787)
12,568,232

Total
$ 51,895,388
(35,460,774)
16,434,614

For the Year Ended December 31, 2029
Bressner
$ 18,252,611
(14,142,944)
4,109,667

OSS
$ 40,055,408
(24,762,812)
15,292,596

Total
$ 58,308,019
(38,905,756)
19,402,263

37.3%
(13,129,857)

21.2%
(3,729,038)

31.7%
(16,858,895)

38.2%
(16,391,427)

22.5%
(3,789,855)

33.3%
(20,181,282)

$

(561,625)

$

137,344

$

(424,281)

$

(1,098,831)

$

319,812

$

(779,019)

Revenue from customers with non-U.S. billing addresses represented approximately 56% and 62% of the Company’s 

revenue for the years ended December 31, 2020 and 2019, respectively.

As of December 31, 2020, substantially all the Company’s long-lived assets were located in the United States of 

America, with the exception of assets of $238,211 located in Germany.

Q
NOTE 16 – SUBSEQUENT EVENTS 

  The Company has evaluated subsequent events after the consolidated balance sheet date of December 31, 2020
through the date of filing.  Based upon the Company’s evaluation, management has determined that, no subsequent events
have occurred that would require recognition in the accompanying consolidated financial statements or disclosure in the notes 
thereto, other than as disclosed in the accompanying notes and as set forth below:

On March 1, 2021, the Company entered into a Securities Purchase Agreement with an accredited investor, pursuant to 

which the Company agreed to issue and sell, in a registered direct offering, 1,497,006 shares of the Company’s common 
stock, par value $0.0001 per share, to the purchaser at an offering price of $6.68 per share. The registered offering was
conducted pursuant to the Company’s effective shelf registration statement on Form S-3 (Registration No. 333-231513), 
which was initially filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 15, 2019; and was declared effective on June
19, 2019.  As compensation for their services, the Company paid to the placement agents a fee equal to 7% of the gross 
proceeds received by the Company as a result of the registered offering, and reimbursed the placement agents for certain
expenses incurred in connection with such offering. The Company estimates that the net proceeds from the registered 
offering will be approximately $9.25 million after deducting certain fees due to the placement agents’ and the Company’s
estimated transaction expenses. The net proceeds received by the Company will be used for general corporate and working 
capital purposes.

F-36

Exhibit
Number

Exhibit Index

Description

p

   2.1 (1)

Agreement and Plan of Merger and Reorganization, dated August 22, 2018, with Concept Development Inc.

   2.2 (2)

Share Purchase Agreement, dated October 31, 2018, with Bressner Technology GmbH.

   3.1 (3)

Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation (currently in effect).

   3.2 (4)

Bylaws, as amended (currently in effect).

   4.1 (5)

Second Amended and Restated Investors’ Rights Agreement, dated January 2007.

   4.2 (5)

Common Shareholder Piggyback Registration Rights Agreement, dated July 15, 2016.

 10.1+ (6)

Form of Indemnification Agreement between One Stop Systems, Inc. and each its directors and executive 
officers.

 10.2+ (5) One Stop Systems, Inc. 2000 Stock Option Plan and related form agreements.

 10.3+ (5) One Stop Systems, Inc. 2011 Stock Option Plan and related form agreements.

 10.4+ (5) One Stop Systems, Inc. 2015 Stock Option Plan and related form agreements.

 10.5+ (5) One Stop Systems, Inc. 2017 Stock Equity Incentive Plan and related form agreements. 

 10.6 (12)

Amendment No. 1 to the 2017 Stock Equity Incentive Plan.

 10.7 (6)

Lease Agreement dated October 21, 2004, as amended.

 10.8 (1)

Piggyback Registration Rights Agreement by and between One Stop Systems, Inc. and James M. Reardon, 
dated August 31, 2018.

 10.9 (7)

Form of Binding Commitment Letter.

 10.10 (8)

Executive Employment Agreement between One Stop Systems, Inc., and David Raun, dated March 24, 2020.

 10.11 (9)

Form of Senior Secured Convertible Promissory Note.

 10.12 (9)

Form of Securities Purchase Agreement, dated April 20, 2020, by and between the Company and the investors.

 10.13 (9)

 10.14 (9)

Form of Security Agreement, dated April 20, 2020, by and between the Company, certain of its subsidiaries 
and the investors.

Form of Intercreditor Agreement, dated April 20, 2020, by and between the Company, the investors and certain 
secured parties.

 10.15 (10) Senior Secured Convertible Promissory Note, dated April 24, 2020, by and between the Company and the 

investor.

 10.16 (11) Promissory Note, dated as of April 28, 2020, by and between One Stop Systems, Inc., as Borrower, and Cache 

Valley Bank, as Lender.

 10.17 (12) Employment Agreement between One Stop Systems, Inc., and David Raun, dated June 24, 2020.

 10.18 (13) Form of Securities Purchase Agreement

 10.19 (13) Form of Placement Agency Agreement

78

21.1*

23.1*

31.1*

31.2*

32.1**

32.2**

List of Subsidiaries.

Exhibit Index

Consent of Haskell & White LLP, independent registered public accounting firm

Certification of Principal Executive Officer Pursuant to Rules 13a-14(a) and 15d-14(a) under the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

Certification of Principal Financial Officer Pursuant to Rules 13a-14(a) and 15d-14(a) under the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

Certification of Principal Executive Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to 
Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

Certification of Principal Financial Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 
906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

101.INS*

XBRL Instance Document

101.SCH*

XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document

101.CAL* XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document

101.DEF*

XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document

101.LAB* XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document

101.PRE*

XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document

*
(1)

(2)
(3)

(4)

(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
+
†
*

Filed herewith.
Incorporated by reference to Amendment No.1 to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on
March 21, 2019.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on February 6, 2019.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 (Registration No. 333-222121) filed 
with the SEC on December 18, 2017.
Incorporated by reference to Amendment No. 1 to the Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 (Registration
No. 333-222121) filed with the SEC on January 16, 2019.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on February 1, 2019.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on August 3, 2019.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on September 6, 2019.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on November 6, 2019.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on May 9, 2020.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on June 26, 2020.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on August 8, 2020.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on August 8, 2020.
Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the SEC on March 3, 2021.
Indicates management contract or compensatory plan.
Portions of this exhibit have been redacted in compliance with Regulation S-K Item 601(b)(10).
These certifications are being furnished solely to accompany this annual report pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, and 
are not being filed for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and are not to be incorporated by
reference into any filing of the Registrant, whether made before or after the date hereof, regardless of any general 
incorporation language in such filing.

79

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the Registrant 

has duly caused this Report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

SIGNATURES

Date:  March 25, 2021

ONE STOP SYSTEMS, INC.

By:/s/ David Raun
David Raun
President and Chief Executive Officer

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, this Report has been signed below 

by the following persons on behalf of the Registrant in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

Name

Title

Date

/s/ David Raun
David Raun

/s/ John W. Morrison Jr.
John W. Morrison Jr.

/s/ Kenneth Potashner 
Kenneth Potashner 

/s/ Kimberly Sentovich
Kimberly Sentovich

/s/ Sita Lowman
Sita Lowman

/s/ Jack Harrison
Jack Harrison

/s/ Gioia Messinger
Gioia Messinger

/s/ Greg Matz
g
Greg Matz

President and Chief Executive Officer (Principal 
Executive Officer)

March 25, 2021

Chief Financial Officer
(Principal Accounting and Financial Officer) 

Chairman

Director

Director

Director

Director

Director

March 25, 2021

March 25, 2021

March 25, 2021

March 25, 2021

March 25, 2021

March 25, 2021

March 25, 2021

80

[THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK]

[THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK]

[THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK]

BOARD OF DIRECTORS 

EXECUTIVE TEAM

CORPORATE COUNSEL

Ken Potashner

David Raun

Chairman & Director

President,  Chief Executive 
Officer & Director

Procopio,  Cory,  Hargreaves & 
Savitch LLP

David Raun

President,  Chief Executive 
Officer & Director

Jack Harrison

Director

Kimberly Sentovich

Director

Greg W. Matz

Director

Gioia Messinger

Director

Sita M. Lowman
Director

John Morrison

Chief Financial Officer, 
Treasurer & Secretary

Jim Ison

Chief Sales & Marketing 
Officer

Tim Miller

Vice President of Product 
Marketing

Julia Elbert

Vice President of Engineering

Victor Hester

Vice President of Operations

Jim Reardon

Vice President of CDI  Products

Martin Stiborski

Managing Director  of Bressner 
Technology  GmbH

AUDITOR

Haskell & White LLP

INVESTOR INFORMATION 

Investor Relations Contact

Ronald Both 

CMA Investor  Relations 

T 949.432.7566

OSS@cma.team

Investor Relations Website

ir.onestopsystems.com

Stock Exchange Listing

Nasdaq Capital Market

Stock symbol: OSS 

Transfer Agent & Registrar

Equiniti

3200 Cherry Creek Dr. South

Suite 430

Denver, CO 80209

T 303.282.4800

O S S G e n 4 4 U  P r o

ONE STOP SYSTEMS, INC.

2235 Enterprise Street #110

Escondido, CA 92029

www.onestopsystems.com