I think the thing you are missing is a sense of scale of the two opposing forces:
On one side you have potential (not guaranteed) selling of shares to cover warrant exercise expense.
On the other, you have news of positive cash flow and confirmation that partners are fully committed and engaged.
When a pre-revenue company becomes a revenue generating business, the valuation of that business changes. Quite a lot. Suddenly you have stock jockeys able to put an earnings multiple on it, for example. I am only scratching the surface.
You also have to factor that if an important announcement comes, many of those looking to sell may take their time doing so, because their perception of the risks inherent in the stock have changed, hence the pressure on the stock price would end up higher than lower.
In short, the news that we are anticipating will absorb whatever selling there is, whenever it is. I mean, by definition for a stock to go up in price that has to be the case, and the widely shared assumption is that commercial partnership deals will be the thing that gets PTK to the nasdaq and then its up to management to keep the wheels moving forward from there.
Hope that helps.