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More on Multicast | 312 comments | Create New Account
Comments belong to whoever posts them. Please notify us of inappropriate comments.
More Background on Hogan
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, September 28 2012 @ 02:09 AM EDT
Oh splugypoof, I hit the wrong button. Oh well, what I wanted to say after my
well formatted comment was that Mr. Hogan doesn't list Seagate in his work
experience.

Should I shut up now? PJ?

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

More on Multicast
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, September 28 2012 @ 04:15 AM EDT

A self serving internet puff piece company? The address on the web site is 711 South Carson Street, Carson City, NV, which is shared by Resident Agents of Nevada, Inc., your own business from the comfort of your living room in your underwear. Check it out on Street View. We can add that to all the addresses Ms. Smith dug up in her article.

And their fancy video compression software, well, you can google that and if you find something of a going concern, feel free to tell us.

And Velvin has all the titles he's ever wanted and he and his best buds can talk about all the big companies they rub shoulders with.

So the moral of the story is, don't believe everything you read on the internet. Seagate is just something Velvin wants to forget, forget, forget. It's not as though Multicast is going to fire him, or worse, like Delaware judges fear ... yeah right.

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

More Background on InTeleMax
Authored by: Anonymous on Friday, September 28 2012 @ 06:36 AM EDT

A little blurb I found floating around in cyberspace. I can only guess about its accuracy . . . . O.K. good enough.

InTeleMax, Inc. is a Nevada corporation formed in 2001 to ultimately develop two major projects. One is the design and development of a radically new state-of-art innovative television viewing technology and interactive devices for the business and consumer electronics industry. This product, named "InTeleVision" utilizes patent able proprietary optical lens technology to enhance the viewing of a standard television monitor. While in advanced stages of development, this technology has been put on hold while the Company's team is focused on the compression technology described below. The other is a technology consisting of a pair of algorithms that together provide the next generation file compression and a method of writing to a hard drive in the most efficient manner possible. It is this technology that is presently receiving the entire focus of the InTeleMax team. It will be the sole focus of this Corporate Profile. Transmission of data between computers depends on many factors, including the infrastructure allowing for speedy transmission. The Internet has effectively become the mode of data transport. Digital media is replacing analog media. The storage space required for digital data grows exponentially. Media companies are seeking ways to reduce storage space requirements (and save money), and transmit digital data quickly. InTeleMax's codecs are state-of-art technology permitting 95% compression...

Seriously, I don't know anything much about media compression but none of what I've read is convincing. Very intelligent people with a stroke of genius backed by large universities and corporations have developed compression techniques and I'm just not an easy convert.

State-of-art technology permitting 95% compression? No wonder his employee tried to steal it. And his company went belly up, or just never really did business in any sort of meaningful way. Has anyone ever found that lawsuit Velvin so pathetically explained to Judge Koh? I've said it before but someone should find a record of it in a court registry. Really, we must, or Velvin could be in some seriously embarrassing big dinosaur do-do.

Now repeat after me, "You can't always believe everything you read on the internet", or hear in Judge Koh's courtroom, maybe.

[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]

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