On Jan 4, 3:31 am, jules Gilbert <
jules.sto...@gmail.com> wrote:
> However, wiser? minds than I have told me that technology today is
> such that what I propose is easily faked, thus my interest in "Adam's
> Platform."
Any demonstration limited to your own hardware can be faked in any
number of ways. Setting up lots of camera angles means absolutely
nothing, and demonstrates nothing. Do not waste your time.
Adam's Platform's testing was mishandled so thoroughly by The Tolly
Group that when they realized they'd been deceived, they set up the
test again, found it was bunk, and pulled the original report from
their website. Tolly didn't bother to verify the contents of the the
hard drives of both computers the first time. When the method came
into question, they set the test up again and pulled the data
connection between the two computers while transmission was in
progress. The destination computer continued to decompress and show
video, proving that there was no actual compression/decompression
process occurring. Adding insult to injury, when they did find the
fake video already on the destination computer, it turned out to be
compressed with a very common codec at the time for Mac (an On2
TrueMotion variant). So the method wasn't even original. Nearly a
decade later, after Adam had already been sent to jail and investors
defrauded, Adam put up a weak technical document on a website saying
"see? I told you so, here's the method" which turned out to be a
single sheet of paper's scrawlings that described a method no more
complex than a colorspace conversion with deltas -- in other words, a
1990's method that is not even remotely capable of the wild claims he
maintained for years.
If you show us video of you doing something with two computers and a
floppy disk, it means nothing. If you open both computers and show
that neither has a hard drive, it still means nothing -- YOU are
performing the demonstration and could be faking the results in tens
if not hundreds of different ways. You must have OTHERS reproduce
your results to receive any sort of funding.
Accept a chunk of data from a third party. Compress that data (if you
can). Then provide the compressed data only (to prove your method
reduces size), and a program that can turn it back into the original
chunk (to prove that your method isn't broken or a fake). *This does
not compromise your compression process.*
Until you're willing to do this, you're wasting your time (and,
unfortunately, everyone else's time). No serious company is going to
be interested in an idea that can't be independently verified.
Maintaining full control of any demonstration just further paints you
as a Jan Sloot fraud, or delusional, or a blatant confidence trickster.