We didn't "sit on it all those years". How would you know anything at all. That we were in deals with Qualcomm is true. That we're the basis --totally and completely--of the Smartphones released 3 years later 2007, is true. That we invented and made products is true. That we licensed to the tune of millions of dollars is also true. And that our CEO Alpesh Bin Patel, Esq., Hedge Fund London-India -owner, part-time barrister from Oxford, pundit for economics and politics on BBC, CNBC, Bloomberg ,UK Trade & Investments executive for the UK government was our Director on VSL Communications through to very recently. And was the CEO and Director who brought the 2009 Cornerstone Group Ltd and Vedanti Systems Limited, Software company located at 6 Carlos Place, Mayfair, London to the attention of Nikesh Arora, number 4 Executive and highest paid in Google. Nikesh helmed New Business Development, along with Megan J. Smith (now Obama CTO division)who signed Alpesh's NDA via K & L Gates our lawyers to Google in March 2010.
Why? It was a $5 Billion M & A. It went on from March to December 2010 when we withdrew because we thought Google executives weren't telling the truth. The Post Its Notes prove conclusively that we were right. But "we didn't sit on anything before that, or since Mister Long-Vestor". Nor do we now. I noticed you mentioned pixels, we are an encoding invention, not pixels and colors, but REGIONS SELECTED IN A FRAME AND WE ENCODE REGIONS, and zip right through the Internet. We do not and never compressed data. We don't decompress data. We encode it. And generally only select 3% of the 100% we receive in a frame of video, or frame of music, or audio, or graphical (animation, etc), or Textual, then we transmit it.
Every electrical engineering and Computer Sciences course globally uses my inventions. How do I know? Tung Vo of Mr. Dastouri's Examining section for patents told Steven Hawkins and me January 11, 2011: "I learned these inventions in my electrical engineering classes. Everybody is taught these inventions. Good for you. I approve all of the claims" That was January 2011. six months prior to grant with acclaimed: "no prior art" distinction.
Constance Nash