Media Cold Fusion!
   I'm taking the liberty to quote a message posted to the Gilder Tech  Forum about the head scientist of this outfit.
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    posted:   Mon Jan 3, 1900 11:04am -- read 116 times, 1 reply   author:    Julie   subject:   Media Cold Fusion
   My bs detectors have been going off while reading the "news" about Media Fusion recently. So far, it looks  as though a bunch of major news outlets that should know better have simply picked up MF's press  releases and reprinted them with a "gee, wouldn't that be great" comment.
   Remind anyone of anything?
   I checked out MF's website, www.mediafusionllc.net, and found the following "biography" on resident genius  William "Luke" Stewart:
   William "Luke" Stewart  VP of Technology and Chief Scientist
   As the inventor of Advanced  Sub-Carrier Modulationª, Luke has  been promoting his Media Fusion  technology as a solution to the  Internet's authentication problems and  the developing world's communications  dilemma. Luke is expert in the fields  of: laser electro-optics (system design  and implementation), nuclear  propulsion, plant design, systems  operation, computer science, computer  hardware architecture, software  development (design and  implementation), quantum  electrodynamics, and semiotics. In the  past, Luke focused on the creative  application of both computers and  lasers to the solution of problems in the  fields of medical imaging and  entertainment. He is a veteran of the  US Navy and has consulted on  numerous special projects for the US  government.
   Ooooh, he's expert in nuclear propulsion AND laser electro-optics AND semiotics? No wonder he's been  too busy to hold down a job!
   A news search on NEXIS turned up the following item on William "Luke" Stewart from 1990. For those too  busy to read the whole thing, I will summarize: Stewart invented "HeartLink", which was supposed to  transmit EKG data over normal phone wires. ("Gee, wouldn't that be great?") This claim, too, was reported  in the Wall Street Journal. Stewart's company, Claritek, apparently disappeared without a trace -- their  California business license was suspended in 1991.
   Sorry for the long post, but I'd hate to see anyone get sucked in by this.
   Copyright San Diego Business Journal, Inc. 1990;  Business Dateline;  San Diego Business Journal
   February 26, 1990
   SECTION: Vol 11; No 9; Sec 1; pg 9
   LENGTH: 1079 words
   HEADLINE: Biomedical Startup Company Seeks Funds for Cardiac Tool
   BYLINE: Mary Hardie
   DATELINE: San Diego; CA; US; Pacific
   BODY:  Deep in the recesses of a Gaslamp Quarter office building, secured by two deadbolted doors,  a computer scientist, a Disney animator and a TRW spacecraft engineer work on computers  and pore over pictures of hearts.
   Since last June, the three have been ensconced in the windowless offices of Claritek, a  biomedical startup. They've mixed mathematics, graphics, computer, medical and  telecommunication technologies to come up with HeartLink. Claritek's first product, the  system clarifies or enhances current ultrasound images of the beating heart and transmits  them in real time over telephone lines.
   "It's something I've never heard done before," said Claritek founder William "Luke"  Stewart, the company's computer whiz. Last week he unveiled HeartLink to venture  capitalists and others attending the Sixth San Diego Technology Financial Forum at the  Hotel del Coronado.
   The forum, which links emerging biotechnology and high-technology companies with  potential investors, was sponsored by a group of banks, law firms and accounting firms in  association with the University of California, San Diego Connect program, the San Diego  State University Entrepreneurial Management Center, the San Diego Economic Development  Corp. and Scripps Clinic & Research Foundation.
   Stewart wants to raise $ 1.2 million to establish the computerized system in five major  university hospital test sites.
   When operational, HeartLink will allow doctors all over the country instant access to  cardiologists and other specialists at the five medical centers.
   "Lots of GPs (general practitioners) and doctors using ultrasound at small or rural hospitals  where there are no cardiologists on staff often can't recognize heart disease in its early stages.  Now they'll know right away if it's a simple case of eating too much pizza the night before,"  Stewart said.
   Currently, these doctors mail videotapes of a patient's ultrasound test to cardiologists for  review and diagnosis. Results can take days or weeks.
   "And if the transducer isn't positioned on the patient right, the video could be worthless and  the patient then has to undergo a second test. All of this takes time, costs money and if there's  a real medical problem, it could mean the difference between life and death," Stewart said.
   The five test sites are: the University of Kentucky, Chandler Medical Center; the Hospital of  the University of Pennsylvania; Massachusetts General Hospital and Beth Israel Hospital in  association with Harvard University; the University of California, San Francisco Medical  Center; and the University of California, San Diego Medical Center.
   Claritek lined up the prestigious facilities through the help of Dr. David Sahn and Dr. Nelson  Schiller, cardiologists at UCSD and UCSF Medical Centers respectively, who saw the system  in action and were impressed, Stewart said.
   The new venture funds also would be used to to hire managers at Claritek, including a chief  executive officer and a vice president of marketing and sales, Stewart said. Currently he is the  company's acting CEO, chief technical officer and only employee.
   Since the company's start up nine months ago, animator William Ackerman, who works on  projects for Walt Disney Studios, Lucas Films and NBC Television, and Atle Steen, on leave  from his job at TRW's Spacecraft Engineering Division, have been consulting for Claritek.
   Steen developed the system's mathematical programs; Ackerman created the animated  images of the actual video pictures of the heart.
   Stewart's wife, Gretchen Cole, formerly a strategic planner with Scripps Clinic for 15 years  and now director of corporate planning for Scripps Memorial Hospitals, sits on the company's  nine-member advisory board.
   The instant access to specialists provided by HeartLink eliminates a lot of risky Procedures  for heart patients, Stewart said. For instance, patients wouldn't need to be transported to  bigger hospitals located hundreds of miles away to see the cardiologist. The number of  exploratory surgeries and other invasive diagnostic procedures such as angiograms also  would be reduced, he said.
   Smaller hospitals or outreach centers of larger facilities, such as UCSD Medical Center, which  supports 48 clinics county-wide, could cut cardiologists from their staffs if they used  HeartLink, he also claimed.
   The system, designed as an add-on product to existing ultrasound equipment and supported  by MicroSoft and Excel software, would save larger hospitals money as well, he said.  "Hospitals wouldn't be throwing away the ultrasound technology they've already spent  millions of dollars on. Instead, they've be improving the value of their equipment," Stewart  said.
   Costs for the HeartLink system would range from $ 350,000 to $ 750,000. Patients would pay  a slightly higher price for an ultrasound exam with the HeartLink hookup. A heart  ultrasound procedure without HeartLink costs about $ 450.
   With over 6,700 tertiary care hospitals, the potential U.S. market for HeartLink exceeds $ 100  million, said Thomas Crews, former partner with Vista Capital Group, now Claritek's  business advisor.
   Large government agencies like the U.S. State Department with employees located at remote  embassies around the globe, and major insurance carriers and other third party payors also  have expressed interest in the system.
   The technology could be expanded to enhance the images of more than a dozen other medical  tests, medical resonance imaging and cat scans included, he said. "If you measure any type of  motion and determine a problem, it could have widespread industrial application as well,"  Crews said.
   Stewart, an independent software developer for MicroSoft and a computer and laser systems  consultant, first conceived of HeartLink about three years after a day on the golf course with  an Scripps Clinic angiographer.
   "He started talking about his job, how he inserted needles in peoples' legs and threaded them  up to the heart for tests. The concept sounded awful! Later he got me dressed in hospital  greens and showed me firsthand what he did. I thought, 'No way. There's got to be something  better, a non-invasive way that's not so painful-looking,'"
   Last summer he deposited $ 38 in a bank account, formally launching Claritek at the  downtown location. Over the next several months, he raised $ 100,000 in seed capital from  private investors to develop the technology, then rounded up a medical advisory panel and a  several computer backers.
   Happy Due Diligence!
   /Julie |