January 09, 2021

How SK Telecom promotes its investment

If the lie is big enough, and if you repeat it, maybe people will start believing it.

Someone posted a link to the June 2020 press release by SK Telecom as a proof that Nanox is not a fraud.

The press release states:

Nanox developed the innovative Nanox System, which is composed of the Nanox.Arc, a novel digital X-ray device.


Oops.  Novel!  Apparently, nobody told SK Telecom that a novel X-ray device cannot be cleared by the FDA, because clearance requires a substantial equivalence to an already legally marketed device.  So being  novel, the device is clearly (pun intended!) not equivalent to anything on the market already, and so cannot obtain a 510(k) clearance

So, if SK Telecom did not lie about the novel thing, then Nanox regulatory strategy goes poof.  Because Nanox has been telling investors that it plans to 

submit an additional 510(k) application with respect to the multi-source Nanox.ARC, which, if cleared, will be our commercial imaging system



 
But how exactly is Nanox device novel?  Well, it is fake and non-functional.  That's its novelty.  The press release helpfully supplies its picture.

Only for angels (humans too heavy for this "body scanner") 

The table clearly can't support a human being.  The Arc is immobile and cannot move along the table (even though it is labeled BODY SCANNER on the side).  The whole thing is powered by a 12V battery (to light up a few LEDs for the photographer and the greedy investors and advisors).  There are no functioning x-ray sources or detectors in the device.  Nanox says on its tech webpage that this is version 1.0 of the device, and claims:

Cold cathode tubes allow the use of a single high voltage power supply and a ‎single high voltage supply line (connecting all the anodes in the system). Digitally ‎controlling each tube enables the system to be significantly reduced and saves ‎power supply cables, installation space, and so on.‎ ‍

Which could be true, indeed, if 12V is high voltage, if and those cold cathode tubes do not generate x-rays but simply multi-spectral light.

The press release also shows an animation gif of the levitating scan, that must generate antigravitons.  Nanox has not provided information as to which version of Nanox.Arc that is.

Roentgen discovered X-rays in 1895, Nanox discovered levitation in 2019.

Update:  Apparently at least one radiologist agrees about Nanox.Arc.

1 comment:

  1. I liked the bit about antigravitons, as I've always wondered about that (there are + and - electric charges, so why not the same for mass?) . Glad to see Nanox has solved it.

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