December 07, 2021

Blurring timestamps to conceal time travel

There is interesting blurring in the Nanox infomercial.


For some reason, Nanox decided that it should hide the date/time the image was taken (October 10, 2021, 5:31:15pm, per DICOM data), but forgot to blur the same timestamp in the upper left corner.  Here is the unblurred timestamp from the hand scan video:


Why are timestamps important?  Because they reveal that the Nanox.Arc scan that supposedly generated that image never happened.  The timestamp was fake to begin with.  

Here is the supposed tomosynthesis stack generated by a pelvic scan.  The DICOM timestamp is again October 10, 2021, 5:31:15pm, to the second.  How come these two completely different scans finished at the exact same second?


What about the head scan?  That one is dated January 1, 2021 (no time shown).


But what about the Nanox.Arc scan that generated that hand image?  Did the scan actually happen?

According to the hand scan video, the scan took about 64 seconds (patient data is entered 00m:16s and scan finished 01m:20s into the video).

The problem is that the control pad (or the "operation console") shows something completely different - the scan took over 10 minutes, not just a bit over a minute, if it was done at all.  And it supposedly happened on November 22, 2021, more than a month after that blurred October 10, 2021 date, while involving an additional short jump back in time.

Here is the timeline of the hand scan, according to the control pad: 

4:44pm

Patient data is scanned (battery is at 37%, not charging)

 travel back in time 1 hour and 37 minutes, which drains the battery charge about 1/3

3:07pm

Select body region, protocol, prepare to start scan (battery is at 10%, charging)

3:13pm

Scan in progress, scan finishes, please wait for reconstruction to finish (battery is at 12%, charging)

3:17pm

DICOM preview, approved and finished (battery is still at 12%, charging)


Conclusion:  Nanox.ARC is fake and did not make even the poor-quality tomosynthesis images shown by Nanox.  It is a mystery how those images were generated (and whether they were done manually or involved a robotic hand).  However, evidence suggests that it is possible that Nanox has invented a time travel machine.

Update:  We were given a heads-up about the time machine in November:


 

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