Anonymous wrote:Those kids will be better off not having a sociopath parent in their lives during their formative years. Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:She was a huge bully who used her power to ruin or try to ruin some of her whistleblowing employees lives, so intensely one former employee took his life, she lied lied lied and stole money from idiot rich people she charmed with her deep voice, Steve Jobs but attractive female cosplay. I feel terrible for her being separated from her children and for her kids who will grow up without their mother. That being said I think she deserved that sentence if not more time.
Anonymous wrote:Will she talk like a man in prison?
Anonymous wrote:She was a huge bully who used her power to ruin or try to ruin some of her whistleblowing employees lives, so intensely one former employee took his life, she lied lied lied and stole money from idiot rich people she charmed with her deep voice, Steve Jobs but attractive female cosplay. I feel terrible for her being separated from her children and for her kids who will grow up without their mother. That being said I think she deserved that sentence if not more time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ironic thing is, I’m pretty sure that what she was trying to do with the blood tests will actually come to pass in the next 10-15 years. The technology wasn’t there yet but it will be.
No. This is not true. It’s a physical limit thing. The small amount of blood drawn by Holmes(a finger pick) is not large enough to actually capture what is in the blood. She was just making things up.
There are already arrays that look for multiple different genetic anomalies from single sample for cancer patients. I m guessing that with time the technical limits that currently have technicians running so many basic tests different machines under different conditions will be reducible to arrays on much smaller surfaces, or test results that can be extrapolated from much smaller starting samples.
I guarantee you a man will patent the technology, run with it, and make billions. The idea is valid. The technology just needs to get there. She said herself that she just needed be more patient for the technology to catch up and that that was her error.
You can't patent an idea.
I said parent the technology, not the idea. The idea has already been had.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ironic thing is, I’m pretty sure that what she was trying to do with the blood tests will actually come to pass in the next 10-15 years. The technology wasn’t there yet but it will be.
No. This is not true. It’s a physical limit thing. The small amount of blood drawn by Holmes(a finger pick) is not large enough to actually capture what is in the blood. She was just making things up.
There are already arrays that look for multiple different genetic anomalies from single sample for cancer patients. I m guessing that with time the technical limits that currently have technicians running so many basic tests different machines under different conditions will be reducible to arrays on much smaller surfaces, or test results that can be extrapolated from much smaller starting samples.
I guarantee you a man will patent the technology, run with it, and make billions. The idea is valid. The technology just needs to get there. She said herself that she just needed be more patient for the technology to catch up and that that was her error.
You can't patent an idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ironic thing is, I’m pretty sure that what she was trying to do with the blood tests will actually come to pass in the next 10-15 years. The technology wasn’t there yet but it will be.
No. This is not true. It’s a physical limit thing. The small amount of blood drawn by Holmes(a finger pick) is not large enough to actually capture what is in the blood. She was just making things up.
There are already arrays that look for multiple different genetic anomalies from single sample for cancer patients. I m guessing that with time the technical limits that currently have technicians running so many basic tests different machines under different conditions will be reducible to arrays on much smaller surfaces, or test results that can be extrapolated from much smaller starting samples.
I guarantee you a man will patent the technology, run with it, and make billions. The idea is valid. The technology just needs to get there. She said herself that she just needed be more patient for the technology to catch up and that that was her error.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been thinking about this lately. I believe EH 100% deserves the sentence she received, but I still feel a great deal of compassion for her (or any woman) leaving for a long prison term with 2 small children.
I'm slowly learning how to not judge these criminals, which was very hard after spending the past few years being robbed, abused and scammed. Been working on giving it to God, even though the injuries done to me are irreversible.
I'll never have compassion for a woman like Elizabeth Holmes but I think I judge her less now than I would've 6 months ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ironic thing is, I’m pretty sure that what she was trying to do with the blood tests will actually come to pass in the next 10-15 years. The technology wasn’t there yet but it will be.
No. This is not true. It’s a physical limit thing. The small amount of blood drawn by Holmes(a finger pick) is not large enough to actually capture what is in the blood. She was just making things up.
There are already arrays that look for multiple different genetic anomalies from single sample for cancer patients. I m guessing that with time the technical limits that currently have technicians running so many basic tests different machines under different conditions will be reducible to arrays on much smaller surfaces, or test results that can be extrapolated from much smaller starting samples.
I guarantee you a man will patent the technology, run with it, and make billions. The idea is valid. The technology just needs to get there. She said herself that she just needed be more patient for the technology to catch up and that that was her error.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ironic thing is, I’m pretty sure that what she was trying to do with the blood tests will actually come to pass in the next 10-15 years. The technology wasn’t there yet but it will be.
No. This is not true. It’s a physical limit thing. The small amount of blood drawn by Holmes(a finger pick) is not large enough to actually capture what is in the blood. She was just making things up.
There are already arrays that look for multiple different genetic anomalies from single sample for cancer patients. I m guessing that with time the technical limits that currently have technicians running so many basic tests different machines under different conditions will be reducible to arrays on much smaller surfaces, or test results that can be extrapolated from much smaller starting samples.
I guarantee you a man will patent the technology, run with it, and make billions. The idea is valid. The technology just needs to get there. She said herself that she just needed be more patient for the technology to catch up and that that was her error.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been thinking about this lately. I believe EH 100% deserves the sentence she received, but I still feel a great deal of compassion for her (or any woman) leaving for a long prison term with 2 small children.
I have no sympathy for her. The lies she told and the people she hurt, she should have been sentenced to 50 years.
She had the second child to garner sympathy trying to get house arrest. She is despicable and deserves everything she received.