He doesn't want to change the name? That's not only a name no one will remember (I've already forgotten what it was exactly), I just remember it was annoying to say. But these are the types of things inventors get stuck on: many of them are incapable of seeing the big picture. They get so defensive about the smallest things, and because they don't budge, they never sell what they invent.
If he ever wants to actually sell this stuff, he's going to have to set aside any stubbornness about the name and let the people who actually know how to market things (which he clearly doesn't know how to do) the freedom to come up with a name consumers will actually remember and not be annoyed to speak.
Loosen up, Leonard. Let the experts figure out the name.
The device is aimed at gamers and TV watchers, generating a 3D image with use of a pair of 0.7-inch OLED panels, which each display separate images, doing away with the ghost imagery that often comes along with 3D displays.
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He doesn't want to change the name? That's not only a name no one will remember (I've already forgotten what it was exactly), I just remember it was annoying to say. But these are the types of things inventors get stuck on: many of them are incapable of seeing the big picture. They get so defensive about the smallest things, and because they don't budge, they never sell what they invent.
If he ever wants to actually sell this stuff, he's going to have to set aside any stubbornness about the name and let the people who actually know how to market things (which he clearly doesn't know how to do) the freedom to come up with a name consumers will actually remember and not be annoyed to speak.
Loosen up, Leonard. Let the experts figure out the name.
And best of luck. Looks like a great product.