First of all, thank you for such a great article! I completely agree with every single argument but this humanizing note. To me, they’re nothing but bunch of frauds. They intentionally spent hours and hours to make that fake CGI video and bluntly put in all those carefully edited lies on to their campaign page. And all of that is for scam people to spend close to a $1000 dollars to buy something they can put together at home for under $50.

I can’t think of them as “good people” just because they may have tried to make it work or they do believe in their vision which will never gonna happen. I read through their campaign before, among all the scientist and tech people they’ve mentioned, none of them had any experience with real holographic technology, and none of them had any experience with making a hardware. Not to mention their so called SDK is nothing but a midware at the best. Having a good idea is one thing, making it come true is completely different thing. Especially when they don’t have the right people nor right background or experience. Good people won’t say “I know we couldn’t do it but let’s still try to scam some money and burn it”. Once you do that, you’re tricking people to buy into your “idea” and offing your risk to them. And the worst part is, I really don’t think the H+ people ever think of the people they’re tricking at all. I mean, when their customer holding that 80s-tech-presented device that can do nothing related to their false claim and they’re $1000 bucks poorer, are the H+ people will come out take that device cost them $50 bucks to made and give their customers a refund? Based on what I see so far, I think not.