| Tim
Ventura, "The Linus Torvalds of Antigravity" started
doing independent research into Antigravity in 1992, but didn't
begin sharing his work with the pubic until 2002, when he
realized the need for an open-source, collaborative effort
to allow scientists, engineers, and inventors to share research
and scientific data online.
Ventura created the American Antigravity website in March,
2002 to popularize Breakthrough Propulsion Technology and
Antigravity research. The website serves a dual role in facilitating
communications and networking between scientists, engineers,
and inventors, as well as in educating the public about emerging
technologies and theories related to ongoing scientific research
in this area.
The American Antigravity website has evolved
since its inception into the most comprehensive resource of
its kind online, containing hundreds of pages of experimental-data,
articles, and interviews with scientists, inventors, and engineers,
His work includes collaborative research and news coverage
on celebrated figures such as Nick Cook, James Cox, Eugene
Podkletnov, John Searle, and others -- as well as breaking
news on work coming from other innovators in the community,
and rich-media content on historically significant research
dating back in some cases nearly 100 years.
Tim Ventura's American Antigravity website serves an audience
of several million visitors per year, and has been featured
around the globe on a multitude of television networks, such
as Nippon TV and the BBC, as well as extensively covered in
print by sources as diverse as Wired Magazine and Jane's Defense
Weekly.
Prior Achievements: Tim
Ventura’s leadership in the emerging science of Antigravity
and breakthrough propulsion technology is the result of nearly
a decade of prior career experience managing techno-centric
projects and teams involved with the development and deployment
of new technologies in the IT & Telecom industries.
At AT&T's Fixed Wireless Project, he
managed a 400 person provisioning staff stationed at two remote
locations in Florida and California. During his tenure in
that department AT&T added over 100,000 new customers
to the AT&T Fixed Wireless platform using Local Number
Portability as established in the 1996 Telecommunications
Act.
A later transition within AT&T placed
him in the management role for AT&T's Provisioning and
E-commerce System. This included responsibility for over $10
million dollars of AT&T Information System assets (systems,
software, and associated contracts), as well as departmental
responsibility for facilitating development and deployment
of E-Commerce related software through the leadership of multiple
virtual and cross-functional teams.
Ventura’s leadership experience also
includes the successful management experience for the Deployment
of mission-critical 911-geolocation services at Telecommunication
Systems, Inc. This consisted of both the management for a
software development & integration team writing telecommunications
software for Police, Fire, and EMT call-centers, as well as
the responsibility for ensuring the integration of new network
nodes into a legally-mandated 911 geolocation service.
His prior experience includes team-building
and systems management experience from Verisign’s Illuminet
division in the Olympia area, where he participated in the
nationwide rollout of Phase I Local Number Portability, and
facilitated troubleshooting for mission-critical LNP ports
over a million-number ramp-up in 1998 – 2000.
Ventura’s philosophy is based on the
concept of bridging the gap between machines and people –
to this end, much of his work has involved educating people
on the finer details of emerging technologies, first in the
telecommunications sector, and later through his continuing
role at American Antigravity. His goal is to foster the transportation
breakthroughs that the 21st century requires by building a
collaborative team of expertise to solve the challenges of
building commercially practical Antigravity devices.
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