Doron T. Volkman: Startups Mentor & Consultant: Biz Dev, Marketing, Writing

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Doron T. Volkman: Startups Mentor & Consultant: Biz Dev, Marketing, Writing Startups and Innovators Mentor & Consultant. Areas of operation include: Business Development, Marke Main areas of operation include:
Hi-Tech, Medical Devices.

I have been involved with startup ventures, growth & diversification programs, innovation & innovators for the last 15 years. My work & experience covers a wide spectrum of functions, necessary in establishing new business operations & growing existing ones beyond their current scope:
Market & feasibility research (tech & business). Writing business, marketing & tech documentation,

I am a key m

ember at CCapital Investment & Business Solutions Ltd as a market research & business development specialist. Homeland Security. IoT, IT, Auto-Tech. Business and organizational / project management solutions. I also participated in several Startups & Innovators Accelerators as a Mentor for Market Research, Business Plan & Business Development. These accelerators were set up for Israeli & European Startups & Innovators who have elected to enhance their development & market pe*******on efforts with hands-on guidance and mentorship via these programs. I served in the Israeli Air Force for 4 years, in the fields of military RF & landline based voice / data communications in both mobile tactical and strategic command units in the capacity of Crew Chief and Communications Operations Warrant Officer. I honorably retired from active reserve duty following 20 years of service.


* Extensive Experience in Business Development - Hi-Tech & Global Business Environments. Presentation & Documentation Preparation. Investor & Client Relations. Contact to senior Executives. Informatics & Market Research

* Excellent Articulation in Speech & Writing. Bi-Directional Translation. English / Hebrew

* Definition, Expansion & Retention of Business Functions. Multi-Cultural & Multi lingual Environments, including localization & adaptation.

* Experienced in Negotiations with External Functions, Partners, Clients, Suppliers & Sub-Contractors

01/09/2025

On November 6, 1935, an engineer named Edwin Howard Armstrong stood before the Institute of Radio Engineers in New York. His paper carried a plain title: “A method of reducing radio disturbance through a frequency modulation system.”
What he unveiled was anything but plain. Armstrong had invented FM radio—a way to deliver sound without the crackle and static of AM. For the first time, voices and music could be heard with breathtaking clarity.
It should have been his triumph. Instead, it became his undoing.
Armstrong was no stranger to invention. He had already given the world the regenerative circuit and the superheterodyne receiver, technologies that made radio practical and reliable. But every breakthrough brought him into conflict with powerful corporations—AT&T, Westinghouse, and above all, RCA.
FM threatened RCA’s empire. They had poured fortunes into AM and weren’t about to see it eclipsed. Armstrong built his own FM network on frequencies between 42 and 49 MHz—a revolution in the making. But in 1945, after heavy lobbying, the FCC reassigned the FM band to 88–108 MHz, instantly making Armstrong’s system obsolete. Years of work were erased with the stroke of a pen.
Worse followed. FM stations were restricted to lower power, crippling their reach. RCA pushed television instead, while Armstrong was dragged through endless, ruinous lawsuits. His brilliance was buried under corporate pressure and legal battles.
On January 31, 1954, at 63 years old, Armstrong—exhausted and broken—penned a farewell letter to his wife, Marion. Then he stepped from the 13th floor of his New York apartment.
Yet every time we tune in to FM, we hear his legacy. The clear notes of a song, the clean tone of a human voice without static—that was Armstrong’s gift. He gave us silence between the noise.
History may have tried to silence him, but his invention speaks for him still.

~Unusual Tales

23/08/2025
19/07/2025
15/06/2025
21/05/2025

In 1975, a young Kodak engineer named Steven Sasson built a device that would quietly spark a revolution. Using parts from a Super 8 movie camera, some digital circuitry, and a cassette tape for storage, he created the first digital camera. It weighed around 8 pounds and could capture a 0.01-megapixel black-and-white image, storing it on a cassette tape and taking 23 seconds to process. Despite its primitive nature, Sasson had proven that photography could be done without film, a radical idea at the time.

Excited, Sasson presented his invention to Kodak executives. Their reaction was cautious. Kodak had dominated the photography world for decades, holding a huge share of the film and print market. Digital photography posed a direct threat to that empire. Although the company patented the technology in 1978, they shelved it, fearing that going digital would cannibalize their film sales. Instead of leading the shift, they tried to delay it. The irony? Kodak had the future of photography in its hands and chose not to act on it.

As the 1990s rolled in, companies like Sony, Canon, and Nikon began making strides in digital imaging. Kodak eventually joined the race, but it was too late. The same technology they once buried reshaped the entire industry. By the time Kodak filed for bankruptcy in 2012, digital cameras and smartphones had completely replaced film for most consumers. Steven Sasson’s invention lived on, not under Kodak’s name, but as a symbol of what happens when innovation is feared instead of embraced.

11/04/2025

Shared by Keneth Wright

22/03/2025

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