I even offered you to start a personal and company cohoperation, because I trusted your person and expertise, creating for you a portal in EU to support actively your products. We've talked about that here on the forum and on skype, I/you can publish screens if you wish. I give you my auth.
The other photo you've sent me, probably a month later (I don't remember, you should know the exact date), it's about the adapter on the motherboard that I've mentioned before. It's another thing that, frankly speaking, I am not even interested to, due the thermal needs and electrical potential issues on the other components (and even incompatible with my current designs).
I suppose that you're correctly referring to me, but I haven't received any kind of project from you. I am open to publish the conversation, given the fact that I have nothing to hide.
About the possible patents of my company:
- a new tipology of PCIE 16x riser
- a new tipology of cloud computing 16X motherboard interface placed in front of the chassis, and powered by another key element
- a new tipology of power delivery based on server PSUs, that will be able to power on, with ease and reliability, all the other components in my designs
- a new tipology of PCB to support the heat managements of the chassis that I HAVE designed
Do you see anything yours? These products will be offered in my systems, in my farm. I don't even know when and IF I will resell them outside, probably not.
Be careful with your statements, it's not professional to behave like this with your potential customers.
Now that you're back, we could have a talk on skype and clarify this accident. I'm a diplomatic person, open to cohoperate with a positive approach, and common interests. As I said before, welcome back.
Just to be clear, I didn't say that you took my idea and wanted to patent it. I'm sorry if it's what you understood.
As I said, I like your full assembly idea, and I believe the market for it is larger that you may think.
I was just pointing out that if your boards aren't new enough compared to what is already offered by me, others or my upcoming boards (DC/DC converter and PCI-E riser), there is no point trying to patent them.
The concept of the boards can't be patented, you need to use them in a new way nobody did before to be able to patent them.
And I'm not just speaking about my boards, but others breakout boards and the enclosures too.
We are anyway aiming at different markets and may be complementary, so I can't see why there could be an issue here.
Again, sorry if I was misunderstood, I would have made it all private if I had such a problem with you.
And I wouldn't have used a smiley in my first message

Also, thanks for not posting the pictures publicly, the project is still in progress and both boards should be released soon.