Martin J. Miles is President of Convex Corporation, which he founded in 1973. He
is a mathematician who invented and
developed the FactLogic method of evaluating cases and the statistical decisions
that emanate from it. He received a bachelor and a master degree in mathematics
from the University of Colorado. He is the author of six books (four for Simon
& Schuster and one for The New York Times), most dealing with the mathematical
aspects of investments. As a mathematician for the National Institute for Standards
and Technology, the Office of Telecommunication, the Environmental Science Services
Administration, and the National Telecommunication and Information
Administration, he discovered two mathematical theorems and engaged in research
of electromagnetic waves and telecommunications using the methods of analysis
and probability and statistics.
He has written more than thirty-five technical
reports and many journal and magazine articles. He has contributed many
scientific papers at conferences in the U.S., Canada, and Europe. He helped
develop, implement, and document the two American National Standards (for ANSI)
that statistically evaluate the performance of digital networks, and he served
as a research consultant for the University of Wyoming for more than a year in a
similar capacity. Mr. Miles invented and received a patent on the methods that
are the basis of the company's services.
His ideas have been discussed in
the following media:
ABC TV
APB Online
BBC
CNET.com, Radio
Fox News TV
KUSA, NBC Denver Affiliate
American Mathematical Monthly
American National Standards
Institute
Australian Times
Billboard
California Computer News
Chicago Daily Law Bulletin
Communications Designer's Digest
Daily Camera
Data Communications
Denver Post
Environmental Science Services
Administration
Fusion
International Conference on
Computer Communication
Law Enforcement Technology
Los Angeles Times
National Institute for Science and Technology
National Law Journal
National Observer
National Telecommunication and
Information Administration
New York Times, Books
Office of Telecommunications
PC World
Prentice-Hall, Books
Record Exchanger
Rocky Mountain News
San Francisco Chronicle
Sign of The Times
Time
United States Postal Service,
Research and Development Department.
Zentralblatt fur Mathematik
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