Dr. Pellionisz, founder of HelixoMetry, Inc., together with Dr. Edward Teller, facilitates "Teller's Vision", also trying to gather and preserve the intellectual capital of other famous Hungarian-Americans. HelixoMetry advisors help one-another, e.g. Professor Bernie Widrow works together with Dr. Edward Teller to improve how scientific debates and classical music can be enjoyed by means of Bernie Widrow's "hearing array", the neural net-based noise cancelling "microphone neclace".

Edward Teller dedicates his recently published "Memoirs" (Perseus, 2001) to the "Martians". First of all, to Theodore von Kármán, who coined the phrase that Hungarian-American talent must be of extra-terrestrial origin, and to Leo Szilárd, Eugene Wigner, and Johnny von Neumann. Edward Teller ["E.T."] says: "No accolade gives me so great a pleasure as that I was counted one of them". The notion of Hungarian-American-Martians originated about half a Century ago. Fortunately, Edward Teller is still alive to deposit a "time capsule, called Teller's Vision" -- similar to what an extra-terrestrial of extraordinary intelligence would leave behind for the Earth-dwellers for their benefit.

The essence of Teller's Vision is that "The Past Century was that of Physics. Now, as he says, we are in the beginning of the Century of Biology". The common thread between the two is the Information Technology. Teller's Vision is to create a bridge between past and future, physics and biology, and also his Native Land of Hungary and the USA where he lives for the past sixty years or so. Hungary started to build this bridge a decade ago, and last year Hungary decorated Dr. Teller with the "Corvin Chain" (the highest honor that can be simultaneously held by only twelve of the most distinguished Hungarians) -- an award that was not possible for him before WWII because of discrimination. There is no discrimination today. Therefore, Teller's Vision and his "time capsule" might return in a triumphant "homecoming" - with this symbolic act, for the first time uniting the scientific efforts of Hungary and the United States of America.