.NET Framework Shared Source

Post Image Microsoft announced today that they will be making the source code for the .NET Framework 3.5 available when the framework ships along with Visual Studio 2008 later this year. From Scott Guthrie:

Having source code access and debugger integration of the .NET Framework libraries is going to be really valuable for .NET developers.  Being able to step through and review the source should provide much better insight into how the .NET Framework libraries are implemented, and in turn enable developers to build better applications and make even better use of them.

This is pretty cool news. I think it’s great for .NET itself too, as I suspect Microsoft will receive a ton of really useful feedback after developers have had a chance to get their hands dirty. There’s literally dozens of ways that this will positively impact the .NET community.

Of course, not everyone is impressed. Already the news has been called a “poison pill” by some, and simply a bad idea by others. Well, you can’t please everyone. And when it comes to Microsoft, there never seems to be a shortage of conspiracy theorists.

For more thoughts, be sure to check out TechMeme and also this post from Miguel de Icaza of the Mono project.

Read: ScottGu’s Blog

Tracking Tweets at Twitter

Post ImageTwitter launched a killer new feature last week, the very aptly named “Track.” Sometimes when I am thinking about something, I wonder how many other people are thinking about that something at the same time. With Twitter and the new Track feature, there’s a way to find out:

You can follow friends on your phone through Twitter, but what about concepts? What if you wanted an update anytime anyone mentioned your name, your favorite band, “NYC,” “earthquake,” or “Steve Jobs?” In real-time? What if you were attending an event and wanted to know who else was there?

That’s what Track lets you do. It’s dead simple to setup – just send “track mastermaq” to Twitter, and you’ll start receiving all messages that mention my nickname. This is really powerful stuff. In addition to the usual ego-tracking, I am also tracking edmonton and podcasting. It’s like a whole new world has opened up!

If you’ve been holding off on trying Twitter, I strongly encourage you to do so now. Especially if you’re in the marketing industry. Where else can you get notifications every time someone mentions your product or service? This is the future, today.

Now if only Twitter was more reliable…

Read: Twitter Blog

Radiohead shows us the music industry of the future

radiohead

What if you could set the price for an album you wanted to purchase? Wouldn’t it be great to have the ability to spend $5 to check out a new band, and $25 for a band you absolutely love? It might happen sooner than you think, with Radiohead leading the charge:

As expected, Radiohead has gone an unusual route for distribution of its seventh studio album, “In Rainbows.” The set will be available for digital download from the band’s Web site beginning Oct. 10, but with a twist — fans can name their own price for the purchase. “It’s up to you,” reads a disclaimer on the checkout screen.

Make no mistake, this is a big deal. Radiohead is obviously a very successful band with a huge fan base which allows them to experiment like this, but dammit someone has to. It might as well be Radiohead. I’ve written about making the music free before, and I’m glad to now see some action.

Techdirt notes that there is more to the story, in that Radiohead is also offering a “discbox” for $80 USD that contains the album on CD and vinyl, along with an additional CD with seven tracks, plus photos, artwork, and lyrics.

In this case, Radiohead isn’t really selling the “music.” After all, you can get that for free. They’re selling the full collection of stuff that comes with the music. Funny how it’s the musicians, and not the record labels, who seem to realize that adding value and getting people to pay for it is a business model that beats suing fans.

This is really cool. Music fans everywhere should be extremely happy about this giant leap forward! There’s more great stuff on the story at Boing Boing.

Read: Billboard

Why teach cursive handwriting? A response

Post ImageBack in April I wondered why we still teach cursive handwriting in elementary school. The post generated lots of discussion at the time, and it definitely gave me much to think about. On Friday, I started thinking about it again after receiving a response via email from a reader known only as "The Bluebell Wood." It’s obvious a lot of thought was put into it, so I asked for permission to publish the response and received it. Here it is:

Being able to write a legible and pleasant longhand is an essential part of rational life. “Word Processing” (an abominable phrase) is no substitute. Marshall McLuhan wrote The Medium is the Message and there is a lot of truth in that. The flow of a pen in the hand over paper while composing sentences is a completely different experience from keyboarding and looking at a screen; physically, and in the tools used, and in the mind as well. There is an effect on the content of what is written; in the same way that seasoned craftsmen in the guilds of Renaissance Italy would say, “It is the trade entering his body” when an apprentice bruised his thumb or some such hurt while learning the use of his tools. Writing with ink on paper is an act by which our peerless English language enters us – through hand, eye, posture, and senses, into our thoughts, affecting the sentence structure and choice of words. Forming well-made letters with the hand while forming thoughts in the mind is not the same as tapping little plastic squares while mechanical fonts appear on a screen and the cursor blinks like a tap that won’t stop dripping.

The practice of handwriting also infuses many desirable character qualities. Regard for the reader in the striving for maximum legibility is foremost; the training and development of the aesthetic sense in the letters, spacing, and overall texture; discrimination in avoiding poor proportions; rectitude in avoiding excessive flourishes; in general the application of what Edward Johnston called “sweet reason” in his classic Writing, Illuminating & Lettering of 1906.

This applies to the slant as well, which ideally is not more than about ten degrees from the vertical.

The clarity and precision needed for good legibility schools us in our thoughts and the sentences which incarnate them.

Why would anyone use cursive handwriting in this digital age? The answers are many: pleasure; rational and aesthetic maturity; participation in a historical stream reaching far, to the very dawn of man; its warmth in personal letters; to improve our thinking; and, as one of your own respondents has commented, “Just because everything can be done by computer doesn’t mean that it should be.” (shermie, May 2/07) (Emphasis added). It is premature to call this a digital “age”; it is barely three decades old, and the common use of fonts and p.c.s has been with us for less than one on hundredths of the ages in which cursive writing has been used, in various alphabets and languages.

The very typeset from which the font in which the question was posed is founded on the Humanist Bookhand and its Italic derivatives, which has been in continuous use for six hundred years, and is still vigorous. It is not possible to participate in the “Great Conversation” without learning cursive handwriting and using it well. In postulating that it no longer be taught, one finds oneself in the position of the man sawing off the limb of the great oak on which he himself resides. It is of the utmost importance to retain this skill. We owe it to children and youth to pass on this priceless heritage.

IT IS NOT OURS TO WITHOLD.

A cursive script was used 3,500 years ago in Egypt, where the priests had a hieratic script with the same relationship to hieroglyphics as our longhand has to printing. Cursive Hebrew dates back to Moses (c. 1400 B.C.) and there are also examples from the times of Jeremiah and Jeroboam II (c. 760 – 570 B.C.).

The pleasure of handwriting has always been with us and it is not going to go away. It represents the distillation of human effort to record images of the mind and heart.

It’s a very good response, I think. The font-face I use on this blog is Lucida Sans Unicode, in case anyone was wondering.

Notes for 9/30/2007

Here are my weekly notes:

  • Megan’s parents took us out for dinner tonight, to celebrate our entering the workforce. We’re now contributing to their pensions 🙂 Heh, very nice of them, and dinner was excellent.
  • Ever wonder what the world would be like without Google Maps? We’d have more swastika-shaped buildings, that’s for sure.
  • After a bit of a hiatus, I had two articles published at last100 this week. The first was on Halo 3 and Microsoft’s strategy beyond gaming, and the second was on the potentially doomed Zune.
  • In a post that received lots of attention, Scott Karp outlined five reasons why he feels the mobile web sucks. He then wrote a follow-up post responding to some of the hostile comments left by readers of the first one. Both are worth a read.
  • Here’s what I like about Wired magazine: I can purchase the relatively inexpensive physical version, read it without requiring access to an electronic device, and then go online to bookmark my favorite articles later because they are all available at the website for free.
  • I downloaded and quickly watched the first episode of the new CBS sitcom The Big Bang Theory, solely because Kaley Cuoco (from 8 Simple Rules) is in the show. All I can say is I am glad I didn’t have to pay for it.
  • The new Smallville which aired Thursday was excellent! They must have spent a fortune on the special effects. I was impressed that they had a nice mix of both subtle (Clark’s skin healing in the sunlight) and over-the-top (Clark vaporizing a river of water) effects. The new girl, Canada’s own Laura Vandervoort, didn’t have much screen time in the premiere. I’m sure we’ll see much more of her though!

A 75th Birthday Tribute to John Williams

johnwilliamsTonight I went to the wonderful Winspear Centre along with Dickson and Sharon to enjoy the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra performing some of the more famous works by John Williams. It was the first night of the ESO Robbins Pops, and it was a great show. Conductor Bruce Hangen from the Boston Conservatory was on hand for the evening, and he shared some short video clips before most pieces of him talking with John about the music. It’s really quite amazing how much John Williams has accomplished in his career. From Wikipedia:

In a career that spans six decades, Williams has composed many of the most famous film scores in history, including those for Jaws, Star Wars, Superman, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Jurassic Park, Schindler’s List, and Harry Potter. In addition, he has composed theme music for four Olympic Games, numerous television series and concert pieces.

Sadly, Raiders of the Lost Ark and Jurassic Park were not performed, but the rest of those themes were, along with Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Amistad, Catch Me If You Can, and Saving Private Ryan. With four of the fourteen pieces they performed coming from Star Wars, you might say that was the theme for the evening, and it was complete with storm troopers, Princess Leia, and Darth Vader. Yes, they actually had people in Star Wars costumes! (UPDATE: Here are some photos.)

Another neat thing about the evening was that Bruce got the audience to sing happy birthday to John on camera! As a thank you for allowing ESO to perform his music (some which hasn’t been published, like Jaws) and for allowing the interview clips to be shown, John will get a copy of our birthday song.

During the interview clip for Schindler’s List, John said he looked at the film and was deeply moved. When he went to talk to Steven Spielberg about the music, the conversation went something like this:

John: This film is incredibly moving, you truly need a better composer than me.
Steven: I know, but they are all dead!

I really enjoyed the show, and hearing the music definitely makes me want to watch the movies again. I had forgotten how perfectly frightening the music for Jaws is! And when they started to play E.T. I couldn’t help but smile – it was like I was transported back in time! E.T. was one of my favorite movies when I was a kid, and it still is. The music just gets me every time I hear it.

Happy Birthday to you John Williams! I hope you continue doing your thing for years to come.

Read: Winspear Centre

Yahoo! Podcasts is dead

Post ImageI’ve seen a few blog posts on this now, and I wanted to add my own thoughts. Some time in the last couple days Yahoo added a message to the top of their forever-in-beta podcast directory site that reads “Yahoo! apologizes deeply, but we will be closing down the Podcasts site on Oct. 31, 2007.” Not really a surprise as far as I’m concerned. Most people in the podcasting community would be able to tell you that Yahoo has ignored the site for months.

Here is what I said about the site when it launched almost two years ago:

Yahoo’s Podcasts directory is put together very nicely, I think. The layout and organization make intuitive sense, and the search functionality seems to work quite well also.

I’m not sure how many podcast directories we need, but I’d have to say that Yahoo’s is a welcome addition to the bunch.

Unfortunately, that didn’t stay true for very long.

Both Read/WriteWeb and TechCrunch invoke the magic word – video – when suggesting reasons for the site’s demise. I’m not so sure the rise of YouTube and the clones had any impact whatsoever on Yahoo Podcasts. As a matter of fact, the site lists both audio and video podcasts.

I think Yahoo chose to kill the site in part because it contains the word “podcast” in its name. I’ve written about this before, as have many others. It’s not the process or idea that’s bad, just the name.

I suspect the main reason Yahoo shut down the site is a renewed focus for the company, as speculated in the comments on TechCrunch. Just as well I guess.

Read: TechCrunch

Happy Birthday Podcast Spot!

Post ImageThe big news today of course is the launch of Halo 3, but it’s also important to me for another reason. It’s kind of hard to believe, but it was on this day a year ago that we launched Podcast Spot. We had no idea what to expect for our first year, but I think we can call it a success. Not a massive success, but a success nonetheless. Here’s what I wrote back in 2006:

That said, it’s just the first step, and there’s still a long way to go. We’re eager and excited to continue improving the podcasting experience, with Podcast Spot and other products too.

I’d say that still holds for today. We’re going to spend some time going through what we’ve learned over the last year, and combined with our ideas and plans, we look forward to making our second year even better.

As I said on the Paramagnus blog, thanks to everyone who has supported us and especially to the podcasters who call Podcast Spot home. It’s still pretty cool to me that people are using something I’ve built.

Read: Paramagnus

Paramagnus in Edmontonians Magazine

Post Image The September 2007 issue of Edmontonians magazine contains an article about Dickson and I. Quite simply, I think the article is terrible. Not only is it factually inaccurate and unnecessarily negative, I feel it is an extremely unfair introduction to both Dickson and myself as individuals. Every friend or family member who has read the article thus far has said the same thing: “that doesn’t sound like you guys!”

The worst part is that there is supposed to be a follow-up article. Will it be better, or just as bad? Does it even matter? I don’t know. We’ll find out soon enough I guess, and I’ll definitely be writing about it here.

In any case, I wanted to write down my concerns with the first article, so that I can look back on the experience and hopefully take something positive away from it. If you’ve got some spare time on your hands, you can read my very long entry here. If you do read what I’ve written, I’d love to know whether you think my concerns are legitimate or if instead you think I’m bat-shit crazy.

Also – have you seen Edmontonians anywhere around town? The circulation page makes it seem like the magazine is really easy to find, but I’ve had a heck of a time finding any copies. Seems the only reliable location is the airport. I guess that’s just as well 🙂

Read: Why The Article on Paramagnus in Edmontonians Magazine Sucks

Why The Article on Paramagnus in Edmontonians Magazine Sucks

NOTE: This post is quite long and involved. The September 2007 issue of Edmontonians magazine contains an article about Dickson and I. Quite simply, I think the article is terrible. Not only is it factually inaccurate and unnecessarily negative, I feel it is an extremely unfair introduction to both Dickson and myself as individuals. In this post I start with some background information, and then delve into my thoughts on the article in more detail.

It all starts with VenturePrize

As most of you know, Dickson and I competed in the 2006 VenturePrize business plan competition. We learned a lot from the experience, and had a great time too. I’ve written quite a bit about the competition on this blog, and also on the special Paramagnus blog we setup to document our experience.

In May, we attended the 2007 VenturePrize competition along with our friends Chris and Don from ProExams, who won the competition last year. Around the same time, we were approached by VenturePrize head-honcho Jay Krysler who wanted to nominate us for the 6th annual Sizzling Twenty Under 30 write-up in the Edmontonians magazine. We thought that was pretty cool, and sent Jay the information he requested (background information on Paramagnus, essentially).

Then we forgot all about it, quite honestly, until July when we received a peculiar phone call and email from Tom Bradshaw asking to meet with us:

After this session we will each write a column giving advice on how you can improve in these areas. This will be part of Septembers sizzling 20 under 30’s. You guys will get a great profile.

He listed the “areas” mentioned in the email: “Voice, Speech and Presentation”, “Visioning and Goal Setting”, “Conflict Management”, and “Health and Wellness”. Tom’s email sort of came out of left field for us, and we said as much in our reply:

We are somewhat confused about the information you have sent us. We’re not sure what the profile or any of the panel members you have mentioned have to do with the sizzling 20 under 30?

Hopefully you can provide some clarification. We were expecting something more related to entrepreneurship, not speech therapy. Sorry to be so blunt, but you’ve sort of caught us off-guard!

Tom’s reply made it clear that we weren’t being considered for the Twenty Sizzling Under 30 at all, but for a different article written by “The Transformers”:

One of the reasons you were suggested to the Transformers, and I am sorry to be blunt back, but we were given the impression that you would have won the venture contest if your presentation had been better? Perhaps this was not the case and as I was not there I can not speak with authority on the matter.

Fair enough – ask a blunt question, receive a blunt response. That said however, we’ve never ever been told by anyone that we’d have won VenturePrize if our presentation had been better. We worked with two mentors very closely, and they were brutally honest about how we could improve. Aside from making both our business plan and presentation less technical, nothing was ever said about our presentation being anything less then awesome. I mean that – we heard countless times from many different people that the judges were very impressed with us. We were under the impression that we didn’t win VenturePrize for business reasons – certain areas just were not as well-thought out as the competition (management and marketing, primarily).

Meeting the Transformers

Dickson and I are both pretty adventurous guys, so we decided we’d accept Tom’s invitation to meet with the group. On August 1st, we met with the Transformers at Dr. Larry Ohlhauser’s downtown office. In addition to Larry and Tom, Steffany Hanlen, Les Brost, and Edmontonians publisher Sharon MacLean were all present.

The meeting was scheduled for 5 PM. I arrived slightly early, and waited in the reception area until the group finished their previous meeting. Dickson arrived just as they were finishing up, and we entered the boardroom, ready to find out what The Transformers were all about.

Let me describe the situation. We were meeting with a group of people we’d never met before. This same group of people was under the impression that our presentation skills suck and that they could give us advice on how to improve. Furthermore, we were meeting on their turf. Essentially the situation was an uncomfortable one, filled with unknowns.

I had only two tasks in mind for the meeting. First, I wanted to find out what the heck we were doing there. Second, I needed to decide if we wanted to participate or not. We started with introductions around the table, and then we asked the group to explain things. They said they’d write an article on us, with each of them taking a slightly different angle based on their area of expertise. I then asked the group how writing an article pointing out our flaws would benefit us. Steffany seemed to be leader, and she tried to answer the question by explaining that it was in their best interests to make us look good.

We then had to make an on-the-spot decision to continue the meeting, or to call it a day and go our separate ways. We decided to continue. Looking back, I’m not so sure that was the best decision.

The rest of the meeting was a fairly typical interview, with each of the Transformers taking turns asking us questions. Things wrapped up at about 6:30, and they said they’d get in touch with us to meet one-on-one in order to gather more information for the article. We thanked them, and left.

We debriefed as we walked to Dickson’s car. Our general feeling was that the article/process could go either way. Could be good, could be bad. It was disconcerting that the publisher Sharon never once got the name “VenturePrize” right, always calling it something else.

Meeting with the Transformers individually

I’m going to keep this section short, as I want to get to the article. During the month of August, Dickson and I met Larry individually, with Tom together, and with Les together.

My meeting with Larry went quite well, I thought. He’s a really interesting guy, and came across as very genuine. We met at Starbucks and then went to his office to fill out the exercises he had prepared. I got the impression that Larry is far more comfortable working with his typical patient however – someone a good thirty years older than me.

The meeting with Tom was interesting. He’s a wonderful speaker, as you might expect from a speech consultant, and he had some funny stories and anecdotes to share. Beyond that however, I wasn’t sure how he was going to be able to help us. The stuff Tom does takes days, or even weeks, and we only had an hour.

I think Dickson enjoyed the meeting with Les more than I did. Les brought along a folder of documents that we went through together. Sadly, I felt that he was just going through the motions. Again, I wasn’t sure how Les might be able to help us.

We never met with Steffany. All we did was fill out an exercise that resulted in four words. Mine were “connect”, “participate”, “experiment”, and “inspire”.

The Article

I found out about the article late on the evening of the 8th, when Dickson sent me a text message. No email or phone call from any of the Transformers to tell us that it was published (not to be expected I guess, but the lack of communication was cause for concern). The article is broken into four sections, each written by one of the Transformers.

ParamagnusParadox with Steffany Hanlen

This is the first section of the article, and the worst in my opinion. This paragraph is particularly telling:

A bit of background: In 2006, Paramagnus entered the VenturePrize competition and placed second. As I understand it, the audience watched as Mack, the president and CEO, and Dickson, the vice-president, pitched their business to various judges-angel investors-and essentially presented themselves right out of the money.

As I’ve already said, we never received any feedback like this. We presented ourselves right out of the money? News to me. I’ve spoken with some friends about the article, and a few of them have pointed out that Steffany did say “as I understand it”, as if that somehow makes it better. It doesn’t. All that does is make it clear that Steffany was too lazy to do any research. Either that, or she’s unwilling to back her comments up with a source.

She goes on:

A number of people who saw them in action instinctively knew they had something special, but some expressed concern they would not be able to attract investors, venture money or capital of any kind without some serious help.

Again, news to me. I’d really like to know if Steffany did in fact find people to say this, or if she’s making it all up. I suspect it’s the latter.

I don’t know if it’s our age or something else, but all four of the Transformers seem to have felt the need to butter us up. Steffany does it in the article:

This could be what it felt like when Steve Jobs or maybe even Bill Gates met with people of a ‘different generation’ and tried to explain what they were doing.

Thanks, but no thanks. Comments like this are flippant and meaningless. How many times has “the next Bill Gates” been written in the last two decades? Too many times to count, that’s how many. Even if Steffany did mean what she wrote, the comparison is unfair. I might think I’m brilliant, but it’s not fair to compare anyone to Bill Gates or Steve Jobs, myself included. They are iconic men.

I don’t know why she felt it was relevant, but Steffany pointed out that we turned down the offer of snacks or coffee. Maybe we just weren’t thirsty/hungry? Nope, must be that we were impatient and rude. Here’s what she wrote about me in particular:

Mack walked in with the heavy footsteps of a man twice his age. A scowl on his face did nothing but mask the spark of personality, generosity of spirit and humour that resonated later. after he figured out we were not there to embarrass them or tell them how to run their business.

I suppose that was meant to be a positive statement, but taken with the rest of her article, I can’t help but think that it could have been phrased better. It’s a backhanded compliment, at best.

Steffany finally gets on to some analysis:

The problem I see is they are unable to explain what they do, or to express their ideas in a face-to-face conversation with most people of a certain generation-and tax bracket-that could help them financially.

This doesn’t make any sense to me. First of all, Steffany decided she could represent an entire generation by declaring that we are unable to explain what we do. Secondly, she failed to take into account the thousands of people, of all ages, that we have talked with about what we do. We’ve been to dozens of conferences, trade shows, and other events, and I don’t ever recall seeing blank stares.

She finishes with this:

My goal with Mack and Dickson is to help them align their intention and desired results with their vision-just as soon as they see the value in creating one.

We have our work cut out for us.

I’m sorry, but I simply don’t see the value in filling out a worksheet to find four words. Steffany hasn’t made any effort to suggest that a vision is anything else. Obviously I’m being a bit facetious here, but seriously.

One other thing:

These McNally High School and University of Alberta grads-both 23-have known each other since childhood…

No, wrong. We’ve known each other since grade ten. You might think this is a small point to make, but I think it’s important. If Steffany is unwilling to do five seconds of research to find out how long we’ve known each other, how likely is it that she researched anything else she wrote? Not very likely I’d say.

HumanCode with Les Brost

All things considered, this section isn’t bad. I’m somewhat surprised that Les doesn’t once mention our follow-up meeting with him, which suggests to me that this was written prior to that.

Les very accurately described the initial meeting at Larry’s office as follows:

Their initial human code signaled “defensive, apprehensive and closed”. the atmosphere in the room was chilly and the tension hung in the air like a mist.

He then goes on to suggest how we could have handled things better:

Mack and Dickson could have lowered the pressure on themselves by saying something like, “We’re pleased to be here, but a bit concerned because we are unclear about the process.”

Fair enough. Except that I wasn’t at all pleased to be there. And to be perfectly honest, I shouldn’t have had to feel concerned or unclear about the process. Steffany, Les, and Tom all write that we were negative and closed when we entered the meeting because we didn’t know what was going on. Not one of them attempts to take any responsibility for that. Perhaps if they had done a better job of explaining who they were and why they wanted to meet with us, there would have been fewer unknowns, and we’d have been happier about walking into a meeting with them.

And sure, it goes both ways. We could have done some research and learned more about the Transformers ahead of time. Thing is, they wanted an hour of our time, not the other way around. Explain to me why I should give it to you, don’t make me guess.

CrediblePresentation with Tom Bradshaw

Like the previous two sections, Tom starts by explaining how we walked into the meeting “almost like they had been called to the principal’s office.” Does this magazine not have an editor? Does saying the same thing three times make it more accurate or important? Fail, fail, fail.

This line from Tom’s section made me laugh:

If you total their combined ages, they are younger than the mean age of the Transformers.

Here is Tom’s analysis of our presentation skills:

At this point, I haven’t seen either Mack or Dickson in action talking to potential investors, but there were a few traits I noticed at the intake interview that need to be addressed.

Each has a habit of speaking with a hand in front of his mouth. First, people really do hear better when they can see your lips moving. Secondly, it sends a message that you may be hiding something which reduces your credibility.

Ask either one of them a direct question, and you get an indirect answer.

I wasn’t aware that I had a habit of speaking with my hand in front of my mouth, but maybe I do. I’ll definitely think about it now. I asked a bunch of people if they thought I had such a habit, and no one said yes. We only spent about two hours with Tom, so I am not sure if that’s enough time to notice something like that and classify it as a habit, but I’m willing to give him the benefit of the doubt here.

Indirect answer to a direct question? I don’t think so. I think my direct answers are part of the reason that I come across as aggressive.

Magic21Rule with Dr. Larry Ohlhauser

Larry’s is the last section of the article, and the only one that ignores the initial meeting completely. I’m not sure why he felt the need to include so much detail, but Larry’s section is full of seemingly random comments, all of them negative:

Mack and Dickson can only carve out time to meet with me to discuss their health and wellness after work hours…

Mack apologizes for arriving a bit late and orders a small plain coffee. It is not his first and will not be his last this long day.

He states, “My biggest commitment to health is changing my drink to Coke Zero.” I inform him that the aspartame in the drink is broken down in the liver, creating formaldehyde. the only benefit I see is a reduction in his embalming cost when he dies.

I always try to arrive to appointments on time, if not a bit early. If I was late to the meeting with Larry, it was only by less than two or three minutes. I probably apologized simply because he was there before I was. I’ll keep my mouth shut next time, in case he’s got a voice recorder handy.

I did mention that I drink mostly Coke Zero now, but I said it jokingly. I’m not sure why he’s got that in quotes, because those aren’t my words. The context has been completely lost.

Here is Larry’s diagnosis of my health and wellness:

He has failed miserably on his nutrition self assessment. He rarely eats breakfast, and goes long hours without food, finally topping up late at night before bedtime at 1 AM. He has no exercise program: what little he does is hit-and-miss.

All true, I’m not going to deny that. I should be healthier! Everyone should be healthier though, right? My problem with the meeting was that Larry seemed unable to relate his knowledge to someone my age.

The rest of Larry’s section explains that I’ve agreed to keep a journal to improve my nutrition, and that I’ll start a regular exercise program. Funny, I don’t recall agreeing to those things. For whatever reason, Larry decided to speak on my behalf. Not good.

Final Thoughts

I got my parents to read the article, and they weren’t impressed either. My Mom said “that doesn’t sound like you and Dickson at all!” Many friends who have read the article have said the same thing. I don’t think it’s possible to read the article and come away with either an accurate or positive impression of Dickson or I. That’s my biggest problem with the article.

The Transformers told us they didn’t want to make us look bad, but that’s what they’ve done. They told us they could help us improve our chances of landing some sort of investment, but I fail to see how anyone could be interested in investing in us after reading the article.

We haven’t yet spoken to any of the Transformers since the article was published, except for an email to schedule another meeting. They are supposed to write a follow-up article, but I’m not sure how well that’s going to go. I don’t think the Transformers themselves deserve all the blame though. I know we could probably learn a lot from them, if only we had the time to do so. Unfortunately, getting an article to print imposes time restrictions for everyone involved, and the simple fact is we haven’t spent enough time with any of the Transformers. You simply can’t accomplish much in a few hours.

The way I see it, there’s no way they are going to make themselves look bad, so they have two options. Either they write an article that is even more negative than this one, explaining how they were unable to help us, or they write that the Transformers are gods and we’ve been successfully transformed. I am not particularly interested in either option.

I am disappointed with the Transformers thus far. I’m also morbidly curious about what’s going to happen next.