Hi Jason, There is something so pure, so precious, so pleasing about what you've done. Just looking at the black screen terminal with the green florescent letters brings back a flood of memories. I was there, in 1983-85, learning and discovering this "new tech space" that none of my friends (my personal friends) knew existed. I am a unicorn for sure. I was a 17 year old, African-American, female, mid-westerner by way of the deep South (all of my chromosomes come out of Mississippi and Alabama). Thanks to my anscetryDNA test swab (that I did last year) I now know that I am primarily Nigerian and Scandinavian. What a combo. Nevertheless, I was a freshman college student at Akron U (majoring in nursing) and I fell head of heals in love, love, love with the first Macintosh. Jason, it was the best thing I had ever touched in my entire life. I started off in the world of desktop publishing. I used this machine to make money typing papers for myself and others, but soon figured out there was more to this. I started out wanting to develop applications on my own. I made my way over to the Science and Engineering College because I thought I could take some elective classes in coding to establish a basis for learning how to code myself. It didn't take long for me to figure out that I didn't have a love for coding, yet I'm glad I learned about COBAL, FORTRAN and Pascal. It gave me my basis for learning about what was going on "behind the scenes" of that wonderful GUI. The dots later connected after several years of self-study. When I discovered Prodigy, Compuserv, Telnet etc. it was part of my self-tech learning journey. I had a few "geek" friends who were active and busy hacking away. My worlds of nursing and tech were so vastly different. I graduated from college in 1987. As a new RN, I thought my tech and nursing background would lead me down the path of biomedical engineering. I worked in the ICU mostly thinking about how I could better design IV pumps, telemetry monitors or improve ventilators. These were the tools I worked with daily in 1988. Instead, I found myself transitioning to post-acute healthcare by 1989 because at that time there was a big push to move people out of the hospital and start doing high tech treatments in their homes. This meant discharging patients on IVs, ventilators and with monitors to their home. I was so ready for this movement. This new area attracted nurses who were comfortable with the technology in the homes of the patients. Obviously the patient and family had to get used to this equipment being in their home, but they also needed a nurse to operate the equipment. It all synced up for me by 1993 when I quit my home health employment and started my own consulting firm. I was only 24, but I knew I had to find a way for my nursing and tech background to intersect. I started self-publishing regulatory manuals for my industry and eventually developed the first phone-assisted electronic clinical documentation system for home health care back in 1996. It's patented and today my technology invention is being mandated in several states. Example of a State Mandate - https://www.dads.state.tx.us/evv/ Anyway, I sold my shares in that company and moved on to other things, but I still live at this intersection of nursing and tech. Interestingly enough, one of my other hobbies is song-writing. I recognized the impact of music on human life when I worked with my patients and families. Do you realize that music is an amazing vehicle of memory for those with Alzheimer's. And if you play music with a dying hospice patient it sooths the process for the patient and the family? Music therapy is as important to the patient as oxygen or prescriptive medication. I started exploring the world of music for my patients and started working with music artists. I listened to their pain and struggle about music going digital and how they couldn't make money anymore etc. and as a problem solver type, I worked to develop technology that would allow them a platform where performance and profit could be realized in a practical way. Through my study I found Fandalism/Distrokid and then I found you. I want to thank you for putting together textfiles.com. Sincerely, Michelle Boasten, RN Founder, LawnFest Live (and so much more)