This week for writing my column, I have traded in my office chair and cup of coffee for a bus seat and an unsweet tea, as our charter bus heads back to Illinois.
WJTL’s Best Dad Ever Contest!
Listen June 14th through June 17th for chances to call in and answer our daily Father’s Day question. Correct callers will win a family four pack of tickets to see the Lancaster Barnstormers and the recently released book,
Be Like Dad: 50 Stories of Life & Leadership by author and speaker Brian Sanders.
Winners will also be entered into a grand prize drawing for a pair of tickets for a hot air balloon ride from The United States Hot Air Balloon Team.
Two grand prize winners will be announced on The Morning Show, Friday June 18th.
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In 2014, Kaiwei Tang joined the inaugural class of a startup incubator in New York. It was backed by Google, among others, and its goal was to turn Tang and his classmates into creators of viral apps and world-changing tech companies.
Given his experience designing phones for Motorola, Nokia and Blackberry, Tang was more than qualified. Yet he thought about technology differently from his teachers and peers. For them, he says, success was about users spending more and more time on their phones, engrossed in the founders’ new apps. But to Tang, who describes apps and phones as ‘tools’, this sounded perverse. Would the maker of a hammer boast about how long his customers spent using it?