I’ve had an interesting few months. I finally bit the bullet, upgrading my website and selecting a hosting provider. The former was a good idea, and long overdue, as it let me set up a store where I could get rich selling digital content. The latter turned out not to be such a good idea since 1) it somehow managed to create a second WordPress log-in for me and 2) said log-in was linked to me staging site, not my actual website.
This meant the blog posts I created on what I thought was my existing website were in fact on the new version, which is also were I happened to create the product page for my eBook (which I also happened to edit and design over the course of the spring).
For the life of me, I couldn’t figure out how to get the new blog posts – namely, the April and May roundups you’ve come to know and love, or at the very least tolerate – to appear on the page that listed all the blog posts. That seemed like kind of a big deal. There were also some quirky tweaks to my new (or maybe existing?) website that weren’t the best, and it wasn’t clear whether they were the result of the site migration or user error.
As a result, I scrapped the hosting plan and stuck with a Business version of my old WordPress site. I didn’t lose any necessary functionality, and I didn’t end up spending more. What I’d been paying for the hosting service basically now pays for a business email address, with the added bonus that it’s not Webmail, which as far as I can tell no one actually likes.
The issue – and this is where it gets interesting, folks – is that I decided to do this a few days after I launched my eBook, which meant to link to it was dead. It also meant the April and May roundups disappeared, along with my heartfelt look back at five years of full-time freelancing. I was able to repost the eBook product page (which was easy enough to rewrite) and the career retrospective (which I’d drafted in Word), and I managed to rewrite the blog post introducing the eBook to the world.
That said, I didn’t bother redoing the roundups. To be blunt, I didn’t feel like it. Plus, the list of Stuff I Read was a bit short, and my Adventures in Fatherhood were a bit repetitive, redundant, and repetitive.
So, instead, I present to you, my loving audience, a quarterly roundup. This includes links to everything published in the last three months, along with some fun tales of raising a child that I may or may not have shared with you already.
Stuff I Wrote
- This here website: Telehealth’s Next Chapter: A Tale of Volume and Value (June)
- Digital Health Insights: Employers blend GLP-1 drugs with wellness to curb long-term costs (June)
- Digital Health Insights: GLP-1s won’t mark the end of lifestyle management programs (June)
- HealthTech Magazine: How Can Rural Healthcare Organizations Benefit From AI? (June)
- HealthTech Magazine: How NetApp Helped a Healthcare Organization Meet Epic Honor Roll Criteria (June)
- HealthTech Magazine: Upskilling Healthcare IT Staff to Meet AI and Cybersecurity Needs (May)
- HealthTech Magazine: How Do Data Silos Impede Patient Care and Provider Efficiency? (April)
- HealthTech Magazine: How SSO Streamlines Identity Management to Improve Healthcare Workflows (April)
- MIT Sloan Ideas Made to Matter: These human capabilities complement AI’s shortcomings (June)
- MIT Sloan: Practical AI implementation: Success stories from MIT Sloan Management Review (April)
- TechTarget: 10 best practices for implementing AI in healthcare (April)
- TechTarget: 10 AI healthcare trends to watch in 2025 and beyond (April)
- Custom content for clients in digital health, health data analysis, health data integration, patient verification, healthcare performance optimization, technology infrastructure, cybersecurity, identity management, and more (I think)
Dang, this list looks a lot more impressive when it covers three months instead of one, doesn’t it?
Adventures in Fatherhood
- Over Memorial Day weekend, I ran a marathon in Burlington, Vermont. The course was two Figure-8 loops. All told, I went through downtown Burlington four times. This meant I ran up the hill on Main Street four times. My wife told my son this was a mean thing to make the runners do. She wasn’t wrong – and for the next two weeks, my son, who has entered the phase of asking so, so many questions – humored me a few times a day by asking, “Why did the marathon do a mean thing to the runners?”
- Meanwhile, over Fourth of July weekend in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, my son was introduced to the idea that Daddy attracts mosquitos almost immediately upon going outside. (Don’t ask me why. They always have.) He then proceeded to humor us by repeatedly saying, “The bugs love Daddy.”
- We’ve recently discovered store-bought frozen water- and fruit-based confections. This is lovely – but, as my son prefers to eat approximately three bites of things before declaring, “All done,” it also means at any given time there are at least two unfinished treats in the freezer. That also means there are often at least two child-sized bowls or plates in the freezer, which is a challenge when, say, we arbitrarily decide the Cheerios need their own bowl.
With any luck, I’ll get back to monthly posts starting in August, just in time for everyone to stop caring about work until Labor Day.
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