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Ah, it's nice to see my new
column online on the MSDN website.
Now that the content is finally "live", I need to tell a story. It's
embarrassing, but it will be much better if I tell this story myself, rather
than having everybody hear it from Chris
Sells:
I've never minded being called a "nerd" or a "geek". These terms of
distinction carry a certain positive connotation. In contrast, the word
"dork" is a term I prefer not to wear unless I truly deserve it.
Chris contacted me several months ago and asked me to write a column for his
new Longhorn Developer Center
on MSDN. I was flattered and I accepted. We talked about details of
the column and it all seemed easy enough. He said each installment of the
column needed to be "of length 2K-4K". No problem.
My first deadline was September 15th. I've never written professionally
with real deadlines and editors, so I wrote my draft well in advance. It
was a little tricky, since these columns needed to be quite a bit shorter than
the stuff I write on my weblog. The weekend before the deadline, I spent a
whole bunch of time tightening the prose to get it under the 4K
limit. My final draft was 3,985 bytes -- plenty of room to spare.
I submitted my column to Chris and he seemed shocked. He couldn't
understand why my draft was so much shorter than the minimum.
I stared at the screen for a moment, completely perplexed. And then I
realized, when Chris said "2K-4K", the unit of measurement was words, not
bytes. I thought it was a bit odd to measure written prose in bytes, but
it never occurred to me that he meant anything else.
On that particular day, I have to admit, I was a dork.
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