Stuff happens, especially when you are dealing with the government.  Whatever 
the issue was, it’s always more important to get ahead of the issue.

One guy that is a controversial public person came out one day and simply laid 
out all his dirty laundry.  He said, I did this and this and this but I’ve 
cleaned up my life and so on.….  Once he did that, his enemies had nothing left 
to attack him on and life moved on.  He is now highly successful.  I have 
always thought that honesty was the best policy but in the case of a public 
company, after the lawyers review the language.

For example, I’m making it public today, I’m a closet HoHo eater.  Yes, I’ve 
said, it, I love HoHo’sm, especially with skim milk.  And I’m working on 
getting my Ham license.

Whew, I’m glad I got that off my chest.    See how easy that was.

Rory



From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Josh Luthman
Sent: Thursday, April 2, 2015 8:09 AM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] What Adam Armstrong of Observium thinks of WISPS


Well AF5X got it.  Assuming the same compliance manager does both that sounds 
like a fact that Nbeam wasn't up to par.

Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373
On Apr 2, 2015 11:04 AM, "Seth Mattinen" 
<se...@rollernet.us<mailto:se...@rollernet.us>> wrote:
On 4/2/15 7:34 AM, Josh Luthman wrote:
 >Not trying to hide anything, it's pretty clear to everyone this has
taken longer than we expected.

 >We hit a few unrelated compliance challenges

That's the thing.  It's always some obscure non answer answer.  Like a
politician.


And yet other vendors didn't seem to have such difficulties. Bad design, 
perhaps? I can see why one vendor wouldn't want to straight up say our design 
isn't as good as our competitors that were able to pass the required tests.

~Seth

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