I dig this picture that my neighbor took of me taking first day of school pictures. πŸ˜€

Bald man in plaid shirt aims a Canon DSLR camera directly at viewer outdoors while a smiling girl poses behind him on a suburban lawn.

In recognition of National Dog Day, a picture of Chase from four months ago.

Black dog standing on a white dock over a choppy lake, tail raised, looking at the camera

Celebrated Tammy’s Dad’s 80th Birthday today! Got a big Olson Family picture too!

Large multigenerational family gathered outdoors on grass celebrating an 80th birthday with gold balloon numbers, two elderly people seated at center holding young children.

Michael Franti & Spearhead

Michael Franti & Spearhead put on an amazing and inspiring show at the Music in the Zoo last night. It was awesome how he engaged the audience and brought kids on stage to sing and dance. There was so much positive energy! 🎢

Band performing on an outdoor stage at night with purple lights, three guitarists in front and a keyboardist behind them Guitarist in a white t-shirt plays on a dark stage bathed in a bright spotlight while a crowd member raises their hand nearby Dreadlocked guitarist in a white t-shirt with a tribal arm tattoo performs on stage facing a large cheering crowd indoors. Concert stage with a guitarist at the mic surrounded by a full band and roughly twenty children singing and dancing under colorful lights

Michael Franti & Spearhead at MN Zoo! 🎢

Band performs on an outdoor stage with green and purple lights, lead singer playing acoustic guitar at center.

Amazing memorial service for David Hussman. A perfect collection of stories, music, poems and reflections β€” that he helped design. Tears and love shared by everyone. Goodbye my friend. 😒

Goodbye to my friend, David Hussman

The last time I saw my friend David Hussman we met at Red Wagon Pizza and enjoyed an extended evening of pepperoni pizza and several glasses of a delicious red wine. We initially sat inside to avoid some scattered rain, but then transitioned outside to enjoy a gorgeous evening, great wine and even better conversation. Like most times that David and I got together the conversation never had a gap and flowed all over the place.

I commented to David that he seemed remarkably well. It had been well over a year since David called to let me know about his cancer diagnosis. When he called he was talking weeks and months. Here we were drinking glasses of wine and laughing well over a year later. He was sharing stories of his recent trip to Italy with his family. It sounded amazing and I could almost be fooled into thinking that David wasn’t sick. But he definitely was.

Person with long hair and glasses resting clasped hands against chin in a thoughtful pose, black and white portrait

I first met David when I was CTO for MarketWatch. One of the engineers on our team knew him and figured he could help us out with some of the things we were doing. I instantly liked David’s insight, his directness and ability to see through the messy stuff and get right to the problem.

David and I were able to combine forces several times over the next 25 years. We had what I would describe as a mutual mentor relationship. One of us would often ping the other with the vague request to get some “hang time” and talk through some topic that was on our mind.

David was always understated. His work to bring agile methods to companies was exceptional, and as a thought leader and speaker his stage was global. He presented at conferences around the world and brought a tremendous amount of energy and fun to the sessions. I enjoyed every talk I ever saw David give. There are dozens of them on YouTube if you never got the chance to see him present. I was really excited when he agreed to give the Keynote at Minnebar 9.

Often times I thought it would be fun to build something with David, maybe do a project or something. Both of us were always busy with family and work things that pushed that off. I tried to get him to join my book club at one point but he deferred, citing his busy travel schedule.

The last year I was able to connect with David on a more regular basis. A terminal cancer diagnosis provides some urgency. He approached his cancer with an amazing resilience. I can’t even imagine how hard such a thing is, but from what I could tell his approach to life made the time he got at the end so much better.

David was often referred to as The Dude, in an admirable reference to The Big Lebowski. He even coined his own law, Dude’s Law, that Value = Why / How. In life David always seemed to have a good handle on Why, and he kept his How pretty damn simple. The rest worked out as best as it can.

You will be sorely missed Dude! v5.6.50

Here are some additional items I’ve indexed remembering David.

A few days ago my dog Chase injured his CCL (Dog version of ACL) in his right hind leg. Today he injured the other one and is unable to walk. He’s older and also has melanoma, so surgery isn’t an option. Hoping he gets mobility back in a few days. 🀞🏻😒

Started allergy medicine β€” I don’t remember a year that I had to start this early! πŸ€§πŸ’Š

Very sad to hear of the passing of my friend David Hussman. We will all miss you dude! 😒 See his CaringBridge site.