Me: I live in Silicon Valley with my wife, child and cat. I have worked at Microsoft since I graduated from College, both in the Macintosh Business Unit on products such as Outlook Express, Entourage, IE, and Virtual PC and in Windows Live on Hotmail, Calendar and People. I am currently a Principal Lead Program Manager on the Windows Live Social Networking team. I basically manage a team of Program Managers responsible for delivering features to support our web and client applications. I've been blogging since 2001 and like to play around with .NET in my spare time working on projects such as dasBlog (the blog that powers this site) and Send to SmugMug (an application for uploading photos to SmugMug). I blog about a number of technology and productivity related topics.
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© Copyright 2010, Omar Shahine
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For the past few weeks I’ve been reading Mao : The Unknown Story. I was interested last time I went to Shanghai, and decided I’d get smart about the founder of the world’s largest communist party. The book claims that Mao was responsible for over 70 million Chinese Deaths. The Communist Party seems to still believe in the good of Mao, and unlike Stalin’s death in the case of the Russian Communist Party, did little to disavow themselves of him when he died. I believe that sentiment is slowly changing and I remember the NPR story on this book where they referred to how people now say that he was 70% good which is a big change.
The book was fascinating. If you have any interest in China I’d recommend it. It’s a bit thick and detailed so I found myself board at times. Mostly because hearing about the things that he did over and over got tiring.
I think I’d like to read about Stalin next.
One thing that I found interesting was that this is now the third book I’ve read that paints a pretty grim picture for Henry Kissenger. I don’t know much about that guy, but he seems to have gotten his finger in a lot of things.