User:HowardCM/R Lang & Associates

R Lang & Associates was founded in the year 2000 by Robert J. Lang, the CEO and general manager of the company. It has maintained a theme in aviation while pursuing other fields of medical engineering, sports medicine, and communication arts.

Education
Robert Lang was educated by various U.S. colleges, finally settling on a grouping of Ivy schools in the East to finish his doctorate.

A Developing Company
Robert Lang began his career in the aircraft industry where he became quite avid, also becoming a pilot in private aviation. After leaving major industry, Lang joined a small five-man team known as Aerospace Structural Research Corp., and performed consulting duties for clients such as NASA on telecommunication satellites. Before long he had ideas for a new venture, and with the support of his peers and business colleagues, began a new company.

In 2002 Lang contributed to the reinvention of Cable Television, realizing the unfinished business of the telecommunications industry. Shortly thereafter he modified the computer’s Hard Drive, combining the Master and Slave drive into one while preserving the original concept.

During the era of the 2008 Olympics[3] and the introduction of new Digital TV, Lang became impressed with athletic performances, particularly Swimming alongside the development of the high tech LaserZ Racer swimsuit.[5] In year 2011 Robert Lang reinvented the heart rate monitor for swimming and all other sports. The new concept took the industry by surprise, becoming one of the few remaining medical instruments to undergo reinvention.

Later in 2012, a further perplexity was experienced in the Vision fields of optometry and ophthalmology. In his fourth U.S. Patent filing,[11] Lang combined the age old concepts of natural vision leader William H. Bates[6] with the modern practices of Rigid Gas Permeable Lenses[7] to yield a methodology to regain natural vision. This makes it possible for previously nearsighted people (and even farsighted) to see without any further aid of contact lenses, eyeglasses, or surgery - known as natural vision therapy.

Communication Arts
Due to the company’s inclination towards new concepts and invention, it is not surprising it found a relative interest in the booming film industry. With the gamut of the many forms of motion picture media to stir the imagination, it is thought possible to open new doors for those who are discriminately aware. It can at least exercise the imagination instead of leaving one dull. More importantly, Lang’s company viewed that literature conveyed through theater will help maintain our moral values which could become lost if forgotten or neglected.

In 2002, Robert Lang took to screen writing, and upon an early casting call by DreamWorks Inc.,[9] wrote the original draft of Catch Me If You Can,[8] a film adaptation of career con-artist Frank Abagnale’s 1980 autobiography. The movie scored an unexpected high gross of a quarter billion dollars, and somehow remains a box office mystery. Due to unexplained encumbrances of Dreamworks Inc., Lang was never fairly rewarded for his efforts and the script rights over the film never settled.

Sport Medicine
Robert Lang carried on in the sport industry and took to swimming himself, realizing the possibly underrated benefit aerobic exercise can have on the health and life span of the human. After making certain his observations, Lang regarded Sports Medicine in the forefronts of the medical field, and has since remained a follower and advocator.