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Departure

departures

“We enter as friends, we leave as friends,” said Mark Relph, then the VP of Microsoft Canada’s Developer and Platform Group as we did my final interview in early October 2008. I started just under a fortnight later, on October 20th, and for the past two and a half years, I have proudly held the title of Developer Evangelist, representing Microsoft to Canadian software developers, and in turn, advocating for Canadian software developers to Microsoft Canada. If you have read anything I’ve written, caught any of my presentations or seen me evangelize, you will know that it is a job that I love and enjoy wholeheartedly.

Mark may have gone off to Redmond to join the mother ship, but his declaration still holds true. I will leave Microsoft as a friend next week on Friday, April 22nd.

zen garden

If life is change, then I’ve had life by the truckload over the past few months. I’ll spare you the details here (if you really must know, it’s best done in person and over a pint or two), but it should be plenty to simply say that if I were a more “New Age” sort of person, I’d say that the universe has been dropping hints that I really need to shake things up. Hence my departure, something I would never have predicted a mere six months ago. Life’s like that.

developer evangelist

Mine is still a great job. I could’ve spent the past few weeks just winding down and wrapping up, but I love this job too much to do that. I enjoy it enough to keeping “Bringing the Awesome”, right to my last minute on my last day next week. Everything I wrote in the “Now Hiring” post when we were looking for a new evangelist back in October remains the same.

What’s changed is me, and I’ve got to go and follow a different path. If and when the opening to fill my position appears, go check it out – you might find that it’s the job for you. It comes with my highest recommendation, and if you’ve got the skills and inclination, I’d tell you to go for it.

joey and microsoft founders

I’m going to wax a little more poetic in a blog post on my final day at the job. For now, I’d like to say that it’s been an honour, a privilege and a joy to have worked at Microsoft. I have worked with bright and talented people on interesting and important projects with some amazing gear, in cities all over Canada. I’ve learned a lot: not just about Microsoft’s tools and technologies, but also about the problems they solve, the customers they serve, the corporation that makes them and the industry said corporation is part of. I am a better geek, a better public speaker, a better writer, a better performer and even a better person for my experiences at Microsoft. For all this and more, they will always have my gratitude. I entered as a friend two and a half years ago, and next week, I leave as one.

Thank you, Microsoft. It’s been a great journey.

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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“Beverley, You’ve Started a Warp Core Breach…IN MY PANTS!”

violated the primed directive

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Scott Hanselman Takes “Jellybean”, the Kinect-Controlled Lounge Chair, for a Spin

clint jellybean

One of the highlights of the Day Two keynote at the MIX conference was the Kinect presentation, where we showed off a number of things that were possible with the upcoming Kinect API for Windows. One of the projects was Clint Rutkas’ Jellybean, a Kinect-controlled lounge chair (pictured above) that can be driven and reclined using only hand motions.

Later that day, Scott Hanselman interviewed Clint on Channel 9 Live and asked if he could take Jellybean for a test run. Clint obliged, and anticipating some YouTube-worthy hilarity, whipped out my Windows Phone and shot the video below:

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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Morten Rand-Hendriksen on the MIX Conference

mortenWe brought in a handful of guests to join us at the MIX conference, one of whom was our good friend Morten Rand-Hendriksen, whom you may know from his work designing gorgeous sites or perhaps from meeting him at last year’s Make Web Not War in Montreal. He’s an interesting guy with interests ranging from metal guitar to photography to ballroom dancing to performing Rihanna numbers at karaoke bars, and that diversity of experience is also reflected in his work, what with his mixing of open source technologies and using tools like Expression Web. In fact, he’s an Expression Web MVP.

Having come from the world of open source programming languages and technologies myself, I know that too few people spend much time in each other’s worlds. The open source geeks tend to stay in their own camps, and ditto for the .NET nerds. We thought it might be an interesting learning experience to invite Morten to MIX and immerse him in the most suitable-for-him conference: after all, this is Microsoft’s most web-centric, designer-oriented gathering.

His impressions so far? Pretty good, from the sound of his most recent blog entry, titled MIX11 – Day One Recap. Here’s the “money excerpt”:

Not to sound like a crazy cheer leader or anything, but the future looks bright. Or to put it in my own humble terms: Microsoft has seen the light and is accepting what we have known all along: Web standards and open source is where the future lies.

You can read the whole thing over at his blog, Design is Philosophy.

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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Trouble, Inc.!

trouble inc

Nothing good can come from this. Here are Scott Hanselman, Miguel de Icaza and Phil Haack, hanging out right by the Channel 9 Live soundstage at the MIX conference, working away on something so very wrong that Scott can’t conceal the guilty look on his face.

The Channel 9 soundstage is where they’re holding interviews all through the day at MIX – tune in to live.visitmix.com to see them!

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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John Bristowe Brings on the Awesomesauce

awesomesauce

Pictured above is our very own Senior Developer Evangelist John Bristowe, making final preparations during the last few moments before he began his MIX11 session this afternoon: Adding the Awesomesauce Flavor with Internet Explorer 9 Pinned Sites. In this session he showed how you can make your own sites pinnable for IE9 (and 10) and why you’d want to do it: increased return visits!

If you weren’t at MIX, fret not: in about 24 hours, you’ll be able to catch the video of John’s presentation on his session’s page.

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection.

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September 13th–16th: Save the Date!

save the date

Don’t forget to mark September 13th through 16th, 2011 in your calendar: it’s when the next major Microsoft developer conference takes place. Stay tuned for more details.

This article also appears in Canadian Developer Connection..