Yes, you could simply secure your wireless access point, but the truly paranoid like to back it up with a sign:
Photo courtesy of ImagePoop.com
Yes, you could simply secure your wireless access point, but the truly paranoid like to back it up with a sign:
Photo courtesy of ImagePoop.com
Maybe today’s the day for surprising announcements. Scott Hanselman has written an article about the beta for Microsoft’s Web Application Installer, an app that can set up the following open source applications:
It won’t install prerequisites, but it will tell you which prerequisites you’re missing and give you the links where you can get them:
Click to see the screenshot at full size.
The Web Application Installer is currently in beta. To find out more or to download the beta, check out the Microsoft Web Application Installer site.
The last of my stuff at the b5 office.
Since I announced that was laid off about three weeks ago, I’ve received a lot of invitations from people to talk about job opportunities at their companies. There were so many invitations, and a lot of them turned into interviews. I ended up being far busier as an unemployed guy than I was during the last weeks of my employment. I want to thank those people for thinking of me, and also for thinking that I might be a good person to work with.
It’s a strange thing to say given that the headlines seem to be all economic doom and gloom, but I had plenty of choices and decided to be really picky. This will be my third company this year. The first imploded under pathologically clueless management. The second, seeing rough times ahead in the internet advertising market, downsized me. I had to make sure that the third time was the charm.
On my first day off the job, I went to my local cafe armed with a printout of my updated resume and a pad of paper. Computers are wonderful things, but sometimes a situation calls for the distraction-free purity of your thoughts and an old-school writing instrument. Reviewing my resume, I made notes based on my recollections from all those jobs, all in order to answer a simple but important question:
What do I want to do?
Me and Linus at LinuxWorld Expo NYC 2000.
I want to get back to the work I loved most and did best. It most often goes by names like “developer relations” and “technical evangelist”, positions I held at OpenCola and Tucows. I loved that sort of work because it combined some of the things I love to do most: computer programming, talking to people, explaining complex ideas, writing, public speaking and yes, rocking out on the accordion.
I want to work on projects with substance. I want my work to reach, influence and benefit a very wide audience. I want opportunities to make a significant contribution to my field. I want to make a big splash.
And finally, I want a change.
My long-held career strategy has been to pick small companies. Over the past thirteen years, I’ve worked mostly with start-ups or small independent software shops.
I’ve learned a lot working in that mode, being small, scrappy and living off penny budgets and meager resources. It gives you a wide range of experiences from having to play many roles, you make significant contributions even if you’re a newbie and you can effectively define your job.
That got me thinking: What if I switched strategies? I’d like to see what I could do, given an environment of plenitude: bigger budgets, lots of resources to draw upon, a really big platform and an audience to match. To borrow a line from Archimedes, “Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world.”
I decided to sign up with the firm who offered me the kind of work I described above. They also seemed to be the most eager to take me on, and offered some of the biggest learning opportunities and challenges. Perhaps you’ve heard of them:
Some of you might need a moment to process this. (If you’re the type to do a spit-take, now is an appropriate time.)
Monday, October 20th, will be my first day as Microsoft’s newest Developer Advisor. Microsoft Canada prefers the term “Advisor” over “Evangelist”, but the job description’s the same. I’ll be part of the Developer and Platform Evangelism group, of which my friends John Bristowe and David Crow are members. The group is headed by Mark Relph, VP Developer and Platform Evangelism, and I’ll be reporting to John Oxley, Director Community Evangelism.
My evangelism work will be focused primarily on using Microsoft technologies to build stuff for the Web. It’s an area where I feel that Microsoft has dropped the ball in the past, but where they’re beginning to show signs of progress and promise.
The position is classified as “mobile”. Sometimes, I’ll work out of my home office. Other times, I’ll be working at a wifi-equipped cafe, either in my home neighbourhood of High Park or downtown. I’ll make regular appearances at Microsoft Canada’s HQ deep in the burbs or the “hotelling” office in the Ernst and Young tower of the TD Centre in the heart of the financial district. I’ll also be on the road, doing demos, presentations and accordion rock and roll for business, academia and user groups.
It seems that no “I’m joining Microsoft” blog entry written by someone who’s been living nearly exclusively in the world of Apple and open source is complete without a long, tortured justification. I’m going to skip all that and simply say that joining Microsoft will allow me to:
It’s been nearly a year since Assrockets and Opportunities (or: Why I Changed Jobs) (an article you really should read if you haven’t already). Since then, I’ve had to make a couple of changes to my plans, but the journey — and the reason for the journey — continues.
I’m going to be living the Chinese curse for the next little while. Working for a company with the size, scope and reach of Microsoft is terra incognita for me, as are its technologies. I’ve already been told by a couple of people on my team that it’s going to feel like “drinking from the firehose” for the next little while, what with getting up to speed with the current stuff and hearing about what’s coming soon at the Professional Developers Conference in L.A. (which I’ll be attending).
These are going to be interesting, exciting and challenging times. I’m looking forward to them.
Ever since I announced that I’d been laid off, I’ve had a lot of kind offers from people who wanted to take me out for a beer. I was IM’ing with one of those people yesterday.
“Sorry to hear about the job,” he said. “Did you get my email offering to take you out for a beer sometime? I was wondering if it ended up in your spam folder.”
“Thanks, and yeah, I got your mail,” I replied. “Sorry for not getting back to you sooner. I’ve been busy with interviews, and I’ve accepted an offer. I’ll announce it on the blog on Friday.”
“Cool,” he said, and we both went back to work.
About ten minutes later, he IM’d me again.
“Holy crap. You’re not going to believe this. I just got laid off.”
“What?”
“I got called into ‘the meeting’, and they started talking about my severance.”
“Just after we were talking about me getting laid off?”
“Yeah. Weird, huh?”
“You know what? I will now buy you that beer.”
The timing of our conversation and his getting laid off were incredibly weird. It’s one of those things that makes you wonder if you’re not really alive, but just a character in a novel whose author has a mild sadistic streak.
Perhaps the new job will help me help him.
CNN/Fortune hated the idea so much that they listed it in their 101 Dumbest Moments in Business article. In 2007, Radiohead made their album In Rainbows available for download before physical copies were available in stores. You could choose to simply download the album or voluntary pay an amount of your choice. Radiohead didn’t reveal any statistics related to the download; the known data comes from comScore, who reported that:
Based on these numbers and Radiohead’s silence, the CNN/Fortune article inlcuded the sneering line “Can’t wait for the follow-up album, In Debt.”
It turns out that Radiohead’s experiment was actually a success. Techdirt points to a report on Music Ally that says that Radiohead’s publisher Warner Chappell will tell all about the In Rainbows experiment at the “You are in Control” music conference now taking place in Iceland.
The “success” of which they speak isn’t the hand-wavy “artistic”, “critical” or “proving a point” kind, but the sort of success that bottom-line thinkers like: In Rainbows made more money before the the album was physically released than the total sales for the previous album, Hail to the Thief. Even when preceded by a free or “pay what you can” downloads, In Rainbows has still sold 1.75 million copies of the CD to date, and it’s still in the top 200 selling CDs in the U.S. and U.K..
The Music Ally article has more details and includes these statistics:
The blog’s new look is just the tip of the iceberg: big changes are in store for both Global Nerdy and its author, Yours Truly. It’ll all be made clear in a post tomorrow, which will include an update on my employment situation.
Purported Windows 7 screenshot, taken from MegaLeecher.net.
More will be revealed at the upcoming PDC (Professional Developers Conference) and WinHEC (Windows Hardware Engineering Conference), but for now, we know the name of the next version of Windows: Windows 7. The only other hint that Mike Nash drops in his post on the Vista team blog is that the goal for this version is to:
“stay firmly rooted in our aspirations for Windows Vista, while evolving and refining the substantial investments in platform technology in Windows Vista into the next generation of Windows.”
which I interpret as: “It’ll be the Vista we should’ve made.” For their sake, I hope so.
As for the name, it may not be as aspirational or inspirational as “Vista”, but it’s probably a good idea for Microsoft to adopt an “under-promise and over-deliver” strategy.