Management — man·age·ment [ mánnijmənt ] noun — rapidly losing one's technical edge...
 Thursday, March 26, 2009

A quick micro-post for everyone. Bill Gates announced today at the Government Leaders Forum – Americas that DreamSpark is available for university and high school students. (The third video in the playlist features Max Zuckerman interviewing Bill about DreamSpark.)

So, what's is this DreamSpark of which you mention?
Simple: it is a program that provides no-cost access to Microsoft's tools as well as training to high school (as of today) and college students. DreamSpark is supported worldwide and is designed to help students learn and develop skills in science, technology, engineering, math and design. Higher education students at the college or university level can verify their status directly and access the software straight from the site. High school students gain access to the software through their teachers, who verify their school and have access to the software, which they can then provide to students.

Cool! So what do students get?
Students get access to most of our development and design tools (Visual Studio 2008 Professional, XNA Studio, Robotics Studio, Expression Studio and more). They also get access to select server products (SQL Server 2008 Developer Edition and Windows Server 2008 Standard Edition) to help with development and testing. Training Resources are also provided (free eBooks, training videos, and more) to help students learn about Microsoft tools and technologies, as well as provide insights into product certification.

Wow! What do I do next?
This is a pretty amazing resource for students. Visit DreamSpark, learn more, and tell your high school administrators and science, math, computer, and physics teachers about it. Let's help our children learn about math, science and technology – and equip them to impact the future of all of us.

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posted on March 26, 2009 #  Comments [0]
 Monday, March 23, 2009

Internet Explorer 8 It may have snuck up on some of you, but Internet Explorer 8 released last week and is available for download. If you haven't had a chance to take a look at IE8, there are a host of great capabilities (web standards mode, improved tab browsing, improved accessibility features such as Caret Browsing, increased security such as InPrivate browsing, automatic crash recovery and performance improvements) and some compelling new features as well (visual search and search buttons, accelerators, and web slices to name a few). Review the rest of the readiness toolkit to see what else is available.

Developers and IT Professionals
Developers should review the readiness toolkit for developers. IE8's developer tools are quite useful, featuring the ability to view the HTML source in a color-coded view (like how Visual Studio does), script performance profiler, and source inspection tools and property sheet view. The navigation buttons (back and forward) honor AJAX calls now, too, so site debugging is easier. There are some pretty interesting capabilities "in the box" with IE8.

IT Professionals should review the readiness toolkit for IT professionals. It covers a wide range of management, administration, group policy and deployment features.

Learning More
If you'd like to learn more, there are heaps of resources for developers and IT professionals from videos to articles and more. Here are some virtual labs you may want to explore to learn more in a more hands-on style format.

posted on March 23, 2009 #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, March 17, 2009

I just heard from a colleague of mine, John O'Donnell and Architect Evangelist on our ISV Evangelism Team, about a training event happening next week for developers in the Chicago metro area and focused on Windows 7.

This is a multi-day training event and there is quite a broad range of topics being covered during this event. Here's the summary John shared with me. More event details are listed below and can be found on the registration site.

Windows 7 enables developers to build applications on a solid foundation; enable richer application experiences; and integrate the best of Windows and web services. The features and technologies of the Windows 7 operating system enable you to build the next generation of software applications. This event represents your opportunity to gain advance access to technical features and solution scenario information enabling you to build solutions on the new platforms. This is a special event organized specifically to share Microsoft's early, forward-looking plans with our closest partners and customers. You will have the opportunity to provide feedback directly with Microsoft product architects. A current Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) is required for this event.

Agenda

  • Graphics Improvements
  • Multi Touch and Ink
  • Security
  • Application Instrumentation, Diagnostic and Performance Tools
  • Application Compatibility Overview
  • Sensor Platform and Location
  • Power Management
  • Background Services and Process
  • New Taskbar
  • Open Packaging Conventions

Event Information
Wednesday, March 25, 2009 through Friday, March 27, 2009, 9:00am to 5:00pm all three days.
Register Online

Location
Directions Training Center
2625 Butterfield Road, Suite 209E
Chicago (Oakbrook), IL 60523
(630) 575-8900

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posted on March 17, 2009 #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, March 10, 2009

The answer is: one of nearly two dozen items in my "to be blogged" folder. Last post there was only about a dozen items in the backlog, but I digress. So, what _is_ Thrive?

Thrive 

Thrive is a collection of resources for IT professionals (a developer version in the works) that will help you track down about three things:

  • Advance your career – resources on career development and training as well as change management
  • Enhance your skills – resources focused on technical topics like virtualization and desktop optimization
  • Align IT with business – resources on driving cost savings as well as compliance and guidance

But don't take my very brief blog post for it. There's a TechNet webcast covering exactly what Thrive is tomorrow, Wednesday, March 11, 2009 10:00 AM Pacific Time. Yeah, it's short notice, but I only just found out myself. I'll amend my post with the on demand link after the webcast.

Join the webcast, check out the web site, and let me know what you think about Thrive. Is it useful and helpful? What do you like? What would you change?

posted on March 10, 2009 #  Comments [0]
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The opinions, views, comments, and errata posted on this blog are mine, and are not representative of my employer's official position or public stance.

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© Copyright 2010 Brian Moore
© Copyright 2010 Brian Moore