Saturday, July 07, 2007

My pal Pirooz just showed me http://www.justsharepointjobs.com/

This is a pretty interesting site not only does it have jobs but it seems to have some pretty good references.  They list some blogs and sites, but they also listed conferences.  I thought that was cool.  You can't even get a list of all up coming conferences from the Microsoft site.

They have a great start I hope they keep up the good work.

 

7/7/2007 6:07:57 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback
 Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Patrick Tisseghem has just written a couple of articles for MSDN on building Windows SharePoint Services solution with Visual Studio 2005 Extensions.  Well a couple of articles is putting it lightly it's 58 pages of printed material that is more than a starting point it's everything you need to know to build solutions on WSS.

Part 1: http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb530302.aspx 
Part 2: http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb530301.aspx

On the surface this seems like it's only for WSS but it also applies to MOSS as well. 

 

6/20/2007 10:04:45 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Sunday, May 27, 2007

Adam Buenz has gone over the edge with Forms Based Authentication by creating a provider for finger print authentication.

http://www.sharepointsecurity.com/blog/sharepoint/sharepoint-2007-development/biometric-authentication-for-sharepoint/

 

5/27/2007 10:27:34 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Monday, May 07, 2007

I just read "12 Important U.S. Laws Every Blogger Needs to Know" (I can't figure out who wrote it), it's about laws that affect bloggers.  A few of these points have been debated for a while amongst fellow bloggers.  The article details appropriate behaviour to keep us out of trouble, but the thing that I liked most is that it had examples in some places where the law is very confusing.  Some interesting topics include linking to images and what to do if someone totally rips off your content.

Stacy Draper

5/7/2007 7:14:41 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Wednesday, April 11, 2007

On my birthday, Glen Block, blogged about a new developer course geared to SharePoint AND developers, what a gift!  Now when people ask me how to get started with SharePoint development I can send them to https://www.microsoftelearning.com/eLearning/offerDetail.aspx?offerPriceId=119608  Well he didn't really do it for me but it's a very nice coincidence!

4/11/2007 9:09:21 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback
 Wednesday, March 28, 2007

I just got back from devConnections.  It's actually still going on, but I had to come home and forage.  I'm not going to make the mistake of writing a blog post like I did for the MVP summit again, but suffice it to say I met a lot of people and cemented more relationships.

Lawrence Liu was to do the key note presentation and he was stuck in Chicago, on his birthday no less, so I ended up having 2 hour to prepare for it.  I literally had 15 minutes of fame, it was a lot of fun and the best part was when attendees told me how much they appreciated it.

It was a great event and I'm glad I went.

3/28/2007 12:37:55 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback
 Monday, March 19, 2007
3/19/2007 8:00:39 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [3]  |  Trackback
 Sunday, March 18, 2007

I just got back from the MVP summit 2007 and as with all conferences I tried to meet as many folks as I could.  I met Sean O’Driscoll who, as it turns out, is the person ultimately responsible for the MVP award program.  I must say Sean has a great sense of humor.  Met Jason Medero for the first time, we are working on the same Wrox book.  We discussed everything from balance of life issues to crazy clients.  Because of our conversation I’m getting a kayak, canoe or something and paddle up and down the intracoastal in the morning and making some time for me. 

When it comes to balance of life we all decided to take Monday off and shoot each other with paintballs.   Besides doing the Macarena, I think paintball is the most fun I’ve ever had.  Dan Larson has some video of paintball, but I think Conelius van Dyk’s blog post was first.  Andrew Connell shared his thoughts on the day as well. 

I’d like to thank Robert Bougue for carting our butts around and now, officially and publicly, apologize to him for shooting him when I was out of bounds. . . . I didn’t know.  Honest. 

Paintball was a ton of fun, 23 of us shot off 24,000 rounds.  Someone calculated that it was 67 paintballs in the air in any given minute, but you really have to think about that.  From the time we shot our first paintball to the last was 6 hours.  But we weren’t playing that entire time.  You have to consider we took a break to catch our breath, drink some water, get air and of course buy more paintballs.  So when there was a paintball in the air there were a lot of paint balls in the air.

It was my first time ever playing, one game was called attack defend.  The defenders have to keep a bell from getting run and the attackers have to ring a bell.  Brad Smith came up with an amazing strategy, “We’ll surround them and shoot everybody we see.”  So we did.  We met in the middle so quickly we started shooting at each other and the referees were laughing.  We all thought they were laughing because we were such aggressive bad asses, as it turns out they’ve never seen a team so aggressively cannibalize itself.  I was shooting at Brad from what I thought was the safest place in the world.  I was sheltered, uphill, with only a 10 inch opening.  He actually shot me right in the eye.  Good shootin’ Brad, even if we are on the same team, I’m still really very impressed.  I’m sure there is a lesson in here somewhere about communication. 

In another game I ran out of air in my gun, so I resorted to throwing paintballs by hand.  Loke Kit Kai shot me.  He said he felt bad because I was so close.  I had to be close because I throw like I use a mouse for a living.  His wife though, Stephanie, she's quite the stealthy one and I, like many of my teammates, was so glad she was on my team. 

Lawrence  really showed us a great time.  He took us to a couple of dinners one at Elliott’s Oyster House where I had a spearfish, it was yummy.  What a great team building day!  Thanks for everything LL, you’re the best!

Of course we all talked a lot of technology the other days, but that’s all under NDA.  The MVP Summit was basically Microsoft employees who were in charge of various products telling us what they had in mind and we told them what we thought and what we thought they should have in mind.  I learned that Shane Young has a long career ahead of him with his upgrade training, because there’s not a lot of automation in that space beyond what the SharePoint team blog's post on the upgrade toolkit points out. 

Adam Buenz, as I found out, is a good guy to have your side of an argument.  He spontaneously created a list of gripes and everyone was impressed with the roll he was on.  He became somewhat of an ambassador for the rest of us.  You could hear other people in the background whispering through him Adam would effectively communicate it to the folks at the podium as if he were some walking talking megaphone.

Who knows what they do with the information but they did seem to cherish it, which made me feel special.  They probably take that information and compare it with their other channels of information.   Somehow digest it all and figure out what the next versions of the products are going to be.  All I can say is that I’m totally impressed with the new stuff they are thinking about while still being enamored with the current stuff.

As with most conferences networking is golden.  I got to see many folks that I met in Berlin like Michael Gerth, Daniel Wessels, and Renaud Comte who represented France and Americans like Woody, Michael Noel, Mike Ammerlan, Fitz, and John Paul.  Michael Noel is always interesting to talk to, because we came into SharePoint from exactly opposite directions.  He entered from administration and I from development and we both know the product really well and overlap in skills so much it’s somewhat amazing to realize that we have such different backgrounds.  He’s obviously progressed a lot further in his career than I have, but I think it’s only because he’s smarter.  It’s always a pleasure to talk to him about anything.   Never forgetting the fellas from the UK who are turning out to be great pals of mine Spencer Harbar, Steve Smith, Nick Swan and Stephen Cummins (in no particular order of course J ).

Stephen brought his wife but I didn’t get a chance to meet her.  Todd Klindt did get to meet his wife and daughter on the plane and he shared with us that their daughter is just the cutest little thing. 

I’m excited for Nick Swan and Todd Baginski.  They are selling a tool called the BDC  meta man if you haven’t heard of it and you have to do anything with BDC you should go look at their product.  Compared to the number of sales they had when I was in Berlin to the number of sale they had when I was in Seattle they had a 50% growth in sales.  That was just 2 weeks apart.  Amazing growth you guys, keep up the good work! 

Of course Florida was well represented!  Andrew Connell, John Holliday who are both going to the code camp next week, March 24 and I’m defiantly going to try to make it.

I really want to make it to an Australian conference some time.  I had the privilege of meeting Ivan Wilson and Gayan Peiris a couple of really cool and smart guys.  Maybe some day I can go, I’m just spread so thin trying to get my arms around Europe.  I did get a chance to practice my Spanish with Carlos Segura Sanz, as it turned out he’s from Pamplona, where they have the running of the bulls.  I’ve always wanted to go there.  As most people know, my wife Macarena is from Spain, so I’m always trying to figure out how to learn the culture well enough to work there. 

Dustin Miller had to have come up with one of the best lines that I heard on the trip.  Dan Larson kept hanging up on Brad Smith because Brad was trying talk Dan out of going for sushi or at least waiting until we got there so we could all go.  Apparently there’s no getting between Dan and his sushi.  I can hardly blame Dan, I’ve eaten there before (with him as a matter of fact) and it was great.  At one point a frustrated Brad bulldogged up and stammered out, “Stop hanging up on me . . . or I’m going to . . . rip out your throat . . . and choke you with it!”  Immediately after saying so you can see the frustration in Brad’s face as he lets out a deep sigh, tilts his head down, hangs up the phone and Bob Fox asked, “Did he hang up on you again?”  Dustin looks up at Bob asking, “10 thousand sperm and you were the fastest, huh?” In the end Adam, Eli, Brad and I had a great time shooting pool at belltown billiards. 

Mathew McDermott caught me having breakfast one morning, what an interesting guy who really knows his stuff.  One day while taking a bus we talked about some nice additions to SharePoint along the lines of user management and I think I’m going to try to build some of them.  I ran some ideas past Mike Ammerlan and he gave me a much better approach than what I had in mind so I really can’t wait to try it out.

Cornelius Van Dyk and I had the same flight back to Chicago.  We talked about our individual community projects we have our sights set on and are going to try to help each other out.  He got me all excited about a SharePoint wiki idea I had a while back.  I brought it up to Lawrence back in October but I set it aside because Dustin was doing something similar really soon.  I need to follow up and see what’s going on there.  Corne created some blogs as he went.  It’s amazing that Bill Gates even let’s people ask questions as this one about lotus notes was a classic, and I thought this one on world hunger was great response as well.  Corne also got some nice photo’s from the key note as well. 

I think it’s a real privilege to hear Bill Gates speak.  I’ve heard he’s so rich that if he were to throw 10 grand out the window while driving down the road at 60 miles an hour would cost him more to turn around and pick it up.  There was a huge line forming before breakfast.  I thought people were going to throw their wives panties on the stage!  It turns out that the forum was nicely sized, I still got breakfast and was only 3 rows back and one group of seats off center.

Bob Mixon has a nice assortment of photos too. 

By the way I purposefully left Gary Bushey out, just kidding Gary.   Dan has another great video of Kells from Thursday night.  This was a really great trip and that’s all I can say without damaging careers (namely my own). 

I’ve been at this blog post for nearly 5 hours and seem to have run out of transitional sentences.  Believe it or not it’s a lot of work to name drop, never mind all the links!  Suffice it to say I met a lot of interesting people from all parts of the world some are new friends while some are old friends and I feel privileged for it all.  Now it's time to firm up those connections and chase down those ambitious dreams!

UPDATED: March 20, 2007

Ivan Wilson just posted his photos

 

UPDATED: March 23, 2007

Renaud Comte just posted his photos

3/18/2007 3:59:08 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [6]  |  Trackback
 Wednesday, March 07, 2007

So the European SharePoint conference was outstanding.  The beer was especially good and the people were great.  I had opportunity to meet a lot of people who work with and around SharePoint.  A lot of folks that I already knew of but hadn't had opportunity to meet yet.

I stayed at the Estrel Berlin hotel, where the conference was held.  I bought a wireless lan internet access coupon for 8 hours.   The username is EST0085587 and the password is 38127656.  I didn't use much of it so there should be close to 8 hours left.

The was the largest SharePoint focused conference to date.  There was quite an exhibit hall, many sessions and just an all around great experience.  I think  the most surprising thing was that everyone spoke great english.  It was freezing cold so I decided to see germany from the inside out only going out 3 nights while I was there.  I'll definatly go to another european conference again.   

 

3/7/2007 9:12:22 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Thursday, February 08, 2007

Alex Funkhouser just emailed me to let me know that there are over 600 people registered for the Code Camp.  Makes me almost want to cancel my trip to Europe, but I'm not gonna.  I asked Andrew Connell if there was going to be a SharePoint track he suggested that I check out the agenda.  There are 12 sessions in all and one is even in Spanish and yes there is a SharePoint track.  The SharePoint speakers all rock!  If you want to talk about SharePoint and the mob of people are too think around John Holliday then find Mark Kruger, he's local to South Florida and knows a ton of stuff.  He won't be speaking, just wearing a regular attendee badge.

 

I love code camps!  I normally pay a lot of money to attend conferences and Code Camps are like a gathering for free.  It's a beatiful thing to see everyone work together to produce a really cool thing.

2/8/2007 9:53:51 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [2]  |  Trackback
 Monday, February 05, 2007

Thursday of this week I'll be co-presentating with Joe Homnick at the Gold Coast User Group on Business Intelegence.  It looks like it's going to be a pretty good event with the Vista and Office launch also included.  This Saturday I leave for SharePoint Europe that should be a lot of fun, I've always wanted to go to a Microsofte centric conference in another country.  Hopefully it will be a good opportyunity to network.  My flight leaves Saturday afternoon which is the same day as the Code Camp  I always like going to Code Camps.  You meet a lot of smart local people and the local connections usually prove to be more fruitful.  But I'm not going to let that stop me,  I'm still going to Berlin.

2/5/2007 11:51:41 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Friday, October 06, 2006

I won an Xbox and yesterday when I got home there was an X-Box and an eager daughter waiting for me.   I kind of went through everything and I didn't see a browser jump out at me.  I'm trying to figure out how I'm going to integrate the X Box with SharePoint.  If I can't find a browser out there I'm wondering how hard it would be to create my own browser using XNA.  Or maybe my very own fat client application.  This way I can be at work and add chores to Alicia's list of things to do, before she can play video games.

 

 

10/6/2006 2:00:36 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Tuesday, September 05, 2006

So a couple of weeks ago I went to Redmond and worked with Microsoft on a project related to SharePoint.  Not being on the vendor list they recommended GrandMasters, LLC and worked with Lisa Kreissler (pronounced like the car, Chrysler).  I've not been handed many contracts or worked with many people where I didn't have some sort of objection.  I usually require something to be changed.  Like those NDA's or non-compete contracts say anything you know is our property and anything we know is our property and you can't use either one in anything you ever do again.  The contracts were fair, equitable, concise and showed me that a contract can be polite.

Naturally I can't speak for everyone's experience but only my own.  We had three days to put this together.  Because of the last minute travel my airfare was probably a little more so I went over my travel allotment by 10% and was entirely reimbursed.  Maybe everyone was a little understanding about the last minutes travel and just did the right thing.  Not sure why I just know that I appreciated it. My luggage never made it on the plane in Seattle, as a result Alicia didn't get any travel gifts.  The luggage arrived the same day my check did so it was a happy day all the way around.

If you're not a vendor with Microsoft and need someone to work with I'd suggest Lisa.  Here's her contact information:

Lisa Kreissler
Director of Business Development

GrandMasters, LLC
1607 116th Ave NE, Ste 100
Bellevue, WA 98004

Tel. 425.471.5140

Fax 425.392.5943

9/5/2006 10:48:56 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Wednesday, August 30, 2006

First of all I want to thank Andrew Connell for putting together the SharePoint track.  Way cool!  I'm not sure I've ever seen a track at a code camp, I'm pretty certain there's never been a SharePoint one.  There were many people who helped put this code camp together and it showed.  This Code Camp was very well organized and I learned stuff.   How do you beat that?

The organizers provided an optional slide deck theme.  I'm forever agonizing over what theme I should be using.  Maybe someday I'll produce a nice Wild Wires, LLC theme for code camps, but I doubt it.  There were lots of people to help folks find their sessions in the really terrific Advanced Technology Center building, Florida Community College at Jacksonville, I even signed up for wireless and it worked great.  I'm not sure if I understood correctly but I think the facility is available for rent.

Obligatory Restaurant Review

Preparing and going to a code camp is expensive, so I like to make a little vacation out of it for my family, even though they don't get to see me much.  On the way home we drove down A1A and stopped at a really cool restaurant Caps on the Water.  It's hard to tell if they were white collar bikers or not, but there sure was a lot of chrome everywhere.  The food was outstanding, everyone loved the hanger steak beef tips appetizer.  The gator tail was pretty cool until I got a nasty piece of gristle which made me focus more on the fish dip and 4 cheese fondue, both yummy.  The Shrimp Vilano, named after a nearby beach or town, was delicious!  After cruising down A1A with the windows down and the sun roof rolled back we were ready seek shelter from the oppressive Floridia heat so we ate inside.  There were a ton of tables outside right next to the water but we still had a great view.  Across the Intracostal is an airport we waited for planes to take off or land while being distracted by several nice boats cruising the water way.  If you ever get a chance to eat there I'd say do it, it's the classiest place you'll ever get to wear shorts too. 

One of the coolest things about traveling to the code camps.  It's all about getting to know the people and places around you, and figuring out what you don't know.  A perfect example, Duray and I ran into David Strommer at Deep Blue (a nightclub overlooking the beautiful St. Johns, one of the few north flowing rivers in the US).  David went on about rules engines and ilog and all kinds of great wonderful things that I had never heard of before.  The best I could come up with was, "Yeah, well I went fishing with my Dad and I caught a fish!"  Point being it's great to run into other people who are using the same technologies you are and see how differently (and how similarly) they are implementing them.  If you ever get a chance to go to a code camp in another area you should go.  It helps bring those tools and techniques back home and make your pool a little bit better.

Review of my Presentations

Something I'm learning how to do is review my own presentations,  I gave myself a 3 at this code camp but the population gave me a 6.  I really blew it.  I thought I was all set up, but I hadn't plugged in my laptop.  As a result it booted up from hibernate mode at 500mhz instead of the 1.8ghz.  Boy was that painful.  I rebooted a couple of times before I realized what was going on.  At this point I was about 6 to 10 minutes into my presentation.  I'm crawling around on the floor looking for a plug, since silence is deadly I'm telling everyone exactly what I was doing and what was going wrong.  It wasn't a pretty sight!  I think I recovered as well as anyone could from such a mistake and will have that one etched into my memory for a long time to come.  I spent a lot of time working on the abstract, with the help of Andrew and as obvious as it may seem, the abstract is what drives people to your session.  There were probably 15 to 20 people in that session about the Feature feature.  I know that they didn't just show up just because it talk about the Feature.  A lot of questions came up about what it is and isn't and when do you use it.  That again was my fault, I did have more information on what it is and when it's used but I botched it.  But I did finally manage to step through all of the things that you have to do to make a feature work so I got most of it out there.

Yet another cool thing about code camps, I can totally go in there and make a mess out of things and it's really not that big of a deal.  Code camp presentations are usually either good or great.  Mine was still on the good side because I did get information out there that people could use.  It certainly wasn't great.  But hey!  Maybe next time.  At a code camp even the worst presenter in the world is going to give a good presentation because the subject matter is about technologies they know and study and work with.  I think I've seen  something to the effect that code camps help local folks become regional folks.  I'm not a professional speaker.  I'm just someone who gets a charge out of showing potentially useful information to a group of people.  Maybe someday, if I screw up in enough code camps (I mean gain enough experience), I too will be among the ranks of desirable speakers.

I also did a presentation on the resources needed in a SharePoint environment.  This was to gear me up for an article I'm writing and I got some pretty good feedback out of there too.

Review of other Presentations

So there was this Cool Code contest.  I think Duray won only because he turned his kid orange.  I personally think mine was the coolest, I demonstrated how to iterate through the list of HTML elements to find the SharePoint form elements so that you could manipulate them.  I still think it's very cool and will post an article on it some time soon when I do the extensible fields in SharePoint, and show this technique as an alternative.  Jim Wooley had a pretty cool concept of generating an rss feed from the event log and that got him third place.  Jacob Sanford did an wonderful presentation on themes.  With the coolest part being that he inherited his own page.  Neat trick!  Joe Healy demonstrated AJAX and as I write this I realize that my presentation was almost as bad as his!   Holy crap I should just kill myself now!  Needless to say, the session was a lot of fun!

I saw Andrew Connell's presentation on creating your own successful blog.  I'm sure this post has him scratching his head wondering if I learned anything at all in his presentation.  I don't have the years of experience he does blogging but I'm stubborn non-the-less.  The one thing that I did really like he said is that you blog is your resume.  I really believe that.  What better way to demonstrate what I know and when and how I learned it.  You can't make this stuff up.  The point that I disagreed with him on is narrowing the subject matter of the blog.  Deep down inside I'm sure he's right.  Andrew is a one of those few great public speakers. 

Jacob Sanford gave a great presentation on ASP.NET themes.  I came out of there knowing exactly what I could do and how I to do it.  A presentation doesn't get any better than that. 

I have missed David McNamee's presentation 3 times on 'Making Technical Presentations'  I did catch the Q&A section and I know that I really have got to watch this presentation.  I've just hired a speaking coach, but I know this presentation is something that I have to watch.  You can just tell David has been doing this for a real long time.  Not just because he's old, but because you can see that when he's giving a presentation he really knows what he's doing. 

Jeff Barnes gave a cool talk on RFID that session answered some question and made new doors visible.  I'm trying to figure out how to approach my client with RFID.  I'm having a hard time figuring out what it costs them to not have it.

There was a lot of buzz about John Holliday's presentation on using reflection to create a SharePoint site definition in c# and Duray gave a great talk on the BDC (Business Data Catalog).

getting life back to normal

I under-slept all week last week and didn't even get to stay long at the party, that's my favorite part too!  Monday was crazy and yesterday was hurricane Ernesto preparation and party night.  A friend of mine bought an xbox and brought it over, while I was playing and he asked me if I thought I could play all night, I thought sure I probably could. . . but what he was really trying to tell me is that he wanted to take his game and go home.  Enesto turned out to not live up to his name.  I'm not even sure if it was a tropical storm as it passed through here.  Now my focus is on a Magazine article due Sept 8th (of this year!).

8/30/2006 8:52:58 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Sunday, August 20, 2006

I’ve been to the Microsoft campus a few times.  I’ve gone for an authors and publishers briefing, MMIT training (during the week of 9/11 and decided to drive back home) and I was there earlier this year for a SharePoint conference, but this was the first time that I’ve ever been paid by Microosft.  I’d have to say that it was an outstanding experience!

 

I met Todd Baginski for the first time and as it turns out I had a lot of explaining to do.  Todd asked me why I thought he’s full of crap.  I was dumbfounded.  I had no idea what he was talking about.  He jogged my memory by referring to a blog post I made last month.  Back peddeling as deftly as I could I explained I felt the first post I read was aggressive and via my blog I was trying to communicate that he really pulled through by meeting his publicly stated goals.  He bought that and instead of grabbing me by the face and dragging me around the campus, ultimatly we became pretty good friends.  Really though, Todd is just a fun loving guy who doesn't take himself to seriously, even though he probably could given all the cool stuff he's done. 

 

I also met Eli Robillard, who I’ve worked with in the past.  He was a technical reviewer providing, Jason and I, feedback on our work.  Everything was always via email, never even once speaking by phone, so it was fulfilling to meet the person behind the feedback. Eli is one of these easy going agreeable people who asserts him self in a positive way.  He’s a very “Yes, and . . “ kind person rather than a “No, but . . .” person.  I admire his blog quite a bit  blog was a major influence for me doing mine.  He co-ordinates a SharePoint user group.  I gave this some thought in the past but I immediately discredited it because I thought it was too niche.  But seeing the success in his makes me want to help put one together in my area. Maybe in the new year?

 

There were other people I worked with last week who are equally impressive as Eli and Todd, the whole experience was just outstanding and I really hope to do something like it again in the future. 

8/20/2006 3:36:58 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Wednesday, August 09, 2006

The Greater Southeast District Information Worker Community (GSDIWC) is a member only site that I participated in and won a X-Box 360 among other things. What follows below is a note from Mike Gannotti the site administrator:

Greetings All,

I had hoped to have the monthly newsletter out by now to include the winner announcement but have been buried and won’t have a chance to do that until tomorrow. However, since quite a few of you have inquired on this I thought I would quickly send out a note before I hit this road this morning.

Without further ado…… (drum roll please) The winner of the Xbox 360 contest is……… Stacy Draper!

Congratulations Stacy. A brand new shiny Xbox 360 will be headed your way. It pays to participate at GSDIWC. I will be announcing a new contest with a new top prize shortly but for those who may be interested the rules are the same as the previous contest. Best of all contributions (questions, answers, tips & tricks) submitted starting this month will count towards the next round. Well I have to hit the road so have a great day everyone.

You can go to the site and find the link to sign up and Mike will get you all hooked up.  Basically the contest is pretty simple.  It's a drawing and the entry is in the form of points.  the more points you ahve to more times you are entered to win.  I'm the guy who buys just one lottery ticket, but I really tilted it this time.  I entered a lot.  You get 1 point for each question you ask, 2 points for each question you answer and 5 point for writing an article.  Come to think of it I don't know how many points I earned.

Tell 'em I sent you!

8/9/2006 6:43:57 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

The Greater Southeast District Information Worker Community (GSDIWC) is a member only site that I participated in and won a X-Box 360 among other things. What follows below is a note from Mike Gannotti the site administrator:

Greetings All,

I had hoped to have the monthly newsletter out by now to include the winner announcement but have been buried and won’t have a chance to do that until tomorrow. However, since quite a few of you have inquired on this I thought I would quickly send out a note before I hit this road this morning.

Without further ado…… (drum roll please) The winner of the Xbox 360 contest is……… Stacy Draper!

Congratulations Stacy. A brand new shiny Xbox 360 will be headed your way. It pays to participate at GSDIWC. I will be announcing a new contest with a new top prize shortly but for those who may be interested the rules are the same as the previous contest. Best of all contributions (questions, answers, tips & tricks) submitted starting this month will count towards the next round. Well I have to hit the road so have a great day everyone.

You can go to the site and find the link to sign up and Mike will get you all hooked up.  Basically the contest is pretty simple.  It's a drawing and the entry is in the form of points.  the more points you ahve to more times you are entered to win.  I'm the guy who buys just one lottery ticket, but I really tilted it this time.  I entered a lot.  You get 1 point for each question you ask, 2 points for each question you answer and 5 point for writing an article.  Come to think of it I don't know how many points I earned.

Tell 'em I sent you!

8/9/2006 6:43:53 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Thursday, June 29, 2006

Bob Fox has recently blogged about recruiters.  I'm not saying that recruiters aren't ignorant, but understand why they do the things they do.  You don't have to be good at putting a resume together to have great skills and to be desirable.  The recruiter is compensated to find a person with a certain skill set.  So they shake a lot of trees, so to speak.  They have to ask the questions, do you have this, this and this?  Over and over again until they find what they are looking for.  The reason is that person might have an outdated resume or may not have thought that those skills were important to list on their resume. 

Naturally a good recruiter or account manager will tell their client sooner rather than later that these skills are incongruent.  But sometimes they don't know, this makes them ignorant.  Ignorance is not so bad as long as stupid isn't added into the mix.  I'm ignorant about a lot of things, but thank my lucky stars I'm not stupid, I can learn stuff I don't know about.  Recruiters aren't really dumb, they usually speak pretty darn well.  They just aren't in this business like we are and don't know what skills makes sense together.  You can certainly tell who you're dealing with when you get a call for a web master position that uses Adobe Photoshop and can maintain the Cisco router.

I work with recruiters a lot.  I'm nice to most of them.  Some of them I really blast though, like the guy looking for the Adobe Photoshop, Cisco router guy.  Good luck with that.   The recruiter you want to work with is the one that realizes how hard it is to find a person with all of these specialized skills.  For me I want to hesitate anytime I feel like yelling at an "dumb ass" recruiter, because they my not be stupid, in which case they wont always be ignorant.  Ultimately, being eligible to work with me someday. 

I've been a paid programmer since 1993, naturally I wasn't as good then as I am now, but working none the less as a professional, getting paid money.  In the future I hope to be even better at my craft, because I constantly study and try to understand what's going on.  Anyone want to talk about AOP?  Frankly I'm a pretty good programmer, I know this because people I have worked with have told me so.  Just because I work with SharePoint doesn't mean that my programming skills will raisin up.  And because I'm a programmer doesn't mean that I don't know much about SharePoint.  I'm actually a pretty strong developer in many different "platforms" like Content Management Server, Biz Talk, Commerce Server . . . and the list goes on and on.  My roots are in web development and all things that allow people to be remote.  I've done quite a bit of work with mobile devices as well.  That doesn't mean that I'm terrible at ASP.  But I am stronger at somethings over others.  Somethings I'm more interested in than others.  It's the recruiters job to find the candidate and the clients and candidates responsibility to know what kind of animal you are and if you are a good fit in the environment. 

One last note, the recruiter competency is usually directly proportional to the client competency.  Because the recruiter is clueless the client would be clueless by orders of magnitude, on the other hand as the recruiter knowledge goes up the clients competency goes up by orders of magnitude.  Naturally this is just a rule of thumb.  My thumb.

So use recruiters as a window to peek into th opportunity and perhaps the job does require to different skill sets, if you've got one put your foot in the door and explain why they need to hire two resources.  Help the recruiters do their job, after all they're just trying to help the client fill a position, why not with you?

 

 

 

6/29/2006 12:29:22 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [5]  |  Trackback
 Sunday, June 25, 2006

Yesterday I completed SharePoint 123 course and then went to a bar-b-que.

In case you hadn't heard of it you can find it at http://www.sharepoint.com. The Atlanta Microsoft Professionals (http://www.atlantamspros.com/) who are Brendon Schwartz, Keith Rome, Matt Ranlett, and Dan Attis built course ware for SharePoint.  It can be done in 6 different sessions, there are 3 hours of lecture and 3 hours of Lab.  I say lecture but it's really demo.  The 300 course had only 15 slides in it for a 3 hour talk and I think half of those were slides that said DEMO.

Being an MCT in the past I know that it takes about three hours for every hour of presentation to prepare.  I went through everything and felt pretty confident about it.  Everything worked for me.  That's when I should have realized there was a problem.  Nothing worked in my presentation.  The demo gods were angry that day.  Luckily Brandon Schwartz popped in after watching me struggle a few minutes he realized I was drowning and jumped in to help fill the voids as I was feverishly trying to get my demos to work.

I learned a lot from the 300 presentation in particular.  I really liked the VBA to SharePoint techniques. It didn't work in my demo, but I was really impressed when I saw it working while I was preparing for the presentation.

This course ware was really well thought out.  I never knew how much so until Brandon told me that it took 4 guys took 3 months to put it together.  That's 1 year in people years!

If you don't get opportunity to watch or give the presentation I strongly suggest reading the slides and doing the labs.  Just going through and preparing for it was either a great refresher or something completely new.

 

6/25/2006 7:28:08 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
 Monday, June 19, 2006

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I had a blast at the code camp, even though I burned through $1,100.  Well I brought my family too, so I wasn’t exactly the role model of an economy traveler, more like a mini vacation.   

Joe Healy asked me why I wanted to go all the way to Tallahassee.  Being all about telling the truth in an attractive manner I responded with, “So I can learn to be a better speaker.”  The fact of the matter is I just don’t want to do a bad presentation where people know me. But the audiences seemed to like it.  I had a couple of people ask me if I was available for work.  I had to ask myself, “They just saw the presentation and still want to work with me?”  So, I’m looking forward to giving these presentations locally.  Presenting locally could still be a problem though.

David McNamee, who somewhat represents Microsoft, covered his face and shook his head 7 times.  On the upside, 2 of those times he  used only one hand.  I took the session hostage, by explaining to Dave that I would kick and scream like a spoiled little girl if he tired to carry me out.  During the previous week I had nightmares of someone banging a great big gong and pulling me off with a hook.