# Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Microsoft will be holding the next Professional Developers Conference (PDC) October 2-5, 2007 in Los Angeles, with two days of pre-conference on September 30 and October 1.  Save the date!

The PDC is the definitive developer event focused on the future of the Microsoft platform.  PDC 2007 attendees will have the opportunity to access new code, learn about the latest Microsoft product offerings and hear from Microsoft executives about the various platform developments.

Check http://msdn.microsoft.com/events/pdc/ for updates; you can also subscribe to the RSS feed to find out more information about the event as we get closer.  Registration will open in the May/June timeframe.    

Wednesday, December 13, 2006 9:08:12 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Monday, December 11, 2006

I saw in my e-mail today several items saying Microsoft released Exchange Server 2007 to manufacturing. I couldn't find an official press release to that effect but since one of the e-mails was from the Microsoft Partner program I am assuming they have it correct. You can read the official press release for the launch that Steve Balmer did on November 30th at http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2006/nov06/11-30NewDayPR.mspx and a Q&A about the business value of the products at http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/2006/nov06/11-30businessvalue.mspx.
 
With this RTM I believe that all of L.O.V.E. (Live, Office, Vista, Exchange) has not RTMed so next year should be a very good year as we try to find out how to best integrate and use the new features in our day to day lives.
 
Monday, December 11, 2006 7:17:22 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Friday, December 08, 2006

Sorry that this post is not more technical but I have been thinking a little about marketing lately. It started after the last Utah County .NET User Group meeting where I asked for suggestions on how to improve and was told that maybe we should look at marketing the group a little more. The idea being if we could get discussions on the forums or something else to create a little buzz we could get more attendance at the meetings and also more support from sponsors. I am still working on what the “right” way to do that is. I realize how hard it is to do correctly and how easy it is to pick out other’s mistakes. Here are a few items that I would consider “bad” marketing that I have discovered or that have been pointed out to me in the last week or so.

 

The company that I work, Keane Inc. for just launched a new slogan complete with a new web design and everything else. The new slogan is “Making Global Work Work”. I know that they mean that with the help of Keane you can reap the benefits of globalization. I also realize that you could twist the slogan to mean that if you hire us it will be a lot of work on your part to get globalization done correctly.

 

Another example is the e-mail I got from MSD2D on SharePoint 2007. At the top of the newsletter was the title and right under it a section on what happened today in history. It happened to be the ratification of the Constitutional amendment ending slavery. I guess I just wasn’t paying enough attention to the headings but I skipped over the heading for “Today in History:” and started reading expecting it to be an article on development. When I saw stuff about forced servitude and the like I was thinking to myself that they were taking the whole Microsoft is going to rule the world scenario a little too far. Then when I got down to the real start of the article I was again confused at the context switch into something seeming to praise Microsoft. When I re-read the newsletter it make sense to me but for a second I was reaching for the delete button and would have been left with the impression that the editors of the newsletter were not doing a good job.

 

I guess it comes down to making sure that whatever your message is, it is clear, concise, and very hard to misinterpret. I have gained a little more respect for the people who do this day in and day out.

 

Friday, December 08, 2006 12:16:31 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Monday, December 04, 2006

I got this in an e-mail. It appears to be tied to the launch of Vista last week.

During the last decade, technology has been the catalyst for incredible change. Ten years ago, the PC was just beginning to achieve broad acceptance. Today, the PC, the Internet, and mobile phones and mobile devices have all reached critical mass, creating fantastic opportunities for hundreds of millions of people and hundreds of thousands of companies around the globe.

In many ways, it was the launch of Windows 95 and Office 95 eleven years ago that signaled the start of this transformation. Together, these two products helped revolutionize the way people create and use information, opening the door to new forms of communication and collaboration that transcend the old limits of time and distance. The free flow of information, goods, and services that resulted has given rise to an era of unprecedented productivity and innovation that has had a profound impact on the global economy. As The Economist magazine recently noted, "the first decade of the 21st century could see the fastest growth in average world income in the whole of history."

But while we like to think that the digital revolution has already happened, we've barely scratched the surface. We still rely too much on paper documents to share ideas and paper forms to conduct business. That's about to change. During the next decade, the world's information will be digitized. So will the world's commerce, communications, and entertainment.

New versions of Windows and Office will play a central role in this ongoing transformation. Today, for the first time in 11 years, we are releasing our flagship products simultaneously. With the PC an everyday tool at work and at home for nearly a billion people around the globe, the joint launch of Windows Vista, the 2007 Microsoft Office system, and Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 will open the door to an era of even greater productivity and innovation. Because you are a subscriber to executive emails from Microsoft, I wanted to share my thoughts with you about why this wave of groundbreaking products will have a bigger impact than anything we've ever built before.

Transforming IT from an Expense into a Strategic Asset

Windows 95 and Office 95 were big, bold bets for Microsoft. The fruit of 20 years of innovation at Microsoft, they embodied our belief in the power of software to change the world. That's a belief I hold more strongly than ever. In fact, I think the innovation we'll see during the next decade-both on the desktop and as a result of the emergence of Internet-based software services-will transform the world of business more profoundly than the changes we've witnessed so far. Ten years from now, the barriers between organizations, systems, processes, and forms of communication will have given way to a seamless flow of information and ideas that will unlock personal creativity and productivity, and drive even greater opportunity and growth.

Windows Vista, the 2007 Office system, and Exchange Server 2007 include sweeping changes designed to eliminate these barriers. It starts with far-reaching changes to the user experience. From the new Windows Vista Aero interface to the new Ribbon in the 2007 Office system, these products offer dramatic improvements that enable users to focus on content and tasks rather than the interface itself, making it easier to find information and access useful features with fewer clicks.

Windows Vista, the 2007 Office system, and Exchange Server 2007 also deliver new capabilities that enhance security and performance; streamline the flow of information between people, systems, and processes; and transform the way people use information to drive informed, creative decision making.

The changes are dramatic. And with significant change comes more than a little risk. After all, these are some of the best-known and most-used products on the planet. Windows powers 845 million computers. Office is used by more than 450 million people. Any thoughtful businessperson would think twice before tinkering with the products that people use every day to manage their work and run their businesses.

So why are we making these changes? And why should you risk disrupting your business to take advantage of these new features and capabilities? Because business has changed and new tools are required. No one questions the competitive advantages that come when we can communicate and collaborate instantly with colleagues and customers around the world. No one doubts that businesses have benefited from access to nearly limitless information about customers, competitors, and markets.

At the same time, no one labors under the illusion that business is any easier as a result. In today's global economy, where customers can find the best price without leaving their desks, competitive advantage can come and go in the blink of an eye. Meanwhile, dealing with the endless deluge of data, email, and information often threatens to overwhelm our ability to be productive and to make smart decisions. According to one leading industry analyst firm, we spend an average of 14.5 hours per week reading and answering email, while the time we spend looking for and analyzing information costs companies $28,000 per employee per year. And ongoing studies by the research firm Outsell show that the amount of time corporate information workers spend gathering information has almost doubled in the last five years.

Windows Vista, the 2007 Office system, and Exchange Server 2007 were designed specifically to address these issues. Our goal is two-fold. First, we want to continue to advance the revolution in workplace productivity and efficiency that we started 11 years ago by delivering tools and capabilities that complete the transformation of IT from an expense into a strategic asset. More importantly, we want to provide a platform that is a catalyst for continued expansion of growth and opportunity because it enables companies to get the greatest possible value from the knowledge and expertise that their employees possess.

A Foundation for the People-Ready Business

Behind all of the changes in these new releases is a single, powerful idea: that people are the driving force behind business success. Ultimately, a company thrives or fails based on the thousands of small and large decisions that employees make every day, on how well they can answer customers' questions, on the insight they can gain, and the product breakthroughs they can deliver based on the information they have at hand. Windows Vista, the 2007 Office system, and Exchange Server 2007 were designed to create a people-ready business where employees are empowered to turn data into insight, ideas into action, and change into opportunity. They deliver a platform that enables employees to build profitable relationships with customers, spearhead new innovations, improve products and services, and drive the business forward.

To provide the capabilities that people need in today's fast-changing world of work, we've focused on four specific areas:

Simplifying how people work together: The nature of how we work has changed dramatically since 1995. Today, people work in teams that cross divisional boundaries and span companies. Collaboration with colleagues and customers in different cities, even different continents, is the norm. The workforce is also increasingly mobile. From unified messaging enabled by Exchange Server 2007 to workflow and collaboration in Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007, the new products revolutionize the way people work in teams.

Finding information and improving business insight: Companies of all sizes struggle with the fundamental paradox of the 21st century: while we generate more and more information every minute of every day our ability to extract useable knowledge from that information grows more and more tenuous all the time. Deep integration of new search technologies and powerful, easy-to-use business intelligence tools will enable employees to find and use information more easily, streamlining the path from idea to execution.

Helping to protect and manage content: Governmental compliance mandates and the growing recognition that simplified business processes and improved information management enable employees to respond to changing business conditions with greater speed and accuracy make organizational transparency one of today's critical business imperatives. Advanced content management and document retention tools combined with features to enhance data confidentiality make content authoring the starting point for automated business processes and regulatory compliance.

Increasing security and reducing IT costs: Secure by design and by default, the new versions of Windows, Office, and Exchange Server deliver breakthrough security features and they streamline deployment and management, helping reduce costs and enabling IT departments to focus on providing new capabilities that deliver strategic advantage.

Pioneering Innovation and an Unprecedented Partnership

In many ways, we have been working toward this moment since the day Bill Gates and Paul Allen founded Microsoft three decades ago. From Microsoft BASIC to Microsoft DOS, through the first versions of Office and Windows, and beyond, Microsoft has pioneered many of the technologies that made the digital information era and the knowledge economy a reality. Windows Vista, the 2007 Office system, and Exchange Server 2007 continue this tradition and I believe they include the best work we have ever done. The result is groundbreaking innovations in interface design, security, networking, communications, and much more.

These new products are also the result of an unprecedented partnership between Microsoft and our customers. We worked hand-in-hand with tens of thousands of customers who allowed us to watch them use Windows, Office, and Exchange in more than 1 billion work sessions to help us understand how they use these products and how new technologies can help them work more effectively. As we moved toward launch, our customers and partners downloaded more than 5 million beta versions of the three products. Their valuable suggestions and feedback helped us assess the quality of our work and the value of the new features and capabilities we've built in. No software products have ever been through a more thorough software design and testing process.

No software products have ever created such broad-ranging business opportunities for the computer industry, either. Across the globe, more than 500,000 partner companies, including consulting firms, independent software developers, and systems integrators are poised to help businesses deploy and run Windows Vista, the 2007 Office system, and Exchange Server 2007. Industry analysts expect that in 2007 alone, these products will generate more than $250 billion in revenue for our partners.

The launch of Windows Vista, the 2007 Office system, and Exchange Server 2007 kicks off the most important 12 months in Microsoft history. During the coming year, we'll introduce new innovations such as unified communications including voice over Internet protocol (VoIP) and performance management utilizing cutting edge analytics and business intelligence that will enable businesses to achieve new levels of value from their information technology investments.

Over the course of the next decade, we expect that Windows Vista, the 2007 Office system, and Exchange Server 2007 will be used by well beyond 1 billion people. They will be used by CEOs to plan corporate strategy and by elementary school teachers to help children learn the skills they need to thrive in tomorrow's knowledge economy. They'll help researchers explore the far reaches of science and enable artists to explore the outer edges of creativity. Product planners at the world's largest consumer enterprises will use them to understand market trends while craftspeople in remote villages will use them to reach out to customers in distant nations. The future of business computing begins today-we look forward to the new ideas, the new businesses, and the new innovations that will result.

Steve Ballmer

 

Monday, December 04, 2006 9:18:30 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Saturday, December 02, 2006

This is one of those non-technical posts so if you don't want to hear me brag about my children then you can skip this one.

The schools around here have a contest each year called "Reflections" where a theme is chosen and the children can enter in one of several categories to show off their talents. The theme this year was "My favorite place". I had two children who entered the contest. My daughter drew a watercolor picture of our front yard. She chose that as her favorite place because at the time the weather was warm and she could take a blanket out on the lawn and read a book. She earned an honorable mention.

My youngest son wasn't going to enter but after a lot of "encouragement" from his parents he finally relented and decided to go take a few pictures of the Peaks Arena ice skating rink because he thought if he took the pictures he could also ice skate and he loves to skate. You might remember the Peaks Arena as one of the venues of the 2002 Olympics. As it turns out he waited until we didn't have any time to skate but I took him down to the arena and he snapped a few photos. He wasn't all that enthusiastic about it but it did give him some one on one time with me and he also got to use the nice digital camera with a lot less supervision (aka Slow down!, Be careful!, Watch what you are doing) that he normally gets.

We entered this picture in the competition. He won first place at his school and is going on to the district competition.

I am very proud of both of my children for the hard work that they put into doing this.

Saturday, December 02, 2006 6:28:20 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Wednesday, November 29, 2006

I just signed up with BlogMailr. It is a free service that allows me to send an e-mail to their service and then they will post it on my blog. I am excited about this since I often see things in my e-mail that I would like to blog about but I don’t want to take the time to open up the browser, copy and paste, and post to the blog. Am I lazy or what? In a lot of cases I end up not doing anything with the e-mail until several days later and by that time I figure everyone on the planet has already heard about the topic and I shouldn’t just contribute noise. Anything that will make it easier for me to post good information in a timely manner is a Good Thing™.

 

Wednesday, November 29, 2006 10:09:45 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Tuesday, November 28, 2006

We will be having our November/December meeting of the Utah County .NET User Group on Wednesday, November, 29 at 6:00 in Provo at the NuSkin network operations center. You can get the address from our web site at http://www.ucnug.org. Ani Babian will be speaking to us about Microsoft's AJAX product named Atlas as well as some of the other cool things coming down the road.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006 6:59:53 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Monday, November 27, 2006

I am catching up on reading blog posts after the Thanksgiving break and ran across the post at http://blog.devstone.com/aaron/archive/2006/11/20/2063.aspx from Aaron Zupancic where someone comments on his prose style. I am not sure I am qualified to comment on how good or how bad his style is for two reasons. The one that is most obvious to those who regularly read my posts is that I don't have the perfect style either. If I forget to run ieSpell I get spelling errors all over the place. The other is that I think style is somewhat like art. There are some basic rules but after that it comes down to personal preference.

I have been blogging for over 2 years now and hopefully I have helped out other people with my posts. I mostly write about what catches my fancy at the time and also try to keep people informed about what is going on as far as I know. I think that most blogs I read are about sharing information more than they are about making perfect writers out of all of us.

Monday, November 27, 2006 10:18:49 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
# Monday, November 20, 2006

You can add one more item to the list of software that has been released this month from Microsoft. After a little over a year since being announced the Office Live site has now been released. You can go to http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/officelive/default.aspx and check out the offerings. They range from free to $39.95 a month and are targeted at small businesses that would normally have to pay more for hosting or an IT person. One of the nice things about the offering is that Microsoft is lining up partners to provide solutions for Office Live. That means that the small business owners  don't have to go out and find people with expertise to create some piece of functionality again and it should result in lower costs to the business.

Monday, November 20, 2006 1:34:57 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |