Sunday, April 27, 2008

Questioning Steve Ballmer

While at the MVP Summit in Seattle, I was able to ask Steve Ballmer a question about better support and interaction between MVPs and local Microsoft offices. I didn't blog about this before because much of the Summit was under Non-Disclosure Agreement, but a friend pointed me to a
transcript on the Microsoft web site. Here's the transcript of our exchange (Toby Richards is the General Manager of the MVP program).

QUESTION: More and more often we're being encouraged to engage with the
local offices, but I've identified four things internal at Microsoft that makes
this very difficult to do. The first one is, and before I get to I've
talked to other people around the country, and they seem to have similar issues.
The first is, we have not had MSDN events in Salt Lake for two years. We're told
there's not enough numbers of attendees there. We sold out our Visual Studio
2008 launch faster than most other cities within a thousand mile radius that are
having events. That tells me the numbers exist.

Second of all, I was told by one of our local developer evangelists,
his budget is 25 percent of what it was two years ago. This makes it very
difficult for him to engage with us.

Third is that it seems that the evangelists turnover about every two years,
and this one is going to be more of a thing for Toby. I found out this week,
they do not have access to our MVP profiles, even if we check Microsoft visible,
and I understand that it's a security thing, put another checkbox on there that
it's visible for local offices.

And, finally, when we do find out who these evangelists are, oftentimes
it's like going to an e-mail black hole, we hear nothing back from them.
(Applause.)

STEVE BALLMER: Okay, a couple of reactions. If you'd like, I've made notes.
Mostly I think that wasn't a question. That was very good input. I do want to
pushback a little bit just so you understand where we're coming from, and then
I'll tell you what I'm going to do. We did make a conscious choice a couple
three years ago, maybe three or four years ago, to move more of our evangelism,
and more of our MSDN event style activity online, to do more things through kind
of online events, and presentations, and the like. We've gotten a lot more
people to attend net, but it doesn't surprise me that we have I don't
know, a 25 percent budget, no MSDN events in Salt Lake, that strikes me as odd,
too. But we did make the conscious choice. Bad choice in your opinion to move
more online?

QUESTION: No, I think it's good to move more online, but let's keep an eye
on what's happening locally still. That's vitally important.

STEVE BALLMER: Okay. So what I will do, one other comment, if you send
e-mail to somebody who works at Microsoft, and they don't return it, I'm angry.
Feel free any time you're not getting an e-mail response from one of our people,
just forward it to me. (Cheers and applause.) It will help, believe me. You will
help me improve Microsoft, and I bet we can improve the response rates awfully
quickly. I give out my e-mail address often, SteveB, SteveB, SteveB, okay. I do
it all the time. And the truth is, I don't get that much e-mail from customers.
The customers don't waste your time. MVPs don't waste my time. People send
legitimate questions, concerns, ideas. Computers send spam, not human beings, by
and large. And if you're not getting a response, seriously, send me one or two,
I guarantee you things will clear up pretty darned quick.
On your other
comment, what I will do is, I'll step back and kind of take an all up look with
our folks on what we've done in terms of physical evangelism versus virtual
evangelism, and I'll take your input, I'll hear what we're doing, and if I agree
with you I'll give them a little bit of a push, and hopefully we'll get it into
a little bit better place.

QUESTION: Thank you.

STEVE BALLMER: Thank you. (Applause.)

TOBY RICHARDS: I would just add, in terms of the engagement with our sales
crew, that's a huge responsibility of my team, our profiling system has outgrown
its capability, and I told the team, hey, we have a product called MSCRM, maybe
we could start using that. Anyway, we'll take actions. By the way, my e-mail is TobyR@Microsoft.com.

STEVE BALLMER: Say it loudly, Toby. TobyR@Microsoft.com.


You can find the complete transcript of Steve's hour with the MVPs here. We also heard from Ray Ozzie (transcript here).

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Saturday, April 26, 2008

New VFP Help File Available

A new VFP 9.0 SP2 help file is now available for download from the VFP home page. One issue that people are running into is that pages don't display or links aren't available in the file. If this happens to you, open Windows Explorer, right-click on the file and select Properties. Then click on Unblock.

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Monday, April 21, 2008

VFP Boot Camp

I got this email today from Vision Pace. While I haven't attended the Boot Camp, I've heard really great things about it.



The next VFP Boot Camp will be in Kansas City, Missouri, May 12-14, 2008 Registration ends on April 24, 2008 for the highly-acclaimed VFP Boot Camp. This event delivers three jam-packed days of solid, hands-on learning. From the fundamentals of VFP development through the very latest VFP 9.0 features, this boot camp is designed to quickly get your VFP skills up to speed. Attendees will receive a 500 page manual in both print and electronic format. For more information visit http://visionpace.com/developereducation.html or email info@visionpace.com. To register call 888-904-7900.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

What's Happening at the MVP Summit

MVPs from all over the world are meeting today in Remond at the annual MVP Summit. Several Fox MVPs are here and attending several different sessions, not just talking about VFP. Much of what we're told is under Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) and can't be discussed here.

However, last night we had the FoxPro Product Team dinner. We were able to meet with Alan Griver, Ken Levy, Calvin Hsia, Richard, Aleksy, and others that have been on the team over the years. It was a great meal and really good to see old Microsoft friends again.

After all the the technical sessions today, we're heading over to the Experience Music Project (EMP) for the MVP party. Tomorrow is the last day of the Summit. It will be executive day and we'll hear from Ray Ozzie and Steve Ballmer before a farewell lunch.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Fox News from the MVP Summit!

New updates for VFP are coming from Microsoft. There are not specific dates, because these things are still working their way through the large Microsoft ecosystem, but yag reported today the following two updates:

- Help file has been updated to fix the index problem with the SP help file.

- There was a bug reported that the report toolbar becomes unusable in the new style report preview.

So, what about the other SP2 bugs that have been reported? We discussed some of the more critical bugs in the core with yag, Milind, and Richard. yag could not guarantee that the high priority bugs will be fixed, but he will see what he can do.

Fixed broken links

I was informed there were some broken links on my updated web site. The Crystal Reports documents were pointing to files on my drive instead of the web site. I've fixed the links and checked they're working.

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Web Site Update

I've made a facelift to my web site. Some older articles have been removed and all current articles are now in PDF format with new file names. If there is an older article that I removed but you think should be online, let me know.

Utah VS2008 Community Launch

The Utah .Net User Group will be spending the next four months on community launch events, the Hero's Happen HereThis month's meeting will be an overview of Visual Studio 2008, Windows Server 2008, and SQL Server 2008. Then the May meeting will be dedicated to Visual Studio 2008, June to Windows Server 2008, and July to SQL Server 2008. I will be presenting the Visual Studio sessions.


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