According to Stewart Greenhill, I am “the friendly face of the evil empire Nick “professional geek†Hodge“
Lulz.
According to Stewart Greenhill, I am “the friendly face of the evil empire Nick “professional geek†Hodge“
Lulz.
Must do more of these screencast thingys.
Amazing to think 12 months ago I was essentially unemployed. Now I make stuff for Microsoft. Do videos, star in videos. Funny how the world works.
Thanks, Frankarr.
Thanks to John and Margaret for inviting me to speak at the Friday morning Computer Pals event.
As always, it was a hoot.
"presented by professional computer geek Nick Hodge" lulz (meaning I am laughing at the funniness of my title being on a large banner!)
Thanks to Kaye Fallick from the About Seniors website and magazine for the invitation to interact with the Melbourne seniors audience.
Most interesting story of these presentations: a lady impressed me with her data security plan for old hard disk drives: physical destruction plus encasing them in her new cement stairs. I just love it!
Spoke to 170 people over the two sessions – each sessions was slightly different, but used these slides as the base presentation.
Good to see Australia’s largest seniors web site: About Seniors, Telstra Bigpond, WorkVentures and the local Microsoft Unlimited Potential all a part of this conference.
Supper Room, Melbourne Town Hall, Thursday 11th October 2007
Supper Room, Melbourne Town Hall, Saturday 13th October 2007
Rundown of a week in Seattle, and sadly a week too soon.
Halo 3 ships this week world-wide, and I missed it. However did buy some Halo 3 T-Shirts for the family.
Meeting up with my fellow Enthusiast Evangelists, prodding VP’s and seeing all sorts of cool things almost made up for the lack of Halo 3. Almost.
Full flight to LAX, and I think I slept most of the way. Two Arrigo-nauts collected me at SEATAC and dropped me off at the hotel in one of the new Arrigo-mobiles. Cost: two jars of Vegemite. Goes well on bagels, evidently.
Sunday: a quick shop and eat with Paul Foster. I can has iCat! Lego store Bellevue!
Monday morning on-campus. Nic Fillingham and I jumped on those shuttle buses, building to building and generally found ourselves lost on campus. Microsoft is big.
On the Monday afternoon before the internal meeting, Nic, Paul and I visited Best Buy, Circuit City and Fry’s (Renton). Retail therapy works on men, too. As long as it is a quick visit, quick browsing and immediate purchasing. All hunting, no gathering. Fry’s had a collection of WiFi antennas that will augment the home network through 100 year old walls. Halo 3 advertising everywhere.
Second only to Halo3 in Seattle are Starbucks. I lost count of how many I saw during the week. Starbucks is so ubiquitous, it is tough to find/get real strength coffee.
This week, it’s OJ on CNN and FOX News early in the week, drifting to Jena and Ahmadinejad in latter part of the week. It seems that these channels have hyper-competed themselves into a corner. At least CNBC and Bloomberg seem to have cool stuff on. Even a Microsoftie in Japan talking Halo 3. I knew I went to the wrong country! Oh, and the History Channel is just like Australia.
Internal meetings are usually "not my thing". I either go postal/have a brain fart (this time I reserved this for a VP) or start thumping the table. This 3 day meeting, I managed to get that out all on the first day. And seem to be keeping my job.
I have not watched Iron Chef, but did see a cook-off show in Japan. There is a restaurant in Seattle where it is a battle of the bands. Our team of EE’s lost due to the use of a former professional chef (Miel) on the other team. I must admit, the steak was almost as perfect as my mashed potatoes.
Thankfully, the PopFly, Visual Studio Express, Photosynth and Windows Home Server guys all had chats with us on Days 2 and 3. The volume of cool looking and working things at Microsoft is increasing.
I have note worked out the story as Benjamin is being cagey: frogz.fr?
News: Australia is one of the largest markets for Windows Home Server. Time to Pimp My Server, too. 🙂
Highlight of the week: Microsoft’s Home of the Future. Flora escorted and presented many concepts that will appear in future homes. Having been setup for some time, does the Home of the Future really foretell the future? Well, originally the Home contained a microwave oven that could scan barcodes. That product now exists on the market in the US$170. My feeling is that technology will slide into the home’s we live in today. Less Jetsons and more Smiths/Jones.
The next 6 months is going to be a little of a consolidation of my first 6 months of work. More hints/tips/howto and a fewer interview style videos.
Interestingly, I could get my phone data-synching in LAX ok via T-Mobile but AT&T in Seattle sucked. The connection kept timing out, so I was relegated to SMS/TXT. How 1997. Due to roaming costs, Windows Mobile 6.0 smartly does not automatically synch and prompts you prior to connecting. The last thing I need is an angry cost centre owner asking why my bill is thousands.
Cashed in all my QFF points and upgraded myself home. Probably not the best use of points, but I needed the sleep.
Next trip to the US: MIX08 in Las Vegas.
Other stuff I missed out on:
Microsoft Wireless Entertainment Keyboard 8000 ships this week in the US. iPod Touch not in stock at the Apple Store, Bellevue. Yes, I believe I am going to buy one as the WiFi and form-factor for browsing is intruiging.
Rock on Halo3. I’m sorry I missed you!
… oh, and I missed my cats, cars, TV and family too.
And now to lose these 2kgs I’ve seem to put on. Even eating 50% of normal volume.
Brian Johnson, former Product Manager in the Microsoft Mac group has joined our little cohort of Professional Geeks (read: Enthusiast Evangelists)
Xbox’er, Mac’er. Microsoft-ee.
Welcome to our bunch, dude! Best job in Microsoft.
Yes, I’ll be at the Australian Blogging Conference.
http://www.freedomtodiffer.com/blogoz/
And Microsoft is a sponsor, too. Which is way cool.
People I hope to meet there include Duncan Riley. See if he’s found out who Fake Steve Balmer is.
Mashup using Microsoft’s Live Search. Created in Silverlight. Go have a butchers at the video.
Do you have an old PC lying around in your house?
Do you have a swarm of laptops needing to be backed up?
Do you have a collection of photos, videos that need to be stored centrally?
Like me, it’s is time to install a server on your home network.
Last year, I transformed an old Dell 8200 PC into our home server. This year, I am going to upgrade to Windows Home Server. Now available: for example: Eyo in Australia have it on their web site for AU$230.00
Bye, bye Mr Developer Guy.
bye bye mr developer guy. Nigel Watson, Finula Crowe and David Safjar surprised and rocked out TechEd with this catchy ditty.
Frank Arrigo, a stalwart of Microsoft Australia is leaving for Microsoft HQ. He’s been kicked upstairs. He’s going to subvert a different hierarchy. Australia’s loss, Microsoft’s gain. Don’t panic! We have yet to see the full impact of Frank Arrigo on Microsoft. Redmond doesn’t know what it’s imported.
Personally, I am not sad at all. Frankarr and his family is ready for this, and he’s going to have a blast. Frank is still “with us”, just in a different timezone and headzone.
Delic8genius and Andrew Parsons created a wiki: http://www.whatdoesfrankarrigomeantome.com/wiki/
A one minute video with various people using a single word describing what Frank Arrigo means to them was used a the closing keynote. A labour of love, this single minute took at least 12 hours to create. Including writing the music. It’s been too long between music for me.
So, good luck to all the Arrigo-nauts. Australia will quietly wait here in the clear light of the south Pacific, underneath the Southern Cross for your return.