A new job... and we're hiring!
I'm happy to report that I've recently joined a new team at Microsoft: John Montgomery's "Non-Professional Tools" team. We're still in startup mode... it's just the two of us right now, but more folks are joining soon and we're looking to hire many more!
Our team's charter is basically to make programming fun, rewarding and cool for hobbyist/student developers. So whether you're a good fit for program management, development, test, or being my manager (along with several other developers and test developers), send me your resume if you're interested! Here's a description from the current two postings I found at the Microsoft jobs site:
Have you ever imagined a “Live” development experience? Do you want to help build one? Did you know that there are over 25M software enthusiasts and students, while there are only 7M professional developers? Did you also know that we really have not tapped into the 25M market? Come explore the possibilities with us on the Tuscany startup team.
The “Tuscany” team is responsible for creating the next-generation experience for enthusiast and hobbyist developers. Our goal is to create a wave of enthusiasts who love building experiences with Microsoft software and services by making it fun, rewarding and cool to create these experiences. We’re exploring some very non-traditional -some might say heretical- methods to achieve this goal, not the least of which is to create a “Live” development experience and to hit a ship cycle that has us introducing new functionality in weeks and months instead of years.
Comments
- Anonymous
June 23, 2006
Good to see Microsoft do something other than chase Google/Yahoo's tails or rest on Windows/Office laurels. This, like the earlier Robotics announcement, is good news. Hope they get the PR attention they deserve.
PS. Please don't call Tuscany "Visual Studio Live" ;-) - Anonymous
June 23, 2006
Adam can call Tuscany Visual Studio Live if he wants -- he's the one writing it, after all. ;-) - Anonymous
June 23, 2006
This is such a great idea and I wish you every success with it. Between this and Project Glidepath it really seems like Microsoft is looking after the wider developer ecosphere.
Any platform lives or dies on how much new content ("applications") gets generated and since it's much easier to trust and feel good about running managed code written by someone you don't know then hopefully we'll see a new wave of must-have micro apps. - Anonymous
June 24, 2006
Pure gold!
Please, please, please develop a new dynamic language like the old VB focused on a clean syntax, nothing else.
Yes, call it Studio Live!
Yes, call the dynamic language Tuscany!
Yes, give free project space and storage for people to build apps.
Yes, build a community around it with enough room for 20M enthusiasts.
What could go wrong?
- Using the .NET framework as it is today.
- Using .NET languages as they are today.
- Hobbyists hate strong typing and never ending layers of classes and complexity.
- Stubbornness
Listen and listen and listen.
Great idea! - Anonymous
June 25, 2006
Enjoy the new team and congratulations with the job-switch! - Anonymous
June 25, 2006
Enjoy the new team and congratulations with the job-switch! - Anonymous
June 30, 2006
The comment has been removed - Anonymous
July 11, 2006
Thanks for the comments! I enjoyed reading Paul Vick's post... I hadn't seen that before. Well Mario, John recently posted an updated charter at http://blogs.msdn.com/johnmont/archive/2006/06/29/645867.aspx. How does that sound? - Anonymous
December 06, 2006
Cette info est peut être passée à la trappe dans nos blogs mais je trouve l'information intéressante. - Anonymous
May 29, 2009
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