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Microsoft Student Insider Training Day 2: The first day at Microsoft Part 3
Mar 27th
Welcome back to my series of posts from my Microsoft Student Insider Training trip to the Microsoft campus in Redmond. This is part 3 of 3 from Day 2, so lets pick up right where we left off! Read about Day 1, Day 2 part 1, and Day 2 part 2 if you haven’t already.
By the time I finished up with my meeting with Josh, it was about dark and time to head back to building 99 to regroup with the rest of the Student Insider crew to head to Joey’s in Seattle for dinner. As much as I would love to say that I enjoyed dinner, that would be a complete lie. Rant time! After a nice little drive to the restaurant, we are quickly seated in the extremely poorly lit bar area where it was so dark I could barely read the menu. As soon as we got our drinks and were about to have our order taken, somebody mentioned that they weren’t 21 which is apparently a problem in Washington. For whatever insane reason, apparently there is a law in Washington that states that if you are under 21, you can’t even sit in the bar area, even if you aren’t drinking or anything. This makes no sense to me considering its not like you can’t order alcohol in the rest of the restaurant anyway. Whatever. So once everybody realized the fact that we were breaking the law, we were moved to the main dining section of the restaurant that seemed to be a lot louder and only slightly better lit. The longer we were there, the louder it got as the place started to fill up. I am guessing it is an acoustics thing because it quickly got so loud that I couldn’t hear the people on the other side of the table from me. Since I couldn’t hear anybody, I pointed myself towards the bar where they had the X Games on. Originally, I had plans to go to the Winter X Games this year until the awesome opportunity to go to Microsoft came up so I was happy that I at least got to watch the X Games, even if I had to watch it from halfway across the restaurant with no audio. The service at the restaurant was by far, the slowest restaurant experience I have ever had. With dinner and desert and everything, we were there for close to 3 hours. We would have been there longer so that people could finish their deserts had we not been trying to rush to the Space Needle before it closed, only to have had it just close before we got there. I also would like to state how horrible the waiter was. In the near 3 hours that we were there, I was never offered to have my drink refilled, I was never asked how my food was and he never asked if there was anything else that I needed. I was even more irritated when apparently he managed to ask everybody but me if they wanted desert. If I was his boss, I would have fired him on the spot. When we eventually got our very overpriced food ($30 for a tiny steak with mashed potatoes stuffed in an something that looked like an eggroll), my steak was undercooked for my liking, something I definitely regretted the following morning if you know what I mean. When we realized what time it was and when the Space Needle closes, we made a mad dash for the van and I can honestly say I have never been happier to get out of a restaurant in all of my life.
After a quick drive over to the Space Needle, we ran up to the doors only to find them locked. After repeated attempts to convince the employees inside to let us in and take us up, we gave up, took a few pictures and headed back to the hotel for the night. Having been to the Needle the last time I was up at Microsoft for a job interview, I wasn’t terribly disappointed by not getting to go up although I would have like to have seen what it was like at night as last time I was there in the day and it was partly cloudy. Once we returned returned to the hotel, myself and a couple of the other Student Insiders decided to hang out in one of the rooms and talk until around 2 A.M. At that point. We went back to our rooms and I spent about an hour before bed trying to catch up on all of the news that I had missed that day. You never realize just how many items you get on your Google Reader until you don’t check it for a day. Around 3 A.M. I went to bed to wake up a couple of hours later since we headed off to Microsoft again at 8 A.M. the next morning.
Stay tuned to find out about my awesome 2nd day at Microsoft including my appearance on Xbox Live’s 1 vs 100 Live!
Microsoft Student Insider Training Day 2: The first day at Microsoft Part 2
Mar 26th
Welcome back to my series of posts from my Microsoft Student Insider Training trip to the Microsoft campus in Redmond. This is part 2 of 3 from Day 2, so lets pick up right where we left off! Read about Day 1 and Day 2 part 1 if you haven’t already.
After the legal discussion, we broke for lunch back at the Commons. This time, I got to explore the commons and all the various different food stations it has to offer, from seafood to pizza, if you want it, they probably have it. The variety of food you can get there really is amazing. What really amazed me is that it is not just food, but there are cell phone stores from a couple of carriers, a bank and even a bike shop in the Commons area so Microsoft employees can get their bike worked on or make changes to their wireless carrier while they are at lunch. During each of our visits to the commons, we had various Microsoft employees come and eat with us and talk to us about everything from the products that they work on to the health benefits that Microsoft offers their employees. Unfortunately I don’t recall the names of everybody we met with over lunch but it was great talking with them and learning about what they do and what Microsoft does for its employees and how much they love the company for it.
After lunch, we split up and got to meet with people from various teams throughout Microsoft for most of the afternoon. First, I got to meet with Mark Hopkins and Luis Cabrera-Cordon who work on the Microsoft Surface team. We got to spend close to a half an hour playing with Surface (something I have done on a couple of other occasions but only to a small extent) and learning about how it works, Microsoft’s vision for the product, what powers it, how they test it and how crazy expensive it is($12,500 for just the unit, $15000 for a developer unit according to wikipedia which is a little higher than I believe we were told but in the same ballpark). It is amazing what the Surface tables can do. It uses 5 IR cameras to detect whatever is touching the table and uses special tags, kind of like a bar code to bring up information about something. This was demonstrated to us with business cards where the card was placed on the Surface and the persons information was read from the tag and brought up on the table. We were shown all kinds of really cool things and I have a video of most of it which I will try to get posted soon so you guys can see just how cool the device is. After we finished learning about and playing with the Surface, I headed to yet another building (pretty much everything was in a different building. It is amazing just how many buildings that Microsoft has) to meet Dan Fernandez (blog) and Brian Keller (blog) from Channel 9. They had planned for me to be on This Week in Channel 9 but unfortunately that wasn’t communicated to whoever planned our schedule and because I had to be at the Scott Hanselman (blog) presentation, I never got to take advantage of that opportunity. I did get to check out the Channel 9 studios however and the equipment in there is amazing. From some awesome lighting to all of the recording equipment, it was everything I could do to keep from drooling and trying to sneak out with some equipment to spice up the Global Geek News Podcast. Someday I hope to make it back so that I can be on one of the Channel 9 shows but who knows when that day will come.
Like I mentioned, my next stop was a meeting with Scott Hanselman in yet another building where I met back up with the other insiders. At the time, I didn’t realize how big of a deal it was to meet Scott. Apparently in the developers/Microsoft employee circles, he is a bit of an all star in the company and even has a great podcast. Apparently he works in another state and rarely makes it to the Microsoft main campus so the fact that we could steal an hour of his time is a big deal or so I am told. The meeting with Scott was a lot of fun as he is a barrel of laughs. He spent the hour talking to us about parallel computing and showing us just how efficient it is. He showed us some code that blew my mind (I haven’t done any parallel programming in all of my years as a programmer). He showed us code for doing parallel queries to a SQL database and demonstrated just how much faster it is when you take advantage of the multiple cores on today’s processors. I was quite impressed to say the least. Speaking of numbers, after our meeting with Scott, I got to go visit with Josh Carroll.
Josh Carroll works on the Telemetry team. Never heard of the Telemetry team? Neither had I, but I quickly found out just how important the team was at for various products at Microsoft. The telemetry team is responsible for the automatically collected data such as crash information and details sent through the feedback tool and such and relays the data back to the teams in charge of the various products so that they can fix bugs and see how users are trying to use the software for future improvements. The information that they interpret and pass on to the product teams played a large part in how great Windows 7 is. For a little more on the team and how the information they gathered was used to shape the final release of Windows 7, I highly recommend checking out this article at Ars Technica. Anyway, the meeting with Josh went great and it gave me some great insight into what happens when users send those crash reports to Microsoft when something goes wrong. I have always been one to submit my crash reports whenever I have them but never realized that they were really being used much until now. Thanks to this meeting, whenever somebody asks if they should submit crash reports, I always make sure to tell them to do it because it can make a big difference in future patches and releases.
I will cut off part 2 of day 2 right here. Stay tuned for the final part of Day 2, our night activities, which should be up within the next 24 hours and then we will be on to the most exciting day, Day 3 which includes my appearance on 1 vs 100 Live!
Microsoft Student Insider Training Day 2: The first day at Microsoft Part 1
Mar 25th
Greetings Readers!
First, I apologize to the folks at Microsoft as well as my readers about not getting these posts up sooner. I had planned on this going up a day or two after the first post about the travel day that I posted like 3 weeks ago. Anyway, now that MIX 2010 is over, I can get back to my series of posts about my trip to Microsoft. Due to posts turning out to be much longer than I expected, I am breaking them up by more than just days. In the case of Day 2, the first day at Microsoft, it will be broken up into 3 posts so that it is not some huge mass of text that will take you a while to read. Day 3 will be the same way. Anyway, lets talk about my first day at Microsoft!
Although this wasn’t my first trip to Microsoft as I have flown up to the campus in the past for job interviews and got a very quick run through of a couple of buildings in the past when I was visiting some family that works at Microsoft, this was the first time that I got a real feel for life and the atmosphere at Microsoft.
The morning of our first day at Microsoft, we were shuttled from our amazing hotel, the Mariot Hotel in the Redmond Town Center to the Microsoft campus where I gathered with the other Student Insiders and the wonderful ladies that are in charge of the Student Insider program shortly before heading to an area called the Commons for breakfast. For cafeteria food, the food was really good. There were all of the normal breakfast foods available from fruits to eggs to sausage and of course bacon. Although I found the commons area to be impressive, it wasn’t until later that I realized just how huge it was and how much it had to offer. Anyway, after eating a great breakfast, we headed back to Building 99 where we first gathered where things really got going. We started out with an introduction to our training which was interesting although I can’t say I paid as close of attention as I should have because the power inverter on my netbook, the only computer I brought with me died as soon as I plugged it into one of the outlets at the table. The introduction was interesting, I just wish I wasn’t so preoccupied that I could have gotten more out of it. Normally I wouldn’t have been in such a panic except that the netbook was the only computer I brought on the trip and everything I had with me, from my phone to my iPod Touch and Zune was USB powered and without a computer to power at least my phone, I would be kind of screwed. Luckily, I was brought a spare power brick around lunch time which really saved my butt.
After our introduction, we got to meet with Microsoft’s great blogger from Australia, Frank Arrigo. The discussion we got to have we him was extremely valuable. From how we might improve our blogs and podcasts to how best to foster a community around our sites, it was an great discussion and I wish it didn’t have to end as quickly as it did. After that fascinating discussion, we were informed about our responsibilities as bloggers, specifically what we need to do and keep in mind when it things like FTC guidelines for blogging and disclosing things that we receive and stuff like that. Having kept a very close eye on this topic ever since the FTC said that bloggers will have to disclose products that they are given and such, there was nothing here that I didn’t already know.
Speaking of which, as soon as I get a chance, I am going to create a disclosure page so that I am completely transparent and you guys can know exactly what I have received or whatever in exchange for blog posts or mentions on the podcast or whatever. I will make sure to have this page up shortly after MIX (I hope). Since this seems like a decent cut-off point for this part of day one, that is it for part 1 of Day 2. Stay tuned and part 2 will be up sometime within the next 24 hours.
Global Geek News Podcast #58
Mar 9th
Here are the shownotes for episode #58 for the Global Geek News Podcast.
Help support us with a $5/mo subscription!

Stories:
- Amazon terminates Colorado based associates over new taxes
- Music biz hopes to stop piracy by tempting ISPs with millions
- Ubisoft’s DRM servers go down, only pirates can play games
- Sony’s great new idea: Game demos that are less fun over time
- Study links violent video games to violent thoughts
- Microsoft talks Windows Phone 7 Series: XNA, Silverlight and no backwards compatibility
- How big were the Winter Olympics online?
- Internet Explorer 8 still not playing well with over 2,000 popular sites
- Google Chrome gains as IE and Firefox lose
- 27% of e-reader owners wish they had waited for the iPad
- Notebooks, iPad like tablets to be 70% of PCs by 2012
Tips of the Week:
- 6 Critical WordPress plugins you should have installed
- Save water damaged books, docs, photos by putting them in the freezer
Fan Global Geek News on Facebook and follow it on Twitter!
Host: Jeremy Bray & Wesley Faulkner
For more news, check out the Global Geek News Blog
Global Geek News Podcast #54
Feb 3rd
Here are the shownotes for episode #54 for the Global Geek News Podcast.
Help support us with a $5/mo subscription!

Stories:
- Bans on phones and texting while driving shown ineffective
- 70% of employers have rejected applicants over online information
- 3 Strikes coming to the US via the back door?
- RIAA to appeal Thomas ruling
- Microsoft sues prominent bittorrent tracker for $43 million
- Microsoft sued over Xbox Live points
- IFPI loses deep-linking case against Baidu
- CompTIA backs down, old certs still good for life
- War of words between Apple and Adobe heats up
- Amazon caves to Macmillans eBook pricing demands
Tips of the Week:
- 64 things every geek should know
- How to write a viral blog post: 7 real examples
- Reminder: Windows 7 RC shutdowns begin in a month
Fan Global Geek News on Facebook and follow it on Twitter!
Host: Jeremy Bray
For more news, check out the Global Geek News Blog
Global Geek News Podcast #53
Jan 26th
Here are the shownotes for episode #53 for the Global Geek News Podcast.
Help support us with a $5/mo subscription!

Stories:
- E-reader owners buy more books
- New York Times will start charging for online news in 2011
- Microsoft asks users to dump IE6, XP because of security problems
- Microsoft merges Zune Software and Xbox teams
- Microsoft may drop points system from Xbox, Zune
- Study: Gamers have bigger brains, better learners
- Kids less happy as they are more plugged in to music/tv/web?
- Larry and Sergey plan to give up control of Google
- Judge cuts P2P lawsuit damages by 97%
- Court: WHOIS privacy is illegal for spammers
- Hulu considering $5/mo charge for older episodes
Tips of the Week:
Fan Global Geek News on Facebook and follow it on Twitter!
Host: Jeremy Bray & Wesley Faulkner
For more news, check out the Global Geek News Blog
Global Geek News Podcast #52
Jan 14th
Here are the shownotes for episode #52 for the Global Geek News Podcast.
Help support us with a $5/mo subscription!

Stories:
- Judge: RealNetworks caused its own legal problems
- Politicians worldwide start asking questions about ACTA
- Prove piracy losses says digital economy bill
- BREIN shuts down 393 torrent sites, nobody notices
- Microsoft patents DRM’d torrents
- Site’s terms of service still enforceable even if users don’t read them
- Court unfriendly to the FCC’s internet slap at Comcast
- New scanners break child porn laws
- Judge: Subway system can’t ban violent video game ads
- Netflix coming to the Nintendo Wii
- DirecTV launching 3 dedicated 3D channels this year
- State of the vlogosphere
- Android demand up 250%, iPhone down
- Why Microsoft killed upgrade versions for Office 2010
Tips of the Week:
- Vacuum-seal your electronics for temporary protection
- Get free access to pay-walled content with a simple Google hack
Fan Global Geek News on Facebook and follow it on Twitter!
Host: Jeremy Bray
For more news, check out the Global Geek News Blog
Microsoft's CES Keynote was a major snooze
Jan 7th
Greetings Readers!
As I am sure many of you are aware, last night was Microsoft’s CES 2010 keynote and if you watched it, you know that the most exciting thing that came out of the keynote was the power failure that delayed it close to 30 minutes (We live blogged it here). As I stated last night, I would give my thoughts, both good and bad right here (Disclosure: I am a Microsoft Student Insider), so here we go.
I was rather surprised at the lack of announcements coming out of the keynote compared to years past. For those hoping for a big announcement regarding the rumored new features behind Ford’s Sync, you are out of luck. Those are apparently being saved until Ford’s keynote. Hoping for a major announcement about the Zune HD? Nope, nothing here either. Windows 8? Wishful thinking. A portable version of the Xbox? This will remain every gamers fantasy. What was announced? Ballmer really didn’t announce much. He gave some lines about Windows 7 being the fastest selling OS of all time and some analyst speculation that PC sales will increase considerably this year but I don’t really call those announcements. Steve announced that the HTC HD 2 running Windows Mobile will be coming to T-mobile but I am not sure anybody cares since we are talking Windows Mobile after all and T-mobile doesn’t help either. Steve said they would talk more about the future of Windows Mobile at the World Mobile Congress in Barcelona next month. Ballmer did show off some prototype “Slate PCs” that will hopefully combat anything Apple announces later this month. The one he really demonstrated was an HP prototype that was running Windows 7 and the Kindle PC software to demonstrate how good of an e-book reader it could be and it looked to be about the same size as the Kindle 2. Sounds nice and I will definitely buy one, but if you are going to try to compete with Apple, you need to show something that will come out a little sooner rather than some prototype. Wait, you really wanted to know what was announced? Ok.
As far as REAL announcements go, there are a couple fairly minor announcements. Bing is now going to be the default home page and search engine for all HP computers. Excited yet? They also demonstrated what a Cable Card and a pc in your tv could do and said that with it, you can record 4 HD channels simultaneously which was probably the most impressive thing from they keynote. They talked a bit about Media Room and some partnership with AT&T’s U-verse that I still don’t understand and finally they had a couple interesting Xbox announcements. Besides all of the interesting number like units sold and games sold, Robby Bach announced that Project Natal will ship as an attachment to existing Xbox 360 systems in time for Christmas 2010. No price although I would expect that around E3. There was also no demo which was kind of disappointing. They also teased a new Halo game only to have it turn out to be a trailer for Halo Reach which was announced back at E3. I was rather disappointed but the audience seemed to love it since they could see the trailer and everybody watching the stream could not. The big Xbox 360 announcement was Game Room.
What is Game Room? Game Room seems to be a virtual space similar to the PS3′s Home where you can run around a giant arcade as your avatar and buy and play old arcade games that look like the arcade units you would spend tons of quarters on in years gone by. Over 1000 games are planned for the next year that will be released in weekly batches that you will have to purchase. The coolest part is that this will be not only for the Xbox 360 but for PCs too! How much are these games going to cost you ask? If you want to play an arcade game on both platforms, you will be paying 400 Microsoft points aka $5. To get it on one platform, it is 240 points or $3. If you really want the old school experience, you can pay 40 points or $.50 and get two quarters worth of playing time on the old machines. The games can be played with other people, in 1080p and there are cross-platform leaderboards and achievements. This is coming in the Spring update to Xbox Live. Personally, I am really looking forward to this because lately I have had the urge to start buying old arcade machines and turning my basement into a small arcade but now I will be able to do it virtually instead of having to completely redo the basement. This was the only real announcement with any cool factor to it other than the HD recording. If you would like to see the demo that the people watching the live stream couldn’t watch, you can check it out here.
That was pretty much about it. It was a very boring keynote and ended kind of out of nowhere. It certainly doesn’t make me super excited about Microsoft this year but hopefully that will change. What did you think about the Microsoft CES 2010 keynote? Good? Bad? Boring? Exciting? Let us know!
