JonUdell
Niner since 2007
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Derik Stenerson on the past, present, and future of the iCalendar specification
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Derik Stenerson first came to Microsoft on an internship as a Test Engineer on Microsoft Mail. After graduating, he joined Microsoft full time in the email group and worked in various roles on email and scheduling products, including Schedule+ and Exchange. His passion for calendaring and scheduling...
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Scott Prevost explains Powerset's hybrid approach to semantic search
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Scott Prevost is General Manager and Director of Product for Powerset, the company whose semantic search engine was recently acquired by Microsoft. In this interview he describes the history of Powerset's natural language engine, and explains how it works as part of a hybrid approach to indexing,...
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Kristin Tolle on biomedical initiatives at Microsoft Research
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Kristin Tolle is the Senior Research Program Manager for Biomedical Computing for External Research in Microsoft Research. Projects run the gamut, she says, from "bench to bedside". In this interview she discusses two major biomedical initiatives: Cell Phone as a Platform for Health Care...
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Roger Barga on Trident, a workbench for scientific workflow
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Roger Barga, a principal architect with Microsoft's Technical Computing Initiative, is leading the development of Trident, a "workflow workbench" for science. In its first incarnation, the tool will enable oceanographers to automate the management and analysis of vast quantities of data...
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Lewis Shepherd discusses the Institute for Advanced Technology in Governments
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Before joining Microsoft's Institute for Advanced Technology in Governments, Lewis Shepherd spent four years at the Defense Intelligence Agency where he helped usher in a new era of collaboration.
In this interview, he discusses how the Institute's small team of seven is exploring the nooks and...
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Maurice Franklin reflects on the 2008 Space Elevator Conference
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Maurice Franklin is a 12-year Microsoft veteran whose career has focused on performance engineering and server scalability. He's also passionate about the concept of a space elevator, and recently organized and hosted a conference held on that topic at the Microsoft Conference Center.
In this interview...
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Ted Semon reflects on the 2008 Space Elevator Conference
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Ted Semon, a retired software engineer, chronicles the efforts to develop a space elevator on the Space Elevator Blog, and volunteers for The Spaceward Foundation which administers competitions to develop several of the core technologies that will be needed to build the elevator.
Ted attended...
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How Microsoft's External Research Division works with a new breed of e-scientists
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Tony Hey, VP for the External Research Division within Microsoft Research, leads the company's efforts to build external partnerships in key areas of scientific research, education, and computing. He's been a physicist, a computer scientist, and dean of engineering, and for five years ran the UK's...
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How the WorldWide Telescope works
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Jonathan Fay is principal developer of the WorldWide Telescope. In this interview he explains how the project has yielded not only a breakthrough software product, but also a reference model for the acquisition, transformation, and visualization of astronomical data. You'll learn not only how the...
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The story of the WorldWide Telescope
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The WorldWide Telescope was first shown to the public at TED 2008, in a joint presentation by project leader Curtis Wong, manager of Next Media Research for Microsoft, and Roy Gould, a science educator with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. In this interview they discuss how -- and...
| Forum | Thread | Replies | Latest activity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coffeehouse | Hello niners | 8 | Jan 26, 2007 at 5:30 PM |
Staff
Here is a list of Channel 9 staff members.
Steven Lees on FeedSync
Dec 07, 2007 at 11:13 AMhttp://channel9.msdn.com/media/feedsync/feedsync.mp3
http://channel9.msdn.com/media/feedsync/feedsync.wma
I've updated the entry but it may take a while to propagate.
A conversation with Peter Neupert about HealthVault
Oct 08, 2007 at 11:06 AMOops. Thanks for noticing, I've fixed that.
A tag-oriented tour of the Windows Vista Photo Gallery
Feb 21, 2007 at 2:12 PMOK I see the problem. Since last I checked here, the entry was regenerated with a View SWF button that is erroneous. In this case I couldn't use SWF because the filesize exploded to 300MB with all the photo data. So I made an FLV instead, which is what's linked to from the word screencast in the writeup. That link is:
http:/channel9.msdn.com/Media/PhotoGallery.html
I don't think we have a way to automatically make a View FLV.
Meanwhile I have completed the WMV which you can get here:
http://channel9.msdn.com/Media/PhotoGallery.wmv
Sorry for the mixup.
A tag-oriented tour of the Windows Vista Photo Gallery
Feb 21, 2007 at 12:34 PMSorry about that.
It's OK for me on IE7 and FF in XP and Vista, also FF on OS X.
Nevertheless I'll start a WMV cranking as well. What with all those photos in the video, it's a /long/ compression cycle.
A tag-oriented tour of the Windows Vista Photo Gallery
Feb 21, 2007 at 9:16 AMExample: I tag my blog entries locally when I write them, but when I post I also inject bookmarks with tags into del.icio.us. I do that partly for my own personal information management reasons, and partly for the social effects that happen on del.icio.us, and in the network of services that connect to del.icio.us.
Photo Gallery's "truth is in the file" strategy[1] is an enabler for that kind of strategy.
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1. http://blog.jonudell.net/?s=truth%20is%20in%20the%20file
A tag-oriented tour of the Windows Vista Photo Gallery
Feb 21, 2007 at 7:33 AMDoes EverNote deal with the question of how the info you create and collect locally can relate to stuff you create and collect on the web?
Over on my blog we've been exploring the whole question of where metadata lives, and how it travels (or doesn't). These are pretty deep and important questions, I think.
Jon Udell: Brian Jones on Office XML
Feb 06, 2007 at 10:09 PMOuch. Now there's a category slip! I'm always fascinated by those. In this case it went like so, I think:
Rolling Stones -> Brian Jones -> Brian Epstein -> Beatles
Clearly we've both spent too much time in XML-land...