Wednesday, April 05, 2006
Bill Gates in an amazing story-telling mode of how he works!  Nice reading.
 
 
 
 
 
posted on Wednesday, April 05, 2006 9:58:58 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [4] Trackback
 Wednesday, March 29, 2006

This stuff looked so damn good that I had to have it on my page. I don't like the pro-Google attitude, but will stick with it for a few days anyway!

posted on Wednesday, March 29, 2006 6:35:17 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
 Saturday, March 18, 2006

Must watch:

Marc McDonald is Microsoft's first employee. Hired back in 1976. Channel 9 recently caught up with him and talked about the old days at Microsoft as well as what he's doing on the Windows Vista team (he's working on defect prevention).

Funny story. He left Microsoft in 1984 because Microsoft had gotten "too big." Microsoft's size at that point? A few hundred employees. (He came back after Microsoft bought the company he worked for).

http://channel9.msdn.com/showpost.aspx?postid=111590

posted on Saturday, March 18, 2006 10:55:21 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
 Wednesday, March 15, 2006

At least a couple of readers of this blog will find this post interesting. The March CTP of VS 2005 SDK is out and it features and end-to-end implementation of incorporating a language into the VS environment. The language chosen for this sample is Microsoft IronPython.

Check out the announcement by Somasegar at http://blogs.msdn.com/somasegar/archive/2006/03/10/549102.aspx

For people who have been following DSL tools, the VS SDK Feb CTP had some great additions. The release version is expected in a couple of months.

Interestingly, many of these tools also work with the Express editions. So enthusiasts can actually try this out for free.

posted on Wednesday, March 15, 2006 2:24:31 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
 Sunday, March 12, 2006

Microsoft Research India, based out of Bangalore, has taken a great first step towards creating Virtual India - the Windows Local version of India.

To start with, there are some wonderful street-level maps of Bangalore, Mumbai and Delhi, with the promise of more.

It will be great to see the day when we have properly implemented driving directions in India.

posted on Sunday, March 12, 2006 4:48:33 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
 Friday, March 10, 2006

It is really heartening to see the way live.com has shaped up. I had this one problem with www.live.com which was that all these gadgets would soon get unmanageable.

I always thought and also told people I know, that live.com should probably pick a lesson or two from www.oazabir.com or similar sites and provide a Windows-like interface on the browser to organize stuff into folders. Looking at the current www.live.com - I think they've done a great job. It could get better, but hey we're still in BETA. And unlike the real evil empire, we keep improving during BETA :)

Great job guys.

And by the way, have you checked out the other live.com offerings?  A virtual walk in Seattle on http://preview.local.live.com or hosting your website with http://www.officelive.com or buying and selling stuff on http://expo.live.com?

And if you wanted all of it together, there is always the all new Windows Live Toolbar (downloadable from http://ideas.live.com/) with integrated Windows Desktop Search and a lot of goodies - like MSN Money,  Phishing Filter for IE 6.0, Feed Reader, Maps,  and everything bundled in.

Also, your favs get auto saved on Windows Live Favorites, making it globally available. This is simply too good!

posted on Friday, March 10, 2006 1:56:53 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
 Wednesday, March 01, 2006

For those who didn’t know already, I am currently at Rockville, Maryland (USA). Whenever you are in the US, you will realize the importance of online maps (and offline too at times) and the way these maps can familiarize you quickly with an unknown territory.

Mapquest and Yahoo were probably the forerunners of online maps till Google came around. Google Maps and Google Earth were simply too good and they used some neat AJAX-ing to get the wonderful effect of these “sliding maps” when you moved around.

Yesterday I was talking to Rosh, who was busy looking to see if he could see a satellite image of me when he was talking to me over the phone, and then I told him that MSN Virtual Earth is also a good alternative.

I had myself visited MSN Virtual Earth very long ago, and so decided to check it out. For one, MSN Virtual Earth now powers Windows Live Local and the interface seemed very confusing some time ago. But now it all makes sense.

It is simply the best web-based map tool interface – and I’m not being partial. The Scratch Pad is such a wonderful concept. I hate it when I have to keep typing the address again and again in other tools once you’ve moved elsewhere.

The best feature of all is the “Bird’s Eye View”. Seeing is definitely believing here – you got to see it to appreciate it. It gives you a much clearer idea of the map than the satellite map which shows you the rooftops of buildings that you wouldn’t anyway be able to see.

I also like the nifty tools and the neat menu interface on the top. Also try the directions when you are viewing in bird’s eye view, the map shows you step-wise landmarks of where you have to take a right or a left.

To the friends at Redmond – GREAT WORK!

posted on Wednesday, March 01, 2006 2:25:16 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [2] Trackback
 Thursday, February 16, 2006

With no particular intention of looking at something in particular, I was looking at a few blogs and came across KPL - Kid's Programming Language. An official website is hosted at www.kidsprogramminglanguage.com and MSDN has a few articles on KPL (owing to the fact that it is developed using C# - if you didn't know, MSDN has a section called coding4fun which has to do with Game Programming and stuff).

Now, KPL is pretty interesting. It is a language with editor and all, and is pretty simple. I am not quite sure how easy it would be for kids to work with, but I guess if somebody has the aptitude, they could pick it up pretty soon.

KPL revived some memories of my own younger days. I was in school when I first got introduced to programming. BASIC used to be the language for kids then and I got a hang of BASIC pretty soon. BASIC continued to be my favourite language for a long time and I worked with various BASIC interpreters - BASICA, Microsoft QBASIC and the others that shipped in floppy disks at that time.

I still think kids can learn a lot more with BASIC. I have met many kids and students of late who were born in the Windows era. They have absolutely no exposure to DOS - not that I blame them. But DOS was fun. BASIC was great fun - screen modes, sounds, animation and all.

I wish there was still a version of BASIC (not Visual Basic) floating around for the kids. KPL is probably attempting to take that place, but it is not quite BASIC, arguably the first PC computer language and the one Bill Gates himself coded in years ago.

UPDATE: Check this Channel 9 post on KPL: http://channel9.msdn.com/Showpost.aspx?postid=166995

posted on Thursday, February 16, 2006 10:59:28 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback