One of the great things about what I do is that I get to work from home. This winter I bought some indoor exercise equipment, so if it weren't for the fact that I take my girls to school (it's only 3 blocks away) every morning, I'm sure I'd probably not even leave the house most work-weeks.
So I'm likely in for a shock once I hit the road for the "Get Ready for Windows Server Longhorn Roadshow".
I'll be presenting the IIS 7 track in the following cities on the following days:
April 17th - Anaheim
April 19th - Santa Clara
May 10th - Dallas
May 15th - Minneapolis
May 17th - Baltimore
May 22nd - Seattle
May 24th - Phoenix
The IIS 7 track consists of 3 sessions, and I'll be authoring the intro session covering the new architecture and configuration options. The other two presenters, Derek Hatchard, and Steve Schofield will author the other two sessions (IIS 7 in Action (mostly demos) and Managing IIS 7 Apps, respectively). But only one of us will be on hand in each of city to present all three sessions.
I'm pumped about the Roadshow, and more particularly about IIS 7. It really does represent an evolutionary jump for IIS, and I'm confident it will change (for the better) how developers, admins, and companies handle, manage, and solidify their web workloads.
Wow, sometimes I'm amazed that I even know you. I think you're the most famous-est person I know. Actually, that makes me kinda cool just for knowing you.
Posted by: Jon | February 15, 2007 at 05:09 PM
I have to say, though, what's up with that picture they have of you? Is that a requirement to be a famous developer? I mean, they take the worst picture of you and use that for everything. I mean, it's been a few years, but I'm sure you don't look that bad, right? I mean, right?
Posted by: Jon | February 15, 2007 at 05:13 PM
Speaking's all about looking like an idiot.
I'm just getting an early start ;)
Posted by: Michael K. Campbell | February 15, 2007 at 05:17 PM