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 Sunday, January 20, 2008

It's not quite the end of January, but there's already alot of "new" in my new year.  There's a  new car, some new gadgets, and on the work front a new project and a new team.

As you may have heard, Charles Fitzgerald, left Microsoft to head to a startup. Charles was the GM that my old team, platform incubation, reported into. Charles set the mission for that team, and was the major stakeholder for Tafiti and several other internal facing projects that I worked on. Charles was a great GM, and while this is a loss for MS, I'm confident we haven't heard the last of him.

With Charles' departure, Scott and I will be moving to different roles in the company. I am happy to report that I am now officially part of Simon Guest's team.   

One of the few negatives about my last role in incubation was that it was inherently secretive, as parts of the work could be patented. As a result, after delivering my book on CardSpace I mostly dropped off the public scene, save for promoting Tafiti. With Simon's team having a key focus on talking about architecture with the broader community, this is something that will change, and you'll see me engaging more publicly on architecture related subjects. Simon's team has a big focus on Software+Services, which if you've read the blog for awhile know is something I've been looking at for some time in and outside of Microsoft. Expect to see me blogging more, podcasting/screencasting more, and writing the odd article or two. (No more books for awhile, though. Having written or co-written 3 books in 2 years, I've committed to my wife not to start another one until 2009)

I also mentioned there's a new project. I'll be carrying over a project with me from incubation to Simon's team as well. Nothing I can share at the moment, other than it will be public focused and it's going to be a key focus for me for a good portion of 2008.

While this project is big, there's another project I'll be working on that's even bigger.  This is a longer term project, estimated to last decades with a budget estimated to be in the seven figures. Oh, and it has nothing to do with software. My wife and I are expected our first child, a son, to literally arrive any day now. While there's alot of great 'new's in 2008 already, this will surely be the best.

Here's hoping your 2008 is going well, and I look forward to engaging with the community more broadly once again.  If there's anything you'd like to see me engage on - be it in blog, article, or podcast, let me know. As always, I can be reached at mmercuri@microsoft.com

1/20/2008 11:35:45 PM UTC  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
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 Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Being on an incubation team, many of the projects I'm attached to are not discussed with the public. Today, however, is a great exception to that rule.

I'd like to introduce you to Tafiti.

Tafiti, which means "do research" in Swahili, is an experimental search front-end from Microsoft, designed to help people use the Web for research projects that span multiple search queries and sessions by helping visualize, store, and share research results. Tafiti uses both Microsoft Silverlight and Live Search to explore the intersection of richer experiences on the Web and the increasing specialization of search.

You can try Tafiti following these steps:

·         Go to http://www.tafiti.com

·         Enter a search query

·         Drag interesting results to the shelf on the right.  Each box on the shelf can be used to save a related set of results.  Shelf contents can be saved and shared. 

·         Use the carousel at the bottom left to do different types of searches (image, blog, etc.)

·         Visualize your results using the Tafiti Tree View.

I did a video interview with Channel 10 on this that has just been posted here.

http://www.on10.net/Blogs/larry/first-look-microsoft-tafiti/

I also did a standalone walkthrough you can get to here:

http://www.tafiti.com/walkthru.html

More to come as the week progresses....

8/21/2007 6:03:04 PM UTC  #    Comments [1] - Trackback
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 Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Going through my email this morning, I received my official Mix07 confirmation.  Last year, I had a number of customer commitments so was really not in the loop on Mix, this year, though, I've had some overlap with some of the things I've been working on and have had a chance to get involved in various aspects of the event.

Earlier this year I went to another web conference(which shall remain nameless), and was so dissapointed I left the conference (and Vegas) a day early. (Me, leaving Vegas early? unheard of, I know). 

Mix, though, is a different story. From what I've seen of the sessions, this is actually an event I'd pay out of pocket to go to. It's got a good mix of folks from MS, as well as from third parties.  I may or may not be delivering a session, that's something that'll get decided in the next month or so, but will be onsite either working in certain areas of the event, or attending sessions.

One of the great things about conferences is that I get a chance to meet up with former colleagues and people I've chatted with via email and blogs. If you're going to be in Vegas the 29th - 2nd and want to chat about WCF, CardSpace, Mashups, or whatever - shoot me an email and we'll make some plans to sync up.

Mix Elvis

2/14/2007 5:02:05 PM UTC  #    Comments [1] - Trackback
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 Wednesday, December 27, 2006

On the heels of writing that last article, I found a copy of Amazon.com Mashups in the post.  The book was written by a friend of mine, Francis Shanahan, and the book also has a great chapter that covers the S3 service mentioned in my previous post.  From defining objects and buckets to building out working prototypes that interact with the S3 service, this chapter helps you get up and running with S3 in an hour, well worth the price of the book for that chapter alone (<$20 on Amazon).

Beyond S3, the book provides a good introduction to the concept of mashups, as well as hands on introductions to mashing up services from Yahoo, Microsoft, YouTube, and others. It also showcases some of Francis' mashup creations, which are cool in their own right (i.e. Zollage, Zuggest, RoboCast, etc.). 

I'd recommend checking out the book and his mashups.

 

The book can be found here:

http://www.amazon.com/Amazon-com-Mashups-Francis-Shanahan/dp/0470097779/sr=8-1/qid=1167221205/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/104-4399996-7228729?ie=UTF8&s=books

His site (and related mashups) here:

http://www.francisshanahan.com

 

12/27/2006 12:07:39 PM UTC  #    Comments [0] - Trackback
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Marc Mercuri
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