Thursday, February 13, 2014

Microsoft Hearts Veterans - "Microsoft focuses on employing and training our nation’s veterans"

Microsoft on the Issues - Microsoft focuses on employing and training our nation’s veterans

How can the private sector best help our nation’s veterans successfully transition from the military to civilian employment? On Tuesday, leading experts and veterans gathered at the Microsoft Innovation & Policy Center in Washington, D.C. to focus on answering these questions and to explore best practices. The engaging and interactive discussion examined how government and industry can work together to help our returning soldiers transition to civilian careers.

House Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Jeff Miller (R-Fla.) delivered opening remarks and provided an overview of the challenges facing veterans as they enter the workforce and the importance of bipartisan collaboration with industry to help our nation’s heroes find post-military employment.

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Chairman Miller’s remarks were followed by a lively discussion moderated by former Congressman and MSNBC Host Patrick Murphy, and featured the following panelists: Col. H. Charles Hodges Jr., Commander, Joint Base Lewis-McChord; Sean Kelley, Senior Staffing Director, Cloud + Enterprise, Microsoft; Bernard Bergan, SDET, Developer Division, Microsoft; Rick Nelson, CEO, Direct Technology; and Thomas Dawkins, Senior Product Manager, Microsoft Learning.

The conversation focused on new partnerships to help provide opportunities to our veterans, such as our Microsoft Software & Systems Academy (MSSA), a 16-week course launched last year to help transitioning service members obtain the skills required for careers such as a developer, applications engineer and IT project manager. Inspired by the 2011 “VOW to Hire Heroes Act,” this program leverages public-private partnerships to create a simplified military-to-employment transition at no cost to the service member. Each panelist provided a unique and personal perspective on his experience with the challenges and opportunities facing veterans as they enter the civilian workforce.

Tuesday’s conversation helped engage the community on ways to best support our veterans’ career transitions. Moving forward, as the pilot program expands to other bases, we look forward to continuing to prepare program graduates with the skills they need to compete in this vibrant, growing sector of the economy.

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To learn more about these issues, please check out Sean Kelley’s recent testimony before the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee. Additional details on the MSSA program and Microsoft’s veterans’ initiatives can be found on The Official Microsoft Blog. We also encourage you to read about Bernard Bergan’s experience in the MSSA program via his “Combat to Coding” blog post.

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As a veteran, a son-in-law in the Navy and my son in the Army Reserves and days away from deploying to Afghanistan, you can say veteran affairs are important to me... Kudo's to those corporations that support our country by supporting our vet's! :)

 

Related Past Post XRef:
Military 2 Microsoft - Map your Branch and MOS to open positions with Microsoft

Stateless Designer Visual Studio Extension (with Source)

Visual Studio Gallery - Stateless Designer

Visual Studio extension to support visual design of stateless state machines. Support for Visual Studio 2012 and Visual Studio 2013. The goal for this projects is to allow software developers to design a state machines visually.

Project site

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CodePlex - Stateless Designer

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About stateless

stateless is a lightweight C# hierarchical state machine framework made by Nicholas Blumhardt. The stateless project is hosted here: http://code.google.com/p/stateless/. If you don't know stateless, here is a comparison between stateless and Windows Workflow Foundation: Comparison between Stateless (on google code) and Windows Workflow. stateless also comes as a NuGet package: http://nuget.org/packages/Stateless. stateless is a great alternative to WWF.

About Stateless Designer

The goal for this projects is to allow software developers to design a state machines visually. Why a statemachine can improve your design. The true power of using a state machine is to have a graph showing the states with transitions. Stateless Designer can help you achieve this.

Stateless Developer use case:
- install Stateless Designer
- start Visual Studio
- create or open a C# project
- Add new Item to the C# project
- select Stateless State Machine
- design your state machine
- a C# class is created with your state machine

Getting started using Stateless Designer step-by-step.

Currently supported features

- Triggers without arguments
- OnEntry and OnExit delegates
- Reentrant transitions
- OnUnhandledTrigger delegate - new in Stateless Designer 1.4
- Guard Clauses: PermitIf and PermitReentryIf functionality - new in Stateless Designer 1.4

External articles

Twitter
www.dotnettips.info article 1168 - Note: Not in English
www.dotnettips.info article 1169 - Note: Not in English

Technology used

- Visual Studio Extensibility
- stateless

Sure Windows Workflow now support State Diagrams, but this is something a little different and I think pretty cool (and WWF just doesn't seem to be getting much press, attention, I wonder...). Anyway, not only do you get the designer, but it's nuget'able and you get the source too it all too. Now that's cool... :)

"The Security Realm - A Microsoft Map of the Known World" (Here Be Dragons...and one really big jpg)

Microsoft Downloads - The Security Realm – A Microsoft Map of the Known World

The Security Realm: A Microsoft Map of the Known World

Version: 1.0

Date Published: 2/12/2014

The-Security-Realm-A-Microsoft-Map-of-the-Known-World.jpg, 103.3 MB

This is a Microsoft map infographic released at Black Hat 2013, that illustrates the various Microsoft security programs working to protect customers and their computer systems.

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Kind of cute but wow, that's a JPG...

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Only in LA? Speed Dating on the Red Line [i.e subway] this Friday/Valentines Day

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The Source - Here’s the waiver for those participating in ‘Speed Dating on the Red Line’ on Friday

If you’re participating in Friday’s “Speed Dating on the Red Line” event, above is the waiver you will need to sign. If you want to get a head start, here’s the waiver, which will also be available at registration for the event.

Registration will be on the east mezzanine of the Red Line station at Union Station (the transit plaza and Vignes Street side) and the mezzanine level of the North Hollywood station. Registration opens at 10:30 a.m. and runs until 12:30 p.m. and ‘speed dating’ will be from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m.

You can also download the waiver and the event rules. Please click on ‘download’ in the top left corner of the page.

What’s the event all about? First you’ve heard of it? Check out the flier below. And if ‘Speed Dating’ is a little too much for you, Metro has an Instagram Valentine’s Day contest.

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Checking the calendar... nope, not April 1st. :p

Given I ride on the Red Line every day, I have to wonder how this will go over. Some of the characters are, well, um... yeah...

I live in the 4th "most pleasant," weather-wise at least, place to live in the US! Woot!

Simi Valley News - Study: Simi Valley Named Fourth-Most Pleasant Place to Live

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Mayor Bob Huber is pleased to announce that Simi Valley has been named fourth on the list of “Pleasant Places to Live in the U.S.” The term “pleasant” was defined by a mean temperature between 55 and 75 degrees with “no significant precipitation or snow depth.”

As reported by CaliforniaCityNews.org, the list of “Pleasant Places to Live” was created by Kelly Norton, who compiled National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data for the past 23 years and determined that Simi Valley has averaged 156 “pleasant” days per year. The City of Oxnard was named third on the list with 166 “pleasant” days per year, and the City of Los Angeles was named number one with 183 “pleasant” days.

Norton is a designer and software engineer who resides in Georgia. He decided to identify “pleasant” climates after flying between Atlanta and New York throughout the month of January.

“We are very pleased that Simi Valley has been recognized as one of the most pleasant places to live in our country,” Mayor Huber said. “Our residents would definitely concur that the weather here adds to our quality of life.”" [GD: Post leached in full]

Simi Valley also still ranks high in the Safest Mid-sized Cities (well usually at least) category too... :)

Go Simi!