On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 8:53 AM, Grigore Dolghin <[email protected]> wrote:
> Stephen
>
> It's too early to say. I have lots of ground to cover in order to be
> proficient. For now I'm like a sponge - I learn anything I can and do
> whatever project I am given (currently working on an ASP.NET + VB.NET
> codebehind website).
>
> I'll be able to answer to this question in a couple of months from now, I 
> guess.
-------------------

Well the company that hired you, what products / software do they
make?  WinForm or Web WPF or Silverlight?  That is just a gross start.

If I were you I would identify what the company does and then find out
the M$ vision on that technology now that VS2010 is released.

To become a MVP, you need to be a leader in knowledge and presenting
M$ qualified answers to everyone.  That is 30% of the prize.  You then
have to instruct people on how to do it better via blog, twitter,
facebook, dig.  That is 50% of the work.  Last part is to present live
to others, in user groups or to hit a wider range of groups in biz as
well as the tech list.  Get the point out to WHY choose M$ to make it
easier for ..... That is the final 20% of the grade.



-- 
Stephen Russell

Sr. Production Systems Programmer
CIMSgts

901.246-0159 cell

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