Lundi, 08 Août 2011 22:33
Microsoft’s WP General Manager Quits To Launch Startup
Charlie Kindel, Microsoft’s General Manager of the Windows Phone Developer Experience announced earlier today that he is leaving Microsoft to launch a start up. Kindel didn’t share any of the details regarding his new endeavor. His public profile on LinkedIn lists him as the Founder and CTO of <redacted> at A super secret stealth startup. According to Kindel, “[The start up] has to do with sports, advertising, mobile, social-networking, and, of course, the cloud,” Kindel wrote in a post on his personal blog. The soon-to-be former executive worked at Microsoft for 21 years, joining the Redmond-based company’s developer support group in 1990. As are most people when they quit their jobs on purpose, Kindel mentioned that he is “…insanely excited to get started” at his startup. Kindel’s email to his team regarding his decision can be found below:From: Charlie KindelSent: Monday, August 08, 2011 9:00 AMTo: A gazillion old friends and colleaguesSubject: Goodbye Microsoft – After 21 Years It’s Time To Move On July 2, 1990 was my first day at Microsoft and September 2, 2011 will be my last. In the time honored tradition of “good-bye mails” this is mine. My first Microsoft product was a Z-80 Softcard for my Apple ][+ in 1984. That amazing product enabled me to become a UCSD P-System, CP/M, and Turbo Pascal geek. I still remember opening the big clear plastic box for the first time. In 1988 (my junior year at the University of Arizona) I decided I wanted to work for Microsoft when I discovered Windows programming (I conned my dad into buying me a copy of the Windows 2 SDK). Charles Petzold was my hero. I got no-hired after my first interviews (a dev role in Languages; shouldn’t really surprise anyone). I bribed my recruiter into getting me another set of interviews by sending her a Christmas card (clearly I was meant to be a PM). The brightest memory I have of my first day at work was a Seattle Times sports page pinned to my manager’s (Ridge Ostling) cube: “Husky Women Beat Beavers”. A few months later we threatened to quit because management kept turning the lights ON in Lincoln Plaza. Arne Josefsberg: I feel bad about writing that tool that generated fake time tracking reports. But what did you expect? We were providing the best damn developer support possible and the number of minutes we spent doing it was totally irrelevant. Curtis Palmer: I miss you. Our Bogus Software was the best. RIP. Tunneling Todd Laney, one day I got so pissed that the Windows 8514a driver didn’t support “smallfonts” that I just fixed it and checked it in. I was still in PSS. My first “production code” at Microsoft and if you don’t count OLEView which was just a tool, my last. I decided I wanted to be Chris Guzak. So I got out of PSS and into Developer Relations. I know, it doesn’t make sense to me either. Vertical Developer Relations was an amazing group. Out of that group came: Jeff Teper, Satya Nadella, Joe Long, John Wilcox, Bret O’Rourke, and others. After writing OLEView I woke up and I was no longer an evangelist but a PM on the OLE team. Initially I was given all the glamorous stuff like Mac OLE. Mario Goertzel scared the crap out of me. It was 3 months before he and the other devs would invite me to lunch. I got to work with Bob Atkinson. He taught me the trick of taking people on walks during 1:1s. He also taught me everything I know. We gave all PDC ’93 attendees a CD with the first DCOM bits. ole.h was missing. One (one!) customer noticed. We thought DCOM was hot-sh**. It wasn’t. The first name for COM+ was COM3. Windows used to let you create directories named COM3. But you couldn’t delete them. The real reason I’m leaving Microsoft? COM is making a comeback. Sweeper and December 7, 1995 were epic. How the name “ActiveX” was chosen was not. Designing the <OBJECT> tag with Tim Berners-Lee was mind blowing for me. Ben Slivka still owes my sister an airplane ticket. Shipping IE 3.0 was my first taste of what it really meant to build a product that changed the world. I would have never joined the Windows Phone team if I had not had that prior experience of an impossible, come-from-behind, project. Somewhere along the line I learned the word “mentor”. Bob Muglia and Chris Jones: Thank you. I learned everything I know from you. In 1998 a bunch of us from the IIS team were in Paris for some conference. We went out to dinner and when we came out of the restaurant there was a literal riot going on around the Arc de Triomphe. France had won the world cup. We joined in. I rode around the Arc de Triomphe on the roof of a city bus chanting Viva-La-France! Microsoft enabled me to see the world and I’m grateful for that. Someday we’re going to have a Project42 reunion party. Or not. Tracy Sharpe once worked for me. One day his office was cleared out. I asked HR “Where’s Tracy?” “Oh, he moved to the Xbox team weeks ago.” Oh, that’s how that works. Charlie: “Hey Chris (Jones) & David (Cole), we should build a Neptune Home Server! We’ll call it Ybox!” Chris & David: “Charlie, shut the eff up and get back to work.” Working on Windows Millennium is where I met Dave Alles. The Connected Home Business Unit had this guy who drove a black Hummer. One day we put a “Yes, my penis is small” bumper sticker on it. Sorry about that Kevin Eagan. Bedrock and the bBox demonstrated that a group could have all the technology and a great user experience and still not know how to spell “business”. BXT folks. BXT! CHBU begat eHome. The first version of Windows Media Center was to be called “Windows Remote View”. Really. When I think about my time as BobMu’s TA I’m reminded of the scene in Blade Runner, where Roy says “I’ve seen things you people could only imagine.” Did I mention that I learned everything I know from Bob Muglia? You know why Quattro was named Quattro? My fourth attempt at building a home server product at Microsoft. Best. Team. Ever. I’ve had some great managers (and some not so great ones). Chris Phillips the best manager I ever had. I learned everything I know from Chris. To the people that helped build Windows Home Server: Chuck Norris doesn’t leave Microsoft. Microsoft leaves with Chuck. Yamanote! Istvan, Friedbert, Bob, Drew, Tudor, Kevin, Akhil, Ron, Scott, and a slew of others: They doubted, but we fraking did it. Together. 27,000 apps and counting. Someone once gave me the advice “The first rule of dependency management is to not have any dependencies.” I call BS on this and we proved that cross-group collaboration CAN work at Microsoft. The real reason I’m leaving Microsoft: At the last partner meeting Dave Alles didn’t ask SteveB a question. To the Windows Phone team: I may stop using some Microsoft products now that I’m out of here. But not Windows Phone. The BEST product Microsoft has ever built. Do not let up! To my wife: Thank you for putting up with “Microsoft Time” (“Honey, I’ll be home in an hour.” Four hours later…). I’ve learned everything I know from Julie Kindel. To my kids: No, just because I don’t work at Microsoft anymore you many not use Google. Remember, every time you use Google, a puppy dies. Back in 1990 I assumed I’d work here for 3 or so years. I’m an entrepreneur at heart and every few years I’d lift up my head and look around. I never had the need to look outside Microsoft because I kept finding one challenging opportunity after another. 21 years later I have finally decided I need to do something different: I’m leaving to start a new company here in the Seattle area. I’m sure you’ll hear about it. There has been one constant in every job I’ve had at Microsoft: People way smarter than me. Microsoft has always enabled me to “play up”. It has truly been an honor working with all of you. Thank you for helping me grow as an engineer, a manager, a businessman, and as a person. Stay in touch and keep changing the world! -cek charlie (at) kindel (dot) com https://ceklog.kindel.com @ckindel on TwitterAuthors:
Read 3226 times
Published in
News Technologique-Tech News
Last WebBuzz
-
WebBuzz du 24/11/2017: Pérou décoller comme superman-Peru Reverse bungee aka Superman Jump
Read 38438 times
-
WebBuzz du 22/11/2017: Une Femme Saoudienne fait du surf dans les rues-Saudi girl Car Surfing after heavy rains and flood in Saudi Arabia
Read 38722 times
-
WebBuzz du 20/11/2017: Maxi crach au grand prix GT à Macau-Huge pile up Crash 2017 Macau Grand Prix FIA GT World Cup
Read 33612 times
-
WebBuzz du 17/11/2017: Boston Dynamics fait le cirque avec ses robots-BD prepare to build a circus with his robots
Read 36380 times
-
WebBuzz du 16/11/2017: Une illusion d'optique féminine-a feminine optical illusion
Read 34424 times
-
WebBuzz du 14/11/2017: Roumanie un bus de police évite un tram de justesse-Close call between a tram and police's bus
Read 30989 times
-
WebBuzz du 13/11/2017: Arrivée fracassante d'un bateau sur les docks de San Diego-Whale Watching Boat Crashing Into San Diego Dock
Read 29217 times
-
WebBuzz du 08/11/2017: Créer des flammes de toutes les couleurs-How to make colourful flames
Read 30026 times
-
WebBuzz du 07/11/2017: Echec test du système de détection des piètons de la Volvo S60-Volvo S60 Pedestrian Detection System Test failed
Read 31396 times
-
WebBuzz du 03/11/2017: Slacker dans la forêt-slackline in the forest
Read 33873 times
Accusé de reception
bancaires
bilan
cheval
configuration
Confirmation de lecture
copie
copies
Dolibarr
duplicata
EDF
Excel
exim
facture
factures
Firefox
Google cloud print
hameçonnage
IE6
IE7
impression
informatique
itunes
java
linux
luxembourgeois
mac os
MAJ
micosoft
microsoft
Office
Outlook
phishing
quicktime
rappels
relances
seamonkey
serveurs
spécifique
Sécurité
Tentative
thunderbird
troie
utilisant
V322
Vista
Windows
Windows 7
XP/2000 : Activer le pavé numérique
établissements