Archive | 2000

Hacker’s Guide named Developer’s Choice

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:Ted Roche (XXX) YYY-ZZZZ
tedroche@compuserve.com

LOCAL AUTHOR RECOGNIZED WITH TOP PRIZE

Developer’s Choice Award

The Hacker's Guide to Visual FoxPro selected as the winner of the VFP DevCon 2000 Developer's Choice award.

The Hacker’s Guide to Visual FoxPro selected as the winner of the VFP DevCon 2000 Developer’s Choice award.

New Orleans, LA — (May 26, 2000) — Ted Roche of Contoocook, NH was awarded the highest honor in his field, the Developer’s Choice Award, last week at the VFP DevCon 2000 Connections conference. Roche, together with his co-author, Tamar E. Granor of Elkins Park, PA, was honored for his most recent book, Hacker’s Guide to Visual FoxPro 6.0 (Hentzenwerke Publishing.) The Developer’s Choice awards are co-sponsored by the conference organizer, International TechCon, LLC, and Pinnacle Publishing’s FoxTalk newsletter. The winners were selected by Visual FoxPro developers via an electronic ballot on the International TechCon web site.

The book is an irreverent and exhaustive reference to the Visual FoxPro programming language. Visual FoxPro is Microsoft’s programming environment for developing data-oriented desktop applications and middle-tier components. This is the second book Roche and Granor have co-authored. In 1996, their collaboration, Hackers Guide to Visual FoxPro 3.0 was published by Addison-Wesley.

Roche is the director of development at Blackstone, Incorporated, a Microsoft Certified Solutions Provider located in Waltham, Massachusetts. Blackstone develops Internet, database and faxing solutions and products for medium and large-scale businesses.

For further information:

Visual FoxPro: http://msdn.microsoft.com/vfoxpro
Hentzenwerke Publishing: http://www.hentzenwerke.com or (XXX) YYY-ZZZZ
International TechCon, LLC: http://www.vfpdevcon.com or(XXX) YYY-ZZZZ
Pinnacle Publishing’s FoxTalk newsletter: http://www.pinpub.com or(XXX) YYY-ZZZZ
Blackstone, Incorporated: http://www.bstone.com or(XXX) YYY-ZZZZ

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Hacker’s Guide to Visual FoxPro wins Developer’s Choice Award

The Hacker's Guide to Visual FoxPro selected as the winner of the VFP DevCon 2000 Developer's Choice award.

The Hacker’s Guide to Visual FoxPro selected as the winner of the VFP DevCon 2000 Developer’s Choice award.

At the VFP DevCon 2000 Connections conference held in New Orleans, the Hacker’s Guide to Visual FoxPro book was selected as a Developer’s Choice award winner. The award was co-sponsored by Pinnacle Publishing’s FoxTalk newsletter. Co-authors Tamar and I were very surprised and honored.

Charter Member, Microsoft Certified Solution Developer

Charter Member, Micrososft Certified Solution Developer Award

In 1999, Microsoft recognized Charter Members of MCSD designation.

In 1999, I received this award, a Charter Member of the Microsoft Certified Solution Developer. I worked quite hard to earn the award. I was in the first round of MCSDs using Visual FoxPro as their primary language. (It did help a little that I was one of two Lead Authors on the Visual FoxPro Distributed exam. A little. I still had to pass the test!) I had worked towards the MCSD for some time, as Microsoft moved the goalposts and required that I first pass two Windows Operating System and Services Architecture (WOSSA) exams, which I did in 1995, then Windows Architecture I and II, which I did in 1998, and finally, the two “Designing and Implementing Desktop/Distributed Applications with Microsoft FoxPro 6.0” exams in February of 2000. Along the way, I passed a total of seventeen examinations, including Visual Foxpro 3 and sufficient Windows NT exams to earn the Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE) for NT 4.0 in May of 1999.

I was, and still am, convinced that software development needs to reach the point where developers can prove their competence at some level. Many organizations have tried to establish such standards, with none succeeding so far. In an industry moving as fast as ours, competence is a difficult standing to define. Vendor-sponsored and -specific certifications obviously fall far short of that standard: the vendor has an ingrained conflict of interest in defining proficiency with their products as proficiency in the field. The numbers of certified individuals are touted by vendors as a sign of credibility in their products. None the less, other industries such as medicine and engineering have found a way to establish professional bodies of licensure and I believe software development will benefit from the same.

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This work by Ted Roche is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States.