A long-time member of Microsoft;s Web Explorer team,
Office Ultimate 2007 Product Key, Chris Wilson, has left Microsoft and is joining Google in November.Wilson;s move is much more than “yet another Microsoft guy goes Google.” Although Wilson didn;t burn any bridges in his September 21 goodbye blog post,
Office 2007, he made it clear that Google;s strategy to advance the Internet as a platform is where he sees the action happening.Wilson said he is taking a month off and then will be becoming a member of Google as a Developer Advocate, working out of Google;s Fremont, Wash.,
Office 2010 Serial Number, offices.“I’ll spare the minor details of my decision (other than how excited I am to turn my Office Space style commute into a 6 mile bike ride to Google’s Fremont office), and just say I’m very excited to work for a company that invests so considerably in making the Web platform better for developers and consumers, and I hope that I can use this as an opportunity to not only do no evil, but to actively do good,” Wilson blogged.Wilson joined the IE team back in 1995, has spent lots of his time on the hot seat, representing Microsoft on various standards groups. As of mid-2009, Wilson was Principal Program Manager of the Open Web Platform in Microsoft;s Developer Division. At that time, he was working for the browser programmability and tools unit,
Buy Office 2007, which was the crew building the “Chakra” JavaScript engine and tools for World wide web Explorer 9.Wilson told me a year ago that Microsoft was working to create a far more unified Internet platform vision and strategy, giving higher priority to the tools and runtime APIs (application programming interfaces) for the Net.The open Internet platform is not a single, definable entity, Wilson said. “But to me, it’s CSS,
Windows 7 Professional Key, HTML 5, JavaScript and other APIs developed by the W3C,” Wilson told me a year ago.IE 9 will be Microsoft;s most standards-compliant and fastest version of its browser when it can be released (most likely in the first half of 2011). So maybe Wilson saw his work at Microsoft as done. I think the Redmondians still have a lengthy way to go before Microsoft ever has the same commitment and support for Net development as it does for Windows development….