The "Voice" of Office Development
April 2004 - Posts
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Briefly, I was in a serious collision with a truck while training on my Trek 5200. I have some broken bones, and I am just now starting to get a little bit of mobility. This is why I have not been blogging or doing much else. I apologize for the hiatus. Read More...
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Andrew May , the programmer/writer for PowerPoint programmability at Microsoft, has two truly excellent papers that just went out the door. They answer some questions that I have seen appear countless times in the ng's, so they deserve some extra headlining. Read More...
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So, the MVP Summit has come and gone. What a great experience. I hope they had as much fun as I did. During one of the sessions, those of us tasked with providing programmability documentation for Office developers peppered the MVPs with tons of questions. Read More...
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OK- I had a few busy days as we hosted thousands of MVP's here for the 2004 MVP Summit. It was good fun. Let's face it, these MVP's are a vital part of Microsoft's success. I value their contributions greatly. There were lots of new faces, and, as my Read More...
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I'll be at TechEd in May, and I am presenting on Outlook. Those of you who have been to one of my presentations somewhere know that I am light on slides, heavy on code walk-through (I really, really hate going to sessions that are all slides or void of Read More...
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In one of my earlier blog entries, I introduced some of the bread-and-butter XML element in the WordML schema. I have been expanding my horizons with other markup. Intriguingly, I have been asked, "Do you really sit down and read the spec?" The answer Read More...
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Scott Watermasysk, brainsource of the truly excellent .Text ASP.NET Weblog technolgy, boosted my ego by posting a comment to one of my recent blog entries about using XML to generate Excel workbooks. I wanted to call it out more clearly here, because Read More...
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