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Month: January 2011

Nice to be Away, and Good to be Back

I’ve been a little quiet here of late. First was because we were uncharacteristically busy during the month of December, and recently because I was able to take a well needed rest with my family to the Mayan Riviera in Mexico. Because in my banner header I threaten to blog about diving, I’m going to go ahead and do so now, and share out a few images.

My wife and I and our two kids stayed at the Sensatori Azul resort, between Cancun and Playa Del Carmen. Frankly, I really don’t like the whole all inclusive resort thing, I much prefer to get a more local flavour, but when travelling with family, these things make too much sense. I was however very impressed with this resort – they have an excellent kids program, the food is fantastic, and you feel much less like cattle, as you do in most resorts. My only problem was the location,which was a $40 cab ride away from Playa Del Carmen,which is where my favourite dive shop is located.

The Abyss Dive Center, in Playa Del Carmen, is where I originally got my Open Water dive certification back in 2003. Since then I’ve done my Advanced, Navigation, Nitrox, and Rescue Diver certification with the Abyss. I really can’t say enough good things about these folks. Operated for 15 years by Dave Tomlinson, an expatriate Canadian, they have exactly the right mix of fun with a focus on safety. They manage to do this without cramping the style of advanced divers. While the staff at any dive shop turns over fairly quickly, I’ve always really liked everyone there, and have been friends with several after they have left. This time was no exception.

II was pretty excited to try out my new camera gear, a Canon EOS 550D (Rebel T2i) which shoots lovely stills and full 1080p HD video, along with a couple of lenses, a 60mm macros and a wide angle that was borrowed from a friend.  It’s bull shark season down there, but unfortunately they weren’t there when I was, and it wasn’t for a lack of looking. My first day we headed to Tiburon Flats and while we were skunked on sharks, I managed to see these two interesting guys:

Southern Stingray

 

They grow large remoras here. Given that these guys hang around sharks, we were hopeful, but no dice.

Both of these were shot with a wide angle lens at about 80 feet.

As for stills, I can’t really pick out one favourite picture from the trip. So I’m posting two:

IMG_1715

Lionfish are an invasive species, only appearing in the area in the past year. They’re a scourge, but they sure are pretty,

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On the other side of the attractive scale, scorpion fish are very adept at disguise, and pretty dangerous. You don’t want to touch one, or you’re off to the hospital. Actually both fish in these two pictures are poisonous, which is not the norm for the area.

These two were both shot on the same dive, at around 40 feet with a Canon 60mm macro lens. If you’re interested in seeing other shots from this trip, you can check out my Flickr Photo set.

I’m pretty happy with the way that the camera performed, but the real test will be next month when I dive at the Wakatobi Dive resort in Indonesia. I’m very much looking forward to it.

That’s enough fun stuff. I’ll be back to some technical posts shortly!

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MVP Award, A Happy New Year Indeed

It looks like 2011 has begun very nicely for me, as I awoke to find an email from Microsoft notifying me that I had been given an MVP award for 2011! The MVP program has been around since the early 1990s, and according to the email, awards are granted to “exceptional technical community leaders who actively share their high quality, real world expertise with others. We appreciate your outstanding contributions in SharePoint Server technical communities during the past year”. Certainly more praise than I would accord to myself, but I’ll take it!

If you read this blog, what this means to you is that I will be in a better position to see and work with new products earlier, to have better access to the product teams at Microsoft, and to be better able to interact with fellow MVPs. Taken together it means that the advice offered here will be better, and hopefully more frequent.

I would also like to take the opportunity to thank Stephen Giles and Simran Chaudhry from Microsoft Canada, who both thought I was a worthwhile candidate, and who worked hard to make this happen. I would also like to thank Alain Fournier,Erik Moll,and Arshad Pathare, also all from Microsoft Canada, who have believed in Second Foundation Intelligence, over the past few years, and who are also strongly advocating on our behalf. Finally I would like to thank my business partner Ed Senez, who makes the business run, and everyone else at Second Foundation Intelligence, who has to put up with me on a daily basis.

Here’s to a great 2011!

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