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Webcasts Magic Winner - David Soussan

 

Everyone remember our Webcasts Magic promotion we did this year? I like it when we do something nice for our customers. So I was pleasantly surprised when we picked one of our webcasts customers, David Soussan of Michigan, as our lucky Webcasts Magic winner. We flew David Soussan and his wife Christi out here to present his webcast on Network Debugging at MS Studios.

 

David and Christi it's over!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dean Andrews, former TechNet Webcasts Manager, met David and Christi in a Lincoln town car and took them about Microsoft Campus, Microsoft Museum, Microsoft Company Store, and MS Studios, where David recorded his webcast last Friday. Later David and Christi had dinner in the Space Needle, compliments of Microsoft.

 

I’m told by Dean Andrews that David Soussan knew his stuff, so you need to be check out his webcast when we post it on https://www.microsoft.com/webcasts. Kudos to David Soussan, and many others like him doing a great job supporting Microsoft servers, developer tools, and technologies… day in and day out.

 

Warmest Regards,

George, MSDN Webcasts

 

P.S. We’ve got more pictures of David and Christi Soussan here at Webcasts Magic Pictures.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    May 05, 2007
    Would like to bring to your attention that am trying to download some webcasts from https://www119.livemeeting.com/cc/mseventsbmo/viewReg. While downloading these webcasts, in most cases i get an error as "Server Not Available". By any chance can you suggest me a mechanism to download these webcasts with out fail in between. At times, i get annoyed when the webcast show this error after downloading about 11MB, resulting entire downloaded invain. Help me.. any suggestion and comments will be helpfull

  • Anonymous
    May 20, 2007
    Georgeo, Thank you! And let me echo how much fun it was! Everyone was extremely helpful -- Jennifer Walts changing around our accomodations and stuff behind the scenes, Marci Stringfellow on the webcast with me making sure everything went smoothly including last minute edits to the presentation, Dave Gross on the mixing board trying to make my notebook's fan noise not so obvious, and Dean Andrews taking us around campus. Though I've probably attended > 20 webcasts on various topics, I had no idea just how much work went into preparing for each of them. As a technical person needing a quickstart on technical topics, I can't say enough positive things about the whole webcast concept. Other than "More, please!" Last week the webcast made it into your index at http://www.microsoft.com/events/webcasts/ondemand.mspx Look for Tue, 15 May 2007 TechNet Webcast: The Art of Network Debugging (Level 200). It starts at Level 200, but goes much deeper half way through. So thanks again for a great program! David Soussan

  • Anonymous
    May 22, 2007
    instead of carying about your blog, can you just fix the webcast website? it is a complete mess without search and 20 steps to download/view/find something there.

  • Anonymous
    May 23, 2007
    Dude, We are trying to fix the site. Internally we're going through some re-org changes to fix our www.microsoft.com/webcasts site and the discoverability of webcasts, virutual labs and podcasts. George