The 2009 MVP Global Summit

Hi, Mike Nash here. I had the opportunity to deliver the Windows 7 keynote yesterday at the annual Microsoft Most Valuable Professional (MVP) Global Summit here in Seattle. Every year we have the privilege of hosting over 1,400 members from our MVP community in a multi-day summit where we do deep drill downs on our products and get very direct feedback from them. This year the product and engineering groups hosted 700 sessions across 70 Microsoft technology areas, presenting over 140 sessions focused on Windows 7, IE8 and Windows Live expertise areas.

MVPs are independent technical experts and early adopters of Microsoft technologies who voluntarily share their knowledge and experiences in offline and online technical communities to help other technology users to solve problems, discover new capabilities and get the most from their technology investments.

Our MVP community as a whole, represents more than 90 countries, speaks 30 different languages, and covers more than 85 Microsoft technologies.

We have thousands of MVPs around the world, with hundreds who are specifically focused on the Windows Desktop Experience, Windows System and Performance, Internet Explorer, Digital Media, Media Center, Printing and Imaging, Tablet PC and more. We rely on them heavily to be our critics and infuse our conscience with how customers are experiencing the Windows client operating system while sharing insights into how we can continue to improve our products and most importantly the customer experience.

Our MVPs have been very engaged in testing and reviewing the Windows 7 Beta, since our first pre-release build was made available at PDC and our feature complete beta that was released at CES in January. MVPs have provided support by contributing to over 40,000 posts on the Windows 7 Beta Forum where technical enthusiasts can find answers to questions with MVP subject experts contributing to an 85+% answer rate during the beta timeframe. More importantly, MVPs are the one group that has an official feedback channel to file their bugs and input feedback directly to the product and engineering teams.

To date, our MVP community has provided great feedback from their voice of the customer perspective to help us deliver on the next milestone of Windows 7.

I want to say THANK YOU to ALL our MVPs for their hard work in helping us to fine tune Windows 7 and put the final fit and finish on the product as we march to our next milestone of a release candidate.

In closing, we had a bit of fun at the MVP Summit producing an “I’m a PC” MVP video with the keynote audience with myself and Steve Ballmer. Have a look.


MVP "I'm a PC" Video

- Mike

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Comments

  1. Posted on: March 05, 2009 at 9:46PM  

    THANK YOU Microsoft for recognizing and acknowledging the work of MVPs! :)

  2. Posted on: March 05, 2009 at 9:55PM  

    I hope that everyone who attended had a great time at the MVP summit, sure seems like it from the video.

    I am not a MVP myself, however I often frequent forums where solutions to problems are offered up by knowledgeable MVP's, so I would like to thanks these professionals for making the computing experience a little better for us average folk.

  3. Posted on: March 06, 2009 at 6:02AM  

    Thank You  to  All our MVP's

    Microsoft ;

    Most Valuable Professional ;

    mvp.support.microsoft.com

    Good Luck ...

  4. Posted on: March 07, 2009 at 11:02PM  

    how can you buy music from windows media player

  5. Posted on: March 12, 2009 at 8:59AM  

    I'm curious what it means to be a Microsoft Gold Partner? The school I'm going to has a lot of MS Gold plaques in the main entrance office. Is it anything related to being an MVP?

  6. Posted on: March 12, 2009 at 9:52AM  

    "Microsoft Most Valuable Professionals (MVPs) are... leaders from around the world who are awarded for sharing their expertise"

    "Can you tell us more?"

    "You're in the wrong group"

    "You must be ...[doing it] wrong"

    "I never have a problem"

    "Reinstall"

    "Call Microsoft"

  7. Posted on: March 14, 2009 at 4:59AM  

    [Intense Suggestion]

    keep theme style consistency for Windows 7.

    keep theme style consistency for Menu bar, Tool bar. like Windows XP theme style's consistency.

    screenshot:

    uploads.bizhat.com/.../389383

  8. Posted on: March 16, 2009 at 1:57AM  

    Intense Suggestion

    ============

    keep Details Columns style consistency...

    Details Columns has two styles in Windows 7.

    Please keep style consistency for Details Columns.

    screenshot:

    www.windows7taskforce.com/.../999

    uploads.bizhat.com/.../389702

  9. Posted on: March 23, 2009 at 10:42AM  

    Hi! I was wondering if the new window 7 will be compatable to all the old computer systems because I'm a gamer and researcher. A lot of the game I play are from the older systems as well as the new systems. I still play a lot of the dos and lynix games as well as old windows games and new windows games. So I'm hoping that the new windows system is compatable to all the old computer systems as well as the new for both gaming and researching as well as education and emailing.

  10. Posted on: April 05, 2009 at 2:53PM  

    1)

    need keep Menu color layout consistency for Windows 7.

    Please keep color layout consistency for Menu.

    Why the 'Include in libary' used another color layout?

    view snapshot:

    www.windows7taskforce.com/.../560

    2)

    Improve Start Menu and Appliaction Menu color style (suggestion consistency)

    (discriminated Appliaction Menu color very difficult)

    There is no consistency between the Start Menu and the Appliaction Menu.

    To keep Start Menu and Appliaction Menu color style consistency, like Windows XP.

    All use white color for background, light blue color for selected item.

    view snapshot:

    www.windows7taskforce.com/.../560

    3)

    keep theme style consistency for Windows 7

    keep theme style consistency for Menu bar, Tool bar. like Windows XP theme style's consistency.

    view snapshot:

    www.windows7taskforce.com/.../960

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    214 Microsoft Team blogs searched, 92 blogs have new articles in the past 7 days. 186 new articles found

  5. Posted by: The things that are better left unspoken on March 09, 2009 at 8:04AM

    MVP "I'm a PC" Video Been there, done that Further reading Microsoft Videos Beta – MVP “I’m

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      MVP "I'm a PC" Video (you can hear SteveB’s energy in here ! ) Technorati Tags: MVP

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