What Comes Next

As most of you know, today is my last day as a fulltime employee at Microsoft.  It’s been an exciting 16+ years and all I can say is that I have been very fortunate to have had the opportunity to be in this industry and at Microsoft.  What an incredible chance to work with such a great set of people.   I was also very fortunate to be in an environment that allowed me to work on a team that was able to have such a positive and significant impact on the way people play and work with technology.

What’s truly amazing to me is that we are just at the beginning for what technology will be able to do.   The next 50 years are going to be much more exciting than the last 50 (and that’s saying a lot!) when you consider the potential impact technology advances will have on people and businesses.

Lots of people have been asking me what comes next. In the long term, I can tell you honestly that I don’t know.  While the term “retire” has been used to describe people at all stages of their lives as they leave a job, for a guy my age it’s a pretty strange term.  I’m not exactly the golfing type.  I am looking forward to spending time with my family and frankly getting some rest. 

While I don’t know what I will be up to in the long term (although charity will be one key focus), I have a pretty good sense of what I will be doing in the near term, so I thought I would share what I think a typical day might look like. 

It might go something like this:

  • 7:00 AM:  Breakfast with my sons.  Ended up doing a product comparison review of the various cereals we had in our pantry.  Sugar does beat the natural stuff and my suspicions about the impact of packaging on the post purchase experience were spot on.  It turns out the box does matter.
  • 7:40 AM:  Kids off to school.
  • 7:45 AM:  Went to check email.  Only two pieces.
  • 7:46 AM:  Checked network connection to see why I am not getting any email.  Everything working perfectly.
  • 8:00 AM:  Went to clean up the playroom so that it’s organized for when the kids get home.  Ended up building an application to sort the Legos using a SQL Server backend and a Windows Presentation Foundation front-end on Windows Vista.  Can’t decide whether the primary index of the database should be color or size of the piece.  While searching the web discovered that Lego means “I put together” in Latin.
  • 9:30 AM:  Spent 45 minutes looking around the house for the big refrigerator with the free soda just like Microsoft – was unable to find it.
  • 10:15 AM:  Worked on my Windows logo latch hook rug – another couple days and I’ll finish the red.
  • 11:00 AM:  Watched Rachel Ray – god is she engaging.  Maybe she should do the launch of the next version of Windows.
  • 11:30 AM:  Checked mail again. No messages.
  • 11:31 AM:  Turned off Spam filter.
  • 12:00 PM:  Went out to lunch with my wife.  Was surprised to see so many other people out for lunch during the week.  I wonder if they have been buzzing around for all of these years that I have been in building 26.
  • 1:30 PM:  Went to check out the Apple store at University Village to see what all of the hype was about.  Ended up demoing Windows Vista for all of the employees (and a few customers).  All they could say was “Wow.”  Ended up leading a group of them over to BestBuy to help them pick out new PCs with Windows Vista pre-loaded.  Need to go to the Bellevue store tomorrow.
  • 3:00 PM:  Checked email.  150 unread messages. Unfortunately, 149 of them were spam.
  • 3:10 PM:  Turned Spam filter back on.
  • 3:15 PM:  Went to drive the afternoon carpool run.  Spent 20 minutes waiting in line behind other parents whose kids weren’t even outside yet.  Need to write paper about Next Generation Carpool Queuing solution (NGCQ) that integrates Windows Live Presence with the driveway scheduler.  Must get appointment with school principal when it’s done.
  • 4:00 PM:  Home with the boys. Went to the playroom to help them build a train layout. Ended up doing interoperability test to study compatibility issues related to using Thomas trains on Brio track. Turns out while they work, the trains perform better on their native platform.  Need to try Brio trains on Thomas track tomorrow.
  • 4:30 PM:  After a phone call with my Mom, I decided I needed to configure her account as a standard user for Windows Vista.   This gives new meaning to “parental controls”, but a son has to do what a son has to do.
  • 5:00 PM:  Dinner with the family.  After they finished asking who was this strange man sitting at the dinner table, we had a great conversation about the kids’ day.  May have spent too much time asking them “how they would have done things better” and “what do they see as their key areas for growth.”
  • 6:45 PM:  Read kids a bedtime story.  They seem to be recently interested in “chapter books.”  I was amazed by how quickly they fell asleep when I read them one of my favorite classics, “The Theory of Recursive Functions and Effective Computability” by Rogers.
  • 7:30 PM:  Checked email.  Again.  No new email. 
  • 7:31 PM:  Turned Spam filter off again.
  • 8:00 PM:  Went down to my music room to play my guitar.  Dozed off on the couch.

Anyway, on a serious note, a few months ago, when I decided to start blogging, a lot of people thought I was crazy. It was certainly an experiment, but in the end it’s been very rewarding for me, and I hope that you’ve enjoyed it as well. I’m about to walk out the door, so clicking “post” on this blog will be my last official act as a Microsoft employee.

I love this company, and I have the utmost confidence that the great people here will continue to bring their creativity, passion, and drive to building world-class software that help our customers do amazing things.

See you on the Internet,

jim


Comments

  1. Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 12:22AM  

    What comes next?!?  Get effing real.  What should have come with Windows vista is the much wanted but never delivered WinFS file system.  Storage capacity is so unbelievably high on most any system that can run an HTML browser that a database oriented file system only makes sense... then again if you did what makes sense there wouldn't have been the bally-hoo over the DRM and the "Vista Team"'s original decision to further curtail what few rights I have left to do with my legally licensed software once you consider the EULA.  Good luck moving Vista, I think you'll need it.

  2. Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 12:46AM  

    I love the Apple bit!  At the computer store I work at, 3 of the 4 Macs on display were running Vista yesterday (fancy that!), and lots of Mac owners have been asking me how they can put Vista on their machines.  Despite all the fuss over missed deadlines and dropped features, the thing I love the most about Vista is that, even after using it since Beta 1, it still feels new and fresh to me.  There are a million little nifty things that it does, and it hurts to go back to XP (even more to use a Mac).  It's been a while since Windows was such a joy to use, and hopefully the best is still yet to come.  I hope to intern with Microsoft this coming summer and take part in building that sort of joy.  Best of luck, Jim!

  3. Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 1:13AM  

    Congratulation on a job well done!

  4. Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 1:15AM  

    Dear Sir.James Allchin.

    Thank you very much for 17 years.

    I send the maximum thanks.

    And, I wish Happy 2nd life in the future

    wonderfully , from far Japan , Tokyo :)

    Daisuke Osada . MVP Shell/User 2007

    balog http://barca.daa.jp

  5. Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 1:43AM  

    What a class act. Thanks for the work and effort you put into Windows -- it shows.

    Enjoy your next adventure. Somehow I think your assessment is gonna last all of 48 hours before you're making things happen again!

    Best.

  6. Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 5:23AM  

    Thanks a lot for all your efforts. Vista is truely the best OS delivered by Microsoft.

    You will be missed a lot by Microsoft and computing world.

    good luck.

  7. HLM
    Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 5:33AM  

    Would like to thank you for all the great work you've done. I remember all those years, especially those one with IE in all it's various versions and Windows 2000, which brought me a lot of excitement. Couldn't imagine a world without Microsoft (and the work you've done there).

    Thanks a lot! And good luck for you!

    Hope, Microsoft will continue with breakthroughs and great products.

    Bye!

  8. Bas
    Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 6:23AM  

    Congratultaions Jim, and thanks for keeping us all up to date through this blog. All the best.

  9. Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 6:48AM  

    Care for a game of Halo? or Gears of War? :P

  10. Posted on: February 01, 2007 at 7:10AM  

    Haha, funny as hell. :)

    Good job saving Windows among the many other excellent things you've done.

    You definitely need to continue writing a blog outside of Microsoft.

Trackbacks

  1. Posted by: Karls Blog on February 01, 2007 at 12:44AM
  2. Posted by: UFies.org on February 01, 2007 at 2:01AM

    A most amusing post from Jim Allchin on the Windows Vista Team Blog on what his life will be like...

  3. Posted by: Robert McLaws: Windows Vista Edition on February 01, 2007 at 4:30AM

    Jim Allchin posted a final blog entry yesterday as his last act as a Microsoft employee. It's a HILARIOUS

  4. Posted by: The Dark Knight's Blog on February 01, 2007 at 9:33AM

    Jim Allchin finally retired from Microsoft on Jan, 30th 2007 following the public release of Windows

  5. Posted by: JrzyShr Dev Guy on February 01, 2007 at 1:44PM

    Today is Jim Alchin's last day at Microsoft. Jim has been one of the executives who has led the Windows

  6. Posted by: MasterMaq's Blog on February 01, 2007 at 2:08PM

    I just read Jim Allchin's final post over at the Windows Vista blog, and I have to admit, it's kind of...

  7. Posted by: on February 01, 2007 at 3:01PM

    Med frigivelsen af Windows Vista har vi så også nået dagen hvor Jim Allchin stopper hos Microsoft. Jeg

  8. Posted by: "So, a booth babe and a geek walk in to a bar..." on February 01, 2007 at 5:50PM

    I had fun yesterday at the Vista/Office launch party on campus here; it was kind of exciting. Top three

  9. Posted by: Richard G. Harper - Microsoft Windows Support and More on February 01, 2007 at 8:36PM

    The good news is that the Windows Mobile Device Center for Vista has been released. This is the Vista

  10. Posted by: Teamzille.de on February 02, 2007 at 8:54AM

    Jim Allchin war der Co-President der Microsoft\'s Platforms & Services Division und gilt als Vater von Windows Vista und Windows Live. Am 30. Januar hat er mit dem offiziellen Start des neuen Betriebssystems seinen Abschied von Microsoft genomme

  11. Posted by: Steffen über SQL, SharePoint und EAI on February 03, 2007 at 12:06PM

    Ich blogge ja sonst keine Links, aber der ist soooo Klasse! http://windowsvistablog.com/blogs/windowsvista/archive/2007/01/31/what-comes-next.aspx

  12. Posted by: Blog Team TechNet Italia on February 03, 2007 at 1:09PM

    Come annunciato da qualche mese, Jim Allchin, il "papà" della divisione Windows ha lasciato Microsoft

  13. Posted by: TechNet Blog CZ/SK on February 03, 2007 at 1:47PM

    Poté, co Windows Vista prošly konečnou fází a vyrazily na trh, ukončil svou činnost v Microsoftu šéf

  14. Posted by: Blog do LORD Palma on February 03, 2007 at 10:08PM

    E lá foi ele. Jim Allchin, ex-co-presidente de plataformas e serviços da Microsoft, oficializou sua aposentadoria

  15. Posted by: Spyware Sucks on February 03, 2007 at 11:20PM

    As we all know, Jim Allchin retired from MS on 30 January 2007, the day that Vista was released to the

  16. Posted by: My view of life on February 05, 2007 at 6:26PM

    IT and stuff Test First Web Applications: TDDing a Castle MonoRail application with C# and Selenium What

  17. Posted by: DeveloperZen.com on February 08, 2007 at 4:46PM
  18. Posted by: .: Michael Korp :. on February 09, 2007 at 3:17PM

    Tja, eine Frage ist ja: Wer ist ein Kollege? Manchmal nicht wirklich einfach zu beantworten. Ist es der

  19. Posted by: Bits and Bytes on February 20, 2007 at 12:33PM

    Ο Jim Allchin παρέδωσε τα Windows Vista και βγήκε στην σύνταξη. Και, όπως λέει ο ίδιος, όχι για να παίζει

  20. Posted by: Saurabh Chowdhury's Virtual Utopia on April 25, 2009 at 2:09PM

    Wishing Jim Allchin, Good Bye