Thanks David,

 

I am creating a Virtual Image right now to start toying around with
Silverlight again.   I usually struggle to think of ideas to do sample
projects myself, but for the moment I have some ideas that can link with
what I do at work.

 

 

Simon Kuldin | Senior Technical Consultant | PRISM 

Suite 3, 214 Bay St Brighton, VIC 3186, Australia

P: +61 3 9596 8633 M: 0408 310 957 W: www.prism-solutions.com.au
<http://www.prism-solutions.com.au/> 

 

prism-v5.jpg 

People.  Responsive.  Innovative.  Simple.  Methodical.

 

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com]
On Behalf Of David Pung
Sent: Thursday, 13 January 2011 10:01 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: RE: Skilling Up

 

I like WPF and silver light. I think they are the future. But HTML5  might
introduce something else.

to my knowledge, there are not many jobs for them at the moment - maybe in
the future I hope. 

 

I think most programmer can learn .NET, C# easily. Since the .NET is huge,
it is good to learn the most requently used first so you can get a job early
and have chances to learn more. The best way I know to learn is to write
applications - invent your own software or help an open source project are
good ways. 

 

Good luck

David

 

 

 

From: Stephen Price [mailto:step...@littlevoices.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, 12 January 2011 4:13 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: Skilling Up

 

There's a Silverlight user group in Melbourne (and Sydney, Perth).
http://sddn.org.au/ should get you some details on where they meet. There's
also a couple of .Net ones but being a Perth guy I don't know anything other
than maybe check http://www.victoriadotnet.com.au
<http://www.victoriadotnet.com.au/> . I think there's another one around
too? 

I can see the issue with talking to your employer, if they catch wind you
are changing careers you might freak em out and affect your short term
relationship with them. Myself, I went and did a degree part time - Bachelor
of Science (Internet Computing) at ECU, which might be something you've not
considered. It took six years but helped my career change (was working full
time as a developer after 2 years of starting the degree).

 

Charles Sturt University also claim to be the best in distance education
(http://www.csu.edu.au/) so might be another option, study at home online.
(Which was how i did a large chunk of my degree - at home via online portals
+ books etc)

 

On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 1:05 PM, Simon Kuldin
<sim...@prism-solutions.com.au> wrote:

Any particular user groups that you would recommend?

 

As much as I would like to talk to my current employer about it, I find it
very unlikely that they would be flexible.  Especially considering the small
size of the company.

 

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com]
On Behalf Of Stephen Price
Sent: Wednesday, 12 January 2011 4:01 PM


To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: Skilling Up

 

I agree with Mike on the point of talking to your current employer. I did
this 6 years ago when I was in infrastructure, and I scored myself a whole
month seconded to the dev team. They were busy in a testing phase so I
basically sat there for a month teaching myself VB.Net (one of those learn
VB.Net in 24 hours books. Its a lie it took me more than 24 hours). The
upside was I got paid while doing it and if I got stuck with anything I
could ask the developers there (which, interestingly they usually couldn't
help me much with my questions as they were VB6 developers and hadn't
learned .Net yet)

 

Also user groups are essential, its essentially free training, mixed in with
socialising/networking with like minded people. I also highly recommend
doing a presentation at a user group, there's nothing more motivating than
having to present on something. 

 

Good luck!

 

On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 12:52 PM, Michael Minutillo
<michael.minuti...@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi Simon,

 

Firstly, it's probably worth talking to your current employer to see if this
is something they can help you with. Sometimes this kind of sideways change
can be beneficial for both parties (especially if it means that the business
can hold on to a valuable resource). 

 

Personally I don't think I'd bother with a C# course or specific
certification. A copy of C# in a Nutshell (or some other title of equal
awesomeness) will probably teach you as much and be more useful in the
future (as you can keep referring back to it). For potential employers, I'd
guess that a C# certification on your CV might not be enough to get an
interview. You're far better off participating in open source projects /
local community groups in my opinion.

 

As far as the technology choices to look at, I'd consider WPF/Silverlight.
Admittedly I have no idea whether or not there is a ton of work out there
for these (I'm stuck in WinForms land) but they both rely on XAML (slightly
different versions) and so does Windows Phone 7 so you get a toe in the web,
desktop and phone development camps all at once. Given you have SQL
experience I'd probably look at Entity Framework 4 as well. You might end up
working on a project where you don't actually touch the UI.

 

Hope that helps and good luck with your transition!

 

--
Michael M. Minutillo
Indiscriminate Information Sponge
Blog: http://wolfbyte-net.blogspot.com

 

On Wed, Jan 12, 2011 at 11:44 AM, Simon Kuldin
<sim...@prism-solutions.com.au> wrote:

Good afternoon everyone,

 

I'm looking at expanding my technical skill-set for future career
opportunities.   My real desire is to learn Dot Net programming (as I'm a
programmer by heart).

 

My current experience is 10+ years as a Developer/Consultant for Microsoft
Dynamics NAV, and I also am getting a fair bit of experience in
administrating SQL Server.

 

I want to move my career sideways to be less ERP focussed, and more overall
development focussed.  

 

Any recommendations on how I would go about it?

 

Is it worth me doing a course to get official C# certification?   Would I be
better off focusing on just Windows development (since that is where my
skill set is mainly set around), or due to demand should I try Web
development?  Any good websites that provide information and little tasks
for you to try to test your knowledge?  

 

I'm sorry if this is not the appropriate avenue to ask.. but I really feel
like I need a change in my career, and I think I need to be more proactive
in making it happen.

 

Cheers for your help!

 

 

Simon Kuldin | Senior Technical Consultant | PRISM 

Suite 3, 214 Bay St Brighton, VIC 3186, Australia

P: +61 3 9596 8633 M: 0408 310 957 W: www.prism-solutions.com.au
<http://www.prism-solutions.com.au/> 

 

Error! Filename not specified. 

People.  Responsive.  Innovative.  Simple.  Methodical.

 

 

 

 

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