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04-10-2011, 09:50 AM
A long-time member of Microsoft;s Internet Explorer group, Chris Wilson, has left Microsoft and is also becoming a member of Google in November.Wilson;s move is additional than “yet another Microsoft guy goes Google.” Although Wilson didn;t burn any bridges in his September 21 goodbye blog post, he made it clear that Google;s strategy to advance the Net as a platform is where he sees the action happening.Wilson said he is taking a month off and then will be becoming a member of Google as a Developer Advocate, working out of Google;s Fremont, Wash., offices.“I’ll spare the minor details of my decision (other than how excited I am to turn my Office Space style commute into a 6 mile bike ride to Google’s Fremont office),Office 2007 Professional (http://www.office-2007-key.co.uk), and just say I’m very excited to work for a company that invests so very much in making the Web platform better for developers and consumers,Office 2010 Pro Plus (http://www.key-office-2010.de/), and I hope that I can use this as an opportunity to not only do no evil, but to actively do good,” Wilson blogged.Wilson joined the IE group back in 1995,Office Professional 2007 Key (http://www.office-2007-key.co.uk), has spent lots of his time on the hot seat, representing Microsoft on various standards groups. As of mid-2009, Wilson was Principal Program Manager of the Open Net Platform in Microsoft;s Developer Division. At that time, he was working for the browser programmability and tools unit,Office Pro Plus 2007 (http://www.microsoftoffice2007key.net), which was the team building the “Chakra” JavaScript engine and tools for World-wide-web Explorer 9.Wilson told me a year ago that Microsoft was working to create a more unified Internet platform vision and strategy, giving higher priority to the tools and runtime APIs (application programming interfaces) for the Internet.The open Web platform is not a single, definable entity, Wilson said. “But to me,Office 2010 Professional Plus (http://www.key-office-2010.de/), it’s CSS, HTML 5, JavaScript and other APIs developed by the W3C,” Wilson told me a year ago.IE 9 will be Microsoft;s most standards-compliant and fastest version of its browser when it truly is released (most likely in the first half of 2011). So maybe Wilson saw his work at Microsoft as done. I think the Redmondians still have a long way to go before Microsoft ever has the same commitment and support for Internet development as it does for Windows development….