Monday - Interview with a Wiki Ninja
Tuesday - TNWiki Article Spotlight
Wednesday - Wiki Life
Thursday - Community Wins
Friday - International Update
Saturday - Top Contributors of the Week
Sunday - Surprise
Today's interview is with a PowerShell MCC, Rich Prescott! (Click here for all our interviews with Wiki Ninjas!!!)
Rich Prescott - Profile
Who are you, where are you, and what do you do? What are your specialty technologies?
You got the quote wrong! It is "Who is your daddy and what does he do?" Guess I'll answer it anyways...my name is Rich Prescott and I am currently living in one of the best cities in the world, New York! I work for a large media company and my main responsibilities include automation and Active Directory. The scripting allows me to work with a wide range of technologies, including virtualization, storage and monitoring. There are so many different things that I work on that it is hard to narrow down, but if I had to pick three:
How did you become an MCC? Do you have any suggestions for other community members who hope to eventually become MCCs?
I was actually awarded with Microsoft Community Contributor recently and honestly, I'm not exactly sure how I got it. I have a passion for sharing my knowledge with others and fortunately enough, Microsoft provides quite a few avenues for that with TechNet (Forums, Galleries, Wiki and Blogs). My technological passion is PowerShell and my MCC journey started out on TechNet writing scripts and uploading them to the TechNet Script Center Repository. After browsing the rest of the links at the top of the Script Center and stumbling upon the other TechNet communities, I was hooked and began contributing to all facets. As far as advice or suggestions for those who wish to become an MCC (the award name hits the nail on the head), find something you are passionate about and contribute to the Microsoft community on that topic in the medium that you are most comfortable with (or all of them!).
If you are more comfortable writing documentation, start out with the wiki.If you are more of a troubleshooter, head over to the forums and help out your fellow system administrators/developers with their questions. If you enjoy writing scripts, upload them to the gallery.
What are your big projects right now?
The most recent project that I just released is a blog post that I wrote for the Hey, Scripting Guy! blog, which was published on January 6, 2012 and is titled PowerShell Community and the Windows System Administration Tool. I am working on certifications for virtualization and the MCITP: Enterprise Administrator. Whenever I need a break from studying for certifications, I take some time to contribute on TechNet or work on a couple of my PowerShell projects:Windows System Administration tool 2.0
AD User Creation tool
What is it about TechNet Wiki that interests you?
Nobody is perfect when it comes to documentation, but with the help of multiple people, you can achieve greatness. As I read that back to myself, it sounds really corny, but there is truth to it. Even if you are an expert in a specific technology, there is someone out there that knows something about that technology that you do not. If both of you contribute to the Wiki, you can both learn from it. And with the number of people contributing on the Wiki, the amount of material to learn from increases exponentially.
What are your favorite articles you’ve contributed?
Feature Requests for TechNet and MSDN Profiles and Social Platform Tools
TechNet Profile Achievements
Windows PowerShell Survival Guide
Windows PowerShell ISE Add-On Tools
Who has impressed you in the Wiki community, and why?
Ed Price - How do you keep up with all of it? If not a Wiki ninja, you are a Wiki beast.The portuguese-speaking community - If the english-speaking community doesn't pick it up, we'll be out-wikied soon.
You've done fairly well on the Wiki. Do you have any tips or recommendations about editing or authoring articles?
As I mentioned earlier, find something that you are passionate about and start there. The rest will follow. A little bit of basic HTML knowledge never hurt anyone either.
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For those of you who haven't seen Rich's Gallery contributions (PowerShell scripts), you should go check them out!
Check out the comments below for more Q&A with Rich Prescott (you might want to come back to see that conversation unfold)!
Thank you to Rich! We'll see you in the TechNet community!
- Ninja Ed (Blog, Twitter, Wiki, Profile)