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Visual Studio Achievements

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  • K Karl Sanford

    [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

    Be The Noise

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Marc Clifton
    wrote on last edited by
    #10

    have more than 10 regions in a single class If someone did this on a project of mine, they would be fired.

    Karl Sanford wrote:

    anyone else have ideas for achievements?

    let's see: 1. code compiles without errors 2. code runs without exceptions being thrown 3. least number of times code has to be debugged 4. code has unit tests 5. imperative code? What, you can't do this declaratively? 6. imperative code? What, you can't do this functionaly? 7. number of methods thread safe 8. number of threads ... I suppose some of those are not achievable simply by hooking into compiler events. Marc

    My Blog
    An Agile walk on the wild side with Relationship Oriented Programming
    Melody's Amazon Herb Site

    B 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • K Karl Sanford

      [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

      Be The Noise

      N Offline
      N Offline
      Not Active
      wrote on last edited by
      #11

      I already get achievement points for my code. I call it a paycheck.


      No comment

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      • K Karl Sanford

        [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

        Be The Noise

        M Offline
        M Offline
        Marc Clifton
        wrote on last edited by
        #12

        In addition, the extension listens for certain events and actions that you may perform in Visual Studio, reporting progress on these events to the server. Oh my. I will NOT install this! Marc

        My Blog
        An Agile walk on the wild side with Relationship Oriented Programming
        Melody's Amazon Herb Site

        K 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • M Marc Clifton

          have more than 10 regions in a single class If someone did this on a project of mine, they would be fired.

          Karl Sanford wrote:

          anyone else have ideas for achievements?

          let's see: 1. code compiles without errors 2. code runs without exceptions being thrown 3. least number of times code has to be debugged 4. code has unit tests 5. imperative code? What, you can't do this declaratively? 6. imperative code? What, you can't do this functionaly? 7. number of methods thread safe 8. number of threads ... I suppose some of those are not achievable simply by hooking into compiler events. Marc

          My Blog
          An Agile walk on the wild side with Relationship Oriented Programming
          Melody's Amazon Herb Site

          B Offline
          B Offline
          BobJanova
          wrote on last edited by
          #13

          Heh, glad you're not managing me so I don't have to explain how this terrible region-infested code is not mine :doh: I don't really see the point in user-level achievements, and most of the ones they seem to have created are bad, so it seems a bit counter-productive, even if it is all for fun.

          M 1 Reply Last reply
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          • M Marc Clifton

            In addition, the extension listens for certain events and actions that you may perform in Visual Studio, reporting progress on these events to the server. Oh my. I will NOT install this! Marc

            My Blog
            An Agile walk on the wild side with Relationship Oriented Programming
            Melody's Amazon Herb Site

            K Offline
            K Offline
            Karl Sanford
            wrote on last edited by
            #14

            A bit paranoid, are we? A bit of Reflector work reveals that the only data sent to 'the server' is: - Your security credentials to verify with your Ch9 account - Data about the achievements you earned: Achievement, DateTime Earned, Progress towards an achievement, etc. This is used to include the data into your Ch9 profile, and subsequently for use in their external connectors (facebook, twitter, widgets...) so you can be social :) [aside: Its also interesting that the communication is with JSON serialization] I take it you also don't participate in the Customer Experience Improvement Program when its offered? ;P

            Be The Noise

            M B 2 Replies Last reply
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            • P Pete OHanlon

              Rumour has it that he's at the check-in waiting for a flight to the UK. I've heard he has several empty pieces of luggage.

              Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

              "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

              My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

              L Offline
              L Offline
              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #15

              Be very scared!!! :omg: :omg: :omg:

              It is an absolute certainty that there are no certainties. ~ Christopher Hitchens 1949-2011

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              • L Lost User

                Be very scared!!! :omg: :omg: :omg:

                It is an absolute certainty that there are no certainties. ~ Christopher Hitchens 1949-2011

                P Offline
                P Offline
                Pete OHanlon
                wrote on last edited by
                #16

                Sadly for JSOP - his guns aren't allowed, and that's what he's relied on to "intimidate".

                Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

                My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

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                • B BobJanova

                  Heh, glad you're not managing me so I don't have to explain how this terrible region-infested code is not mine :doh: I don't really see the point in user-level achievements, and most of the ones they seem to have created are bad, so it seems a bit counter-productive, even if it is all for fun.

                  M Offline
                  M Offline
                  Marc Clifton
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #17

                  BobJanova wrote:

                  Heh, glad you're not managing me so I don't have to explain how this terrible region-infested code is not mine

                  Well, ultimately I don't care because I turn off region collapsing in the IDE. My loathing for it comes from the days (VS2005???) when the search function wouldn't by default search in collapsed regions. It probably still doesn't, and I don't want to have to remember to click the checkbox! Marc

                  My Blog
                  An Agile walk on the wild side with Relationship Oriented Programming
                  Melody's Amazon Herb Site

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • K Karl Sanford

                    A bit paranoid, are we? A bit of Reflector work reveals that the only data sent to 'the server' is: - Your security credentials to verify with your Ch9 account - Data about the achievements you earned: Achievement, DateTime Earned, Progress towards an achievement, etc. This is used to include the data into your Ch9 profile, and subsequently for use in their external connectors (facebook, twitter, widgets...) so you can be social :) [aside: Its also interesting that the communication is with JSON serialization] I take it you also don't participate in the Customer Experience Improvement Program when its offered? ;P

                    Be The Noise

                    M Offline
                    M Offline
                    Marc Clifton
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #18

                    Karl Sanford wrote:

                    I take it you also don't participate in the Customer Experience Improvement Program when its offered?

                    You got it! Marc

                    My Blog
                    An Agile walk on the wild side with Relationship Oriented Programming
                    Melody's Amazon Herb Site

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • K Karl Sanford

                      [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

                      Be The Noise

                      D Offline
                      D Offline
                      dazfuller
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #19

                      Every time Visual Studio goes 10 minutes without crashing I think should be recorded as an acheivement :-D

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • K Karl Sanford

                        [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

                        Be The Noise

                        B Offline
                        B Offline
                        BrainiacV
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #20

                        Is it just me, but doesn't it look like "Unleashing Visual Studio" suggests it is done by doing three lines of coke? ;P

                        Psychosis at 10 Film at 11 Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it. Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • K Karl Sanford

                          A bit paranoid, are we? A bit of Reflector work reveals that the only data sent to 'the server' is: - Your security credentials to verify with your Ch9 account - Data about the achievements you earned: Achievement, DateTime Earned, Progress towards an achievement, etc. This is used to include the data into your Ch9 profile, and subsequently for use in their external connectors (facebook, twitter, widgets...) so you can be social :) [aside: Its also interesting that the communication is with JSON serialization] I take it you also don't participate in the Customer Experience Improvement Program when its offered? ;P

                          Be The Noise

                          B Offline
                          B Offline
                          Bitsqueezer
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #21

                          Hi, sound like a funny thing, getting "achievements". Yeah, I can be proud of getting silly "awards" mostly for problems in my code. And I tell everyone in the world what kind of code it is I'm working with, regardless of it is mine or code from newbie programmers. And links to data octopus like Facebook, Twitter and other "social" networks don't let me get a better feeling about that. Yes, the data might "only" be what you described but the data you get out of a database full of that information is a lot more. Do you really think that the Visual Studio Team at Microsoft does have the time to develop such "funny" things without targeting at a business demand? I don't believe that they have done all this in their freetime and I also do not believe that they invest their private money to set up a server farm which is fast enough to handle all the input. So if someone invest money in a company he wants to get a benefit back. The benefit is Data Mining using all the input coming from all the Visual Studio installations which uses this "feature". You could get statistical data like: - in which countries is VS installed? - how many installations of VS exists in which country? - how many developers are interested in social networks? - which kind of programming will be mostly used in VS, which programming language? - where can we invest more in developing extensions, i.e. LINQ, database support and so on? - which features of VS are mostly used, which are never or rarely used? - which exact programmer (link to account) does use which features? - how long is VS used daily? And a lot more things like that, you can get a LOT more information about the product usage than with the customer experience program which mostly will be used to report crashes and their reason to Microsoft. Yes, the "benefit" we have MAY be that the product gets a better development experience in future with all this data, but I also think that we deliver a lot of data about ourselfs daily without the knowledge what happens with all this (or the knowledge THAT we deliver data, like opening an email and downloading graphics and deliver informations to the sender that we read/open the newsletter and when and so on..). I don't think that we should support all the data madness only to satisfy other's business and their earning of money with our data. You may call it paranoid, but the examples above should let you think a little about if you want to be a transparent human. I personally prefer privacy at every point where I can

                          B 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • K Karl Sanford

                            [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

                            Be The Noise

                            Sander RosselS Offline
                            Sander RosselS Offline
                            Sander Rossel
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #22

                            Not sure getting some of them look good on your resume :laugh:

                            It's an OO world.

                            public class Naerling : Lazy<Person>{
                            public void DoWork(){ throw new NotImplementedException(); }
                            }

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                            • K Karl Sanford

                              [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

                              Be The Noise

                              R Offline
                              R Offline
                              Rob Grainger
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #23

                              Haven't they got more productive ways to employ their developers? Like fixing bugs. This seems such a bad idea - encouraging coders to try new add-ins, for example, can only encourage flakiness, and that's not in the "Don't try this at home" category (add to which, if I tried any of those except at home, I'd fully expect to be fired).

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • K Karl Sanford

                                [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

                                Be The Noise

                                K Offline
                                K Offline
                                Kirk Wood
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #24

                                I looked at it and then looked at the achievements available. The first thing I noticed is that every one of them was supposed to indicate a problem. Then I had the warm fuzzy feeling from thinking back to my sophomore year of high school. Back when I thought doing wrong just to do it was cool. Then I wondered just how many programmers would install this. But, it could possibly provide some interesting statistics. It might prove my theory that the world runs on crappy code.

                                L 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • K Kirk Wood

                                  I looked at it and then looked at the achievements available. The first thing I noticed is that every one of them was supposed to indicate a problem. Then I had the warm fuzzy feeling from thinking back to my sophomore year of high school. Back when I thought doing wrong just to do it was cool. Then I wondered just how many programmers would install this. But, it could possibly provide some interesting statistics. It might prove my theory that the world runs on crappy code.

                                  L Offline
                                  L Offline
                                  Lost User
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #25

                                  Kirk Wood wrote:

                                  It might prove my theory that the world runs on crappy code.

                                  What evidence do you need? Practically all projects suffer from one of the following: - Unrealistic requirements from somebody who is afraid that he gets too little for his money - Unrealistic deadlines because somebody is afraid that the project will cost too much - Unrealistic deadlines because the whole thing is 'a matter of life and death' Without looking at the quality of the code (or the coder), those three usually lead to crappy code before it's even written.

                                  And from the clouds a mighty voice spoke:
                                  "Smile and be happy, for it could come worse!"

                                  And I smiled and was happy
                                  And it came worse.

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                                  • K Karl Sanford

                                    [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

                                    Be The Noise

                                    O Offline
                                    O Offline
                                    o_theophilus
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #26

                                    I can't wait until managers start using this in reviews... Manager - "Let's see, you only accomplished 50/1000 coding accomplishments this year - no raise for you" Stranger things have happened ;)

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • N Not Active

                                      I already get achievement points for my code. I call it a paycheck.


                                      No comment

                                      G Offline
                                      G Offline
                                      giuchici
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #27

                                      It's not the same. Anyway it is still reassuring that I am not the only one that gets paid for coding :D. Not everybody can work for free and live off of achievements recognition.

                                      giuchici

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                                      0
                                      • K Karl Sanford

                                        [From the News section] So has anyone else tried this yet? http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/01/18/announcing-visual-studio-achievements.aspx[^] I just installed it yesterday, and I have to say it's actually kind of fun. Working alone from home, I usually only get recognition for finished products at a very high level, and almost never for the actual work that goes into them. It's a nice little 'attaboy', and even brings some humor to the process. I've decided not to go 'achievement hunting', and rather let them come naturally as I work. I hope MS keeps this up and adds more achievements... Although I did find it funny that I created a new project, added a DB first Entity Framework model to it, and automatically got the 'Overload' achievement from the 'Don't try this at home' category from all of the generated code. :laugh: http://channel9.msdn.com/achievements/visualstudio/MoreThan10OverloadsAchievement[^] Personally, I think they need to add an achievement for commenting your code; anyone else have ideas for achievements?

                                        Be The Noise

                                        S Offline
                                        S Offline
                                        SeattleC
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #28

                                        Wait, wait. Are there people who actually think this isn't bogus? If I needed a trumpet fanfare and a badge every time I accomplished something at work, I'd have switched careers long ago. Programming is a very internal art form. You have to be satisfied by the problem solving and the elegance of the result. Achievements in video games exist for the purpose of getting you to spend more hours playing the game. By extension, we might ask what microsoft wants to gain by putting achievements into visual studio. Yeah, you might say it's all fun and games, but maybe not. Maybe the purpose is to make you more dependent on the features of visual studio, to make yuu less likely to switch O/Ss and build tools. Beware of geeks bearing gifts.

                                        K 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • S SeattleC

                                          Wait, wait. Are there people who actually think this isn't bogus? If I needed a trumpet fanfare and a badge every time I accomplished something at work, I'd have switched careers long ago. Programming is a very internal art form. You have to be satisfied by the problem solving and the elegance of the result. Achievements in video games exist for the purpose of getting you to spend more hours playing the game. By extension, we might ask what microsoft wants to gain by putting achievements into visual studio. Yeah, you might say it's all fun and games, but maybe not. Maybe the purpose is to make you more dependent on the features of visual studio, to make yuu less likely to switch O/Ss and build tools. Beware of geeks bearing gifts.

                                          K Offline
                                          K Offline
                                          Karl Sanford
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #29

                                          Member 2941392 wrote:

                                          If I needed a trumpet fanfare and a badge...

                                          Don't 'need' it per se... its just kind of fun. With the stresses of our work, getting more 'fun' any way you can just sounds like a good idea.

                                          Member 2941392 wrote:

                                          Yeah, you might say it's all fun and games, but maybe not.

                                          Why do so many people on this thread think there has to be some sinister underlying motive to this thing? Lighten up people! ;P

                                          Member 2941392 wrote:

                                          Maybe the purpose is to make you more dependent on the features of visual studio, to make yuu less likely to switch O/Ss and build tools.

                                          Visual Studio itself pretty much had this in the bag since v1 ;)

                                          Be The Noise

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