A Quarter Century in Tech

Today marks my 25th anniversary of full-time work in tech.

June 18, 2001 – My third “New Employee Orientation” at Microsoft, starting my full-time employment after University. I worked on the Office Online PM team for three years before moving to the Internet Explorer Networking and Security teams for 8 more, eventually leading a team of PMs.

September 29, 2012 – I resigned from Microsoft to move to Austin and build Fiddler at Telerik.

January 4, 2016 – I started on the Chrome Security team at Google. Working at Google was an amazing experience and while I wasn’t supposed to be a software engineer, I managed to survive long enough to learn a ton.

June 4, 2018 – I rejoined Microsoft to work on the Edge Web Platform team. Using my newfound Chromium skills, I landed more changes into Chromium as an Edge PM at Microsoft than I had landed as a Chrome SWE at Google. lol. After four years on Edge, I moved to the Defender team, where I’ve been a PM, GPM, SWE, and Architect-in-All-But-Name.

Prior to full-time work, I spent:

  • two summers as an Electronics Test technician
  • a summer as a Delphi developer
  • a summer as an intern webdev at a Federal contractor
  • a spring as a webdev intern at The Motley Fool
  • two summers interning at Microsoft on the product that would become SharePoint
  • two semesters as a Student Consultant for Microsoft at the University of Maryland

I don’t have anything newly profound to share today, but much of what I’ve learned over this quarter-century is summarized in some of the many posts on Career I’ve posted over the last thirteen years. Back in 2015, I gave a talk about what I’d learned in my first fifteen years: you can find the recording and deck of Lucking In on GitHub.

Tempus fugit!

Published by ericlaw

Impatient optimist. Dad. Author/speaker. Created Fiddler & SlickRun. PM @ Microsoft 2001-2012, and 2018-, working on Office, IE, and Edge. Now working on Microsoft Defender. My words are my own, I do not speak for any other entity.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from text/plain

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading