Hi SDN Members,
It is December already the right time to think about what was the best this year on SDN.
Please post your personal favorite:
- Article
- Weblog post
- Forum post
- E-Learning session
- other
Let everyone know why. I am really looking forward to your stories.
Thanks, Mark.
Well my vote for what was personally the most important weblog wasn't actually posted in 2004 (but given the number of times it is still referenced in the forums; it is still quite relevant). That weblog would be the following:
/people/mark.finnern/blog/2003/09/23/bsp-programming-handling-of-non-html-documents
This was one of Brian McKellar's first WebLogs on BSP. This was very early on so I hadn't quite made up my mind about SDN. Personally this weblog convinced me that SDN was going to become a place of great technical information. This weblog and Brian McKellar are the reason I stuck around (and eventually started contributing myself).
Category Other:
My personal SDN Best of 2004 favorite is getting an autographed photo of Mark Finnern with a rose in his mouth sitting on the SDN Clubhouse Info Desk before TechEd San Diego started. It will adorn my cubicle wall for as long as SDN exists. 😊 Go, Mark! But don't leave us for GQ magazine!!!
Elke
It is really hard to choose one, but I must say the ABAP Forum is how I started with and in between I changed jobs, which gave me the opportunity to look beyond ABAP. The BSP Forum was making a lot of (sweet)noise then and Brian McKellar, Craig Cmheil and Thomas Jung contributed a lot with their BSP weblogs. I don't think , there were as many , until Horst Keller started posting ABAP weblogs. ( Probably BSP was a trendsetter ).
The E-Learning Sessions and Weblogs have been very helpful, in particular.
I may not be the best or even close, but I am better off than guys ignorant of SDN.
It is so difficult to get out of SDN , even on weekends.
My personal favorite would be this,(as I gained confidence, that it is possible for me to sit on the other side of the world and <b>ACTUALLY</b> reach out).
Regards,
Subramanian V.
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