Remercions nos membres Français de la communauté .NET

No need to check your translation settings. We meant to do that. The .NET community is far reaching and offers some really great contributors striving to make us all better programs. We wanted to put a spotlight on these two French .NET developers making us better one line of code at a time.

Bruno Boucard

ncover_mvp_bruno_boucard_twitterBruno has been a specialist in Microsoft technologies for many years. He has a wide experience ranging from programming for kernel mode to managing projects using agile methodologies. Once .NET was announced back in 2000, he quickly started to learn C#.

His passion for Microsoft technologies drew him to Microsoft France where he worked as a consultant for a time, but nostalgia for the trading floor has taken him back to Société Générale where he now manages a team of software architects. Currently, he is working for BNP PARIBAS as technical architect. He remains passionate about innovation, like the parallel programming with Visual Studio 2010, 2012 and 2013 (and more). Check out his blog on parallel programming here.

Christopher Maneu

ncover_mvp_christopher_maneu_twitterChristopher is a developer and technical writer expert in Microsoft solutions. He loves spending his time creating user-friendly software on devices. You may see him working at Deezer as a UI Engineer or around the continent speaking at professional conferences.

He also is on The Developer Guidance team and sits on the Server & Tools Division with Microsoft. Their mission is to create rich and compelling guidance to ensure developer success on all Microsoft platforms during the planning, development and post-release phases of all products.

In his downtime, you will find him under the sea as a scuba instructor. You can keep up with his experiences on his blog or follow him on twitter @cmaneu

 

Comments

  1. Kerry Meade says:

    Our first pass at the translation of the article’s title fell a little short. Thanks to Laurent for pointing it out and putting us on a better bath. Vive la France!