Microsoft launched a brand new Web website on March one,
Microsoft Office 2010, its Novice Developer Understanding Center (BDLC),
Office Professional Plus 2010, together with the aim of bringing much more "non-professional" programmers into the Microsoft fold. The new internet site is designed to supplement the outreach to hobbyists, do-it-yourself developers and other programming newbies that Microsoft began targeting in November 2005, when the company released for free its Visual Studio Express tools. According to its own studies, Microsoft believes there to be about seven million professional programmers worldwide. But there are as many as 100 million tinkerers who are doing everything from HTML tweaks, to JavaScript coding,
Office 2007 Product Key, to macro-based development. Microsoft refers to this group as "non-professional programmers." Via the new BLDC web page,
Office 2007 Keygen, Microsoft is working to provide non-professional programmers with basic content. The site currently offers two main tracks: Windows development and Internet. It also features a Kids Corner,
Office 2007 Serial, featuring materials developed in conjunction by Microsoft and teachers.