Achievement Unlocked ... For Developers

vs_achievement

Long Zheng and Rafael Rivera previously kicked around a fun idea for Windows-based Achievements similar to those you see on Xbox LIVE, but this week Microsoft did the next best thing, providing an Achievements capability for developers using Visual Studio. How fun is that?

According to a Microsoft representative, the company is offering software developers the ability to bring some friendly competition and fun to their work, while--on a more serious note--gaining public recognition for writing quality code. Visual Studio Achievements awards points and badges to developers as they work, rewarding elegant code or adept use of little-known features of Visual Studio, as well as some tongue-in-cheek “Just For Fun” awards like “Potty Mouth” (for using 5 different curse words in a single file). Triggered badges are then posted to the user’s Channel 9 profile and a public leaderboard.


"Visual Studio Achievements, a Visual Studio plug-in, enables developers to unlock badges and compete against one another for a place on a leader board based on the code they write, its level of sophistication, and the Visual Studio capabilities they use to do so," the post notes. "Developers finally have the ability to actually show their friends, colleagues, project managers, spouses and customers how good they are at what they do all day and sometimes into the night."

There are 32 achievements with six categories and corresponding badges. And each time you earn a badge, a unique page is created with your profile picture, the badge and a description. You can tweet about achievements, share them on Facebook, and show a list of achievements on your blog using the Visual Studio Achievements Widget.

Discuss this Article 1

ndberg
on Jan 18, 2012
I wish they'd stop playing around with adding 'toy' features and fix the tons of bugs, the usability issues, and the performance problems with Visual Studio 2010 / TFS 2010. I'm a professional SW developer, and get frustrated when every release gets worse. Honestly, I think the best thing Microsoft could do for VS2012 is to fix bugs & performance issues, that would do way more to enhance my productivity than any new feature ever could.

Please or Register to post comments.

IT/Dev Connections

Las Vegas
September 30th - October 4th

Paul ThurottYou'll have the opportunity to experience:
• 120 Technical
Sessions
• Networking with Peers
• Expert Speakers


Come See Paul Thurrott & Mary Jo Foley in Person!

Register Now

Office 365 InfoCenter

Get the latest insight and info from Paul

Read Now!

What I Use