Brendon Schwartz has worked in the Atlanta area user group scene and is known around town as one of the Atlanta .Net Regular Guys (www.devcow.com). He is currently on the INETA Board of Directors as the Vice President of Technology and is a Microsoft MVP for ASP.NET. In addition to presenting at local user groups, he helped create the Free Training 1,2,3! series (www.freetraining123.com) to help developers learn Microsoft technologies. He presented material at the first SharePoint 1, 2, 3! event (www.sharepoint123.com) along with other members of the Atlanta Microsoft Professionals. Brendon has helped on the leadership teams of five different user groups, and has been interviewed for his community efforts on Pod Casts - including the ASP.NET Pod Cast, .NET Rocks! (Carl Franklin Road Show - Atlanta) and the SharePoint Show Pod Cast. At the first Atlanta Code Camp in 2005, he presented material on ASP.NET mobile controls. Since 2006, he now Co-Chairs the Atlanta Code Camp with Matt Ranlett. Today, Brendon works on real world business problems with Microsoft technologies, such as SharePoint, Office, VSTS, and .NET technologies. Brendon spends what little free time he has with his wife, whom he met while attending the University of Georgia.
Matt Ranlett, a SQL Server MVP, has been a fixture of the Atlanta .NET developer community for many years. A founding member of the Atlanta .Net Regular Guys (www.devcow.com), Matt has formed and leads several area user groups. Despite spending dozens of hours after work on local and national community activities such as the Free Training 1, 2, 3! series (www.freetraining123.com), organizing two Atlanta Code Camps, working on the INETA Board of Directors as the Vice President of Technology, and appearing in several Pod Casts, Matt recently found the time to get married to a wonderful woman named Kim whom he helps to raise 3 monstrous dogs.
Brendon and Matt also run their own blog, which is widely used for community information and technical topics, a place to upload community pictures, and post code for fellow developers to download. In addition to the Dev Cow main community site, they also maintain and help run the websites and user groups for Microsoft focused user groups.

