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Microsoft MVP Program Blog
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Learn the latest technologies from each other in a safe place

RieMoriguchi's avatar
RieMoriguchi
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Aug 19, 2022

“I watch Build every year and I’m very excited about all the cool announcements,” AI MVP in Massachusetts United States, Veronika Kolesnikova, shares her Microsoft Build experience. She led the virtual Microsoft Build Watch Party in June 2022 as a co-organizer with the Boston Azure’s community members.

 

This event was designed to watch the featured Build session selected by the organizer, Scaling responsible MLOps with Azure Machine Learning, to learn relevant technical information, and have a discussion to gain in-depth understanding. Veronika said, “I wanted to share my excitement with our user groups and also discuss the latest and greatest tools, cool technologies and learn other people’s perspective regarding the major announcements.”

 

Organizers encouraged the attendees to join the live discussion. “We didn’t record the event to make sure people are comfortable unmuting themselves and sharing their opinion freely,” she adds. This rule was announced in its event page in advance and ensured everyone to share their ideas, insights, and questions in a safe place.

 

Since MVPs and communities moved their stage to the virtual space, a lot of conferences and community events involved the people who had difficulties in visiting the event venue, and it brought expanded connection even with the community members in remote areas. On the flip side, many organizers and attendees know it is not the same experience as having a live community experience with friends in the physical space.

Veronika continued, “I hope next time to do it in-person, because not too many people showed up online for the event this time. I blame it on “online world fatigue”. Pizza and swag will probably also attract more people. It would be also good if the attendees could watch a couple of recorded sessions online ahead of time and then do lightning talks.”

Updated Aug 19, 2022
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1 Comment

  • dougboone5's avatar
    dougboone5
    Copper Contributor

    When you actually attend something like Build everyone knows that you're busy doing something important. Your manager knows that they spent a significant amount of money sending you someplace and that expecting you to do standups, pull requests, and all "just a quick meeting about ..." is wasting that money.  But if you're "just watching videos" they don't have any trouble with expecting you to stay on a normal schedule and be available instantly.  You can watch videos on your time, after your 10-hour day.  

     

    Also you get a better feel for how your peers are reacting to the latest announcements, what's pure marketing versus what might have a real impact on your work. Videos come across as pure marketing unless they're heavily into coding and demos, in which case the video makes it possible to pause and rewind to understand the details, so being able to go in person and watch the recordings is the best of both worlds.

     

    And swag is always good. After two years of Covid isolation I'm running out of stickers.