Autodesk DevCon 2023 in Munich - Part 2

In the last post we took a look at the first day of last week's Autodesk DevCon in Munich. Today's post focuses on the second day and overall impressions of the event.

For me day 2 of the DevCon started with a short U-Bahn trip from Goetheplatz to Harras.

Goetheplatz U Bahn

From the U-Bahn exit, I instinctively started walking the wrong way - I'd like to say this is easily done, but anyway - but luckily a fellow DevCon attendee coming from the other direction helped me realize my mistake. I do love the Autodesk developer community!

The room filling up

The general session filled up quickly, once again. Rather than sitting near the front, this time I found a convenient coffee table near the back.

Peter Schlipf having his photo taken

Emile was once again master of ceremonies and recapped the previous day's general session before introducing the next topics.Emile recapping and introducing the agenda

Ben Cohran hosted a very interesting panel with Frank Neuberg and Caner Dolas.A panel with Frank and Caner

There were a number of helpful announcements, including this slide on the APS SDK roadmap.The SDK roadmap

I was happy to see Tandem introduced to the broader audience ahead of Jan Liska's break-out session.Emile introducing Tandem

This slide nearly got some applause (I know this from speaking to some folks afterwards). It seems to be a very important topic for our desktop developers.Some excitement from the audience for this slide

It was really nice to have such a large audience focused on learning about our platform technology.
A full room

Then came the moment I'd been waiting for, and to some degree dreading.

Jim Quanci, my friend and mentor, is retiring in the spring and this would be his last European DevCon. (It's one of the reasons I chose to come across - I was not going to miss this, even if I had to pay for my own trip.)Jim s farewell hug

I have worked closely with Jim since the late 90s and reported to him directly for several years from 2005 to 2012 (give or take). I have learned so much from Jim, over the years: how to prioritize what's best for the company over what's best for your organization, how to speak openly and frankly about technology in a way that inspires trust, how to engage with an audience, how to manage a large team… the list goes on.

I choked up a little (actually a lot) as Jim bade farewell to his community. I know I'll get to see Jim at AU and beyond - he promises me he'll be across in Europe for a visit before too long - but this was the last big developer event I'll see him at. It's been an honour and a privilege, Jim. May the wind be always at your back.I m going to miss this man

That was the end of the general session. From there on out it was break-outs. These were the ones I attended (I would have also attended the Fusion session but ended up having an interesting discussion about robotics).Day 2 break outs

My old friend Jan Liska is now a Developer Advocate in the Tandem team and presented the product and its platform.

Jan introducing Tandem

The Tandem stack

I'm always happy to see the influence of our work on Project Dasher, in this case through Tandem's volumetric heatmaps.Demoing heatmaps

And of course lots of sensor data.Sensor data

Jan posted links to the Tandem samples, which I'm sure will be helpful to folks.

Tandem samples

As well as a testbed for Tandem's REST API.Tandem testbed

Michael Beale showed a sample project integrating PowerBI with Tandem - a hot topic for people building dashboards and analytics.

Michael talking Tandem and PowerBI

Michael also gave some additional demos in the context of a very nice-looking facility. Maybe it's the new Snowdon Towers sample Revit model that I've heard so much about?That s a pretty facility

The next break-out I attended was on building Forma extensions, presented by Håkon Dissen.Extensions in Forma

We had an internal hackathon earlier this year where I built a rudimentary generator, but it's good to see that the mechanism is now documented publicly.

Introduction to generators

For the next session I was tempted to attend Cyrille Fauvel's AutoCAD update, but I opted to see Jim in action one last time with his Dancing with Elephants session.

Dancing with Elephants

This presentation is a must-see for anyone curious about the dynamics between smaller companies and larger platform providers (Jim's insights are true for small companies working with Autodesk but also for Autodesk working with - say - AWS or Microsoft).Know thyself

One really important slide focused on the way people in different positions are measured. Understanding this is extremely important for nurturing beneficial relationships with platform providers.

Incentives are everything

Jim also talked about different approaches to dancing with elephants, whether you're off to the sides, picking up leftovers or running out in front. Each of these strategies comes with its own risks.

Where are you relative to the elephant

The last break-out I attended was on the APS Viewer.

PowerBI with the Viewer this time

Once again it was extremely well attended.Standing room only

Petr Broz told a great anecdote about his Dad using the Autodesk Viewer for a chemical plant project. He also talked about how the Viewer strategy is on enabling better large model performance through selective loading or other performance optimizations.Large model support

Michael Beale shared some of his great work on integrating 3D tiles of point clouds data into the APS Viewer.3D tiles are awesome

During the last session I went outside to chat with people on a variety of topics before jumping on a few calls.Autodeskers chatting outside

All in all it was a fantastic DevCon: the venue was perfect, as was pretty much every aspect of the organization. There was a decent mix of strategic and technical content, and it was really great to catch up with so many old friends. I very much hope there's another in 2024!

Over dinner I managed to catch up with some former Autodeskers - all of whom worked in Neuchatel before settling in Munich - which was a lovely end to my quick trip to the city. It was great to see you again, Lisa, Markus, Petra and Marion!

Dinner with old friends

The following morning I walked back to the central bus station to take a very early bus back to Zurich and then a train back to Neuchatel. I'm very glad I made it across for Jim's last DevCon, although I admit I'm still coming to terms with this fact.

2 responses to “Autodesk DevCon 2023 in Munich - Part 2”

  1. What is this slide about?
    Does it have an impact on addin developers?
    uploads.disquscdn.c...

    1. Ok I saw the news in the beta program about moving from version 4.8 to .NET Core 7. I'm going to comment there. I would made an applause too, before realising the six months warning about this disruptive thing.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *