I attended the PASS Data Community Summit held in Seattle in person this year after a long gap of 4 years and after RedGate software took over running the summit.
The place I work at had stopped paying for in-person training – making it an expensive decision to attend if I wanted to. I had not submitted to speak or planned on attending until about August when my boss found a backlog of unused vacation I had and needed to use before the year ended. I had plenty of vacation, was also able to secure airline tickets based on my points, got affordable Airbnb accommodation close to the convention center, and booked a trip to India after the summit. In short, it was meant to happen, and it did.
Some specific observations are as below.
1. The new convention center was an amazing location. The distance to classrooms was optimal and not a hike like at the older place. It was a modern building with several areas to sit around, and network, and huge glass panes let in sunlight. It made for a great experience.

2 RedGate did an amazing job with organizing. Everything was very smooth, starting with registration. There were many opportunities to network, even if one was not a party or late-night person. Coffee and tea were set up all day until 5 p.m. Friday.
3 The ‘Experts’ clinic, which replaced MSFT’s SQL clinic, was staffed by MVPs/consultants and seemed a huge success. People lined up all day and seemed to get the answers they needed.
4 There were many case study presentations—moves to AWS/Azure seemed to make for several.
5. I was invited to one of several closed-door discussions on tech careers, managing data in the cloud, and other topics. Several people expressed frustrations about hasty moves to the cloud and how much they cost their company. Some felt these costs were passed down as pay cuts and low salaries. I was also selected to be interviewed by Louis Davidson, one of my #sqlheroes and among the senior community members I look up to. It was a great conversation.
6 The ‘community zone’ was set up away from dining rooms and classrooms, making it a place specifically for people to hang out and engage in conversation. It worked amazingly well. There were informal sessions here, too—I got to do one on mentoring and community with my good friend Chris Yates and greatly enjoyed it. There were sessions on hobbies and various fun activities here, too.





7 Very few MSFT employees were present on site. Several took time to drive in to meet friends on their own. I was very touched personally that they took time for me. I hope the formal presence of MSFT will improve at future summits; if not, the conference will take on a very different shape. For the first time in history, the new SQL server version was not announced at the Summit.
8 RedGate put up a Postgres conference in the same venue for half the cost. Both conferences shared the vendor area. It was a good move and made it possible for me to meet some amazing people – particularly Adam Machanic, one of my sqlheroes, and Karen Schuler, my good friend and long time community volunteer from Louisville.


9 I had a list of newer folks in the community whom I wanted to meet. I ended up meeting many more. It was a positive experience, and I felt good about the future of the community—although it would be very different from the one I was used to.

Observations not directly related to summit
1. Many people I talked to felt confused and worried about the job market. SQL Server, as a hardcore technical skill, seemed less in demand, although it is very much around. The ‘other’ skills needed were spread over a wide spectrum, ranging from NoSQL Platforms to AI technologies. The pay was much lower than five years ago, and in-person work is primarily expected.
2 Several people felt that SQL Server as product was not getting as much love from MSFT compared to Fabric and AI. What that means for us career wise remains to be seen and to me , strongly related to how many years of work one has ahead before retirement. It is, for sure, time to adapt and learn a lot more stuff.
3 The loss of Twitter/X as the main networking platform was felt and missed deeply. The only social event I attended personally was the RedGate volunteer party. I had lunches/dinners with several friends in private and headed home early on most nights. Granted, this was a choice for me – but one did not even know of other social events, formal or informal, because there wasn’t a platform to communicate as a community any more.
4 Grant Fritchey talks of his word of choice to describe the year as ‘fragmented’. That would be my choice, too – especially with the community. Many people we used to hang out with have retired, moved on to doing other work, and many have intentionally limited their contacts. I realize that the ‘glue’ that kept us friends was community politics, common technology (SQL Server), and the many in-person events where we used to see each other – before 2020. The politics is different now. The technology has expanded to many other platforms, and in-person events are drastically low. That, combined with losing X, leads to a highly fragmented community.
I missed the older, bigger crowd – but the friends who sought me out and who I have now are those who want to stay in touch because they value me as a person over politics/technology/and other common talk topics. In other words, the ‘real’ people I want in my life. That is nothing but a good thing.
I hope to attend PASS Summit 2025 to deepen a few existing friendships and make newer connections, as well as learn and share our concerns about where we are heading. I want to thank RedGate Software sincerely for making me feel welcome and helping me participate in many ways.