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Microsoft: Devs Are Choosing Immersive Learning as AI and Modern .NET Accelerate

As AI-assisted development, modern .NET architectures, and cloud-native patterns accelerate, developers are increasingly seeking learning formats that go beyond short videos or introductory overviews. That shift was visible during the 2025 holiday season, when Microsoft published 19 sessions from the recent Visual Studio Live! Orlando developer conference to YouTube -- and developers responded in large numbers.

Those sessions were viewed nearly 30,000 times during the holidays, a period when many teams traditionally slow down. According to Jim Harrer, senior product marketing manager at Microsoft, the engagement highlights how developers are intentionally investing time in deeper learning, even during downtime.

"That tells me two things," Harrer said. "First, learning doesn't stop just because the calendar does. Second, developers are being very intentional about what they choose to spend time on."

The most-watched sessions focused on advanced topics such as Visual Studio 2026 performance improvements, C# source generators, Copilot-powered debugging, and modern .NET patterns. Rather than introductory material, developers gravitated toward content that promised practical leverage as development workflows continue to evolve.

Mads Kristensen Kicked Off VSLive! Orlando
[Click on image for larger view.] Mads Kristensen Kicked Off VSLive! Orlando (source: Microsoft).

Holiday Viewing Signals a Shift Toward Depth
Harrer said the popularity of the Orlando sessions stood out not just because of the timing, but because of where attention concentrated.

"It's not just the volume of content," Harrer said. "It's the depth. The chance to spend five or six days fully focused on improving how you work, surrounded by people solving the same problems, guided by engineers and practitioners who do this for a living. It's scenario-based learning, not feature tours. It's practical guidance you can take straight back to your team."

Sessions covering Visual Studio 2026 performance, advanced debugging with GitHub Copilot, and modern .NET capabilities consistently ranked among the most viewed. Other highly watched talks explored C# source generators, caching strategies, and lesser-known Visual Studio features.

Together, the viewing patterns suggest developers are prioritizing learning that directly affects productivity, performance, and maintainability, particularly as AI-assisted tooling and modern frameworks become more central to day-to-day development.

From Watching to Immersion
While recorded sessions provide flexibility, Harrer emphasized that on-demand learning is only a first step. As stacks grow more complex, especially with AI-assisted workflows and cloud-native architectures, many teams need time and space to experiment, ask questions, and validate approaches.

That is where immersive, in-person training becomes more valuable. At VSLive! events, attendees step away from daily interruptions to work through real-world scenarios with instructors available to answer questions as they arise. Conversations often continue beyond sessions, extending into hallway discussions, meals, and evening events.

According to Harrer, that environment helps developers move from awareness to confidence, making it easier to apply new tools and patterns once they return to their teams.

Hands-On Learning by Design
VSLive! conferences are structured to emphasize participation rather than passive listening, Harrer indicated. Full-day, instructor-led labs on Monday and Friday focus on hands-on exercises using real code and realistic scenarios.

Tuesday through Thursday feature deep technical sessions across Visual Studio, .NET, Azure, GitHub, AI-assisted development, cloud-native architecture, data, security, and DevOps. Attendance is intentionally capped, often at around 500 developers or fewer, to encourage interaction and discussion.

Harrer further explained how speakers remain accessible throughout the week, and attendees frequently report leaving with specific implementation guidance and unanswered questions resolved, something that can be difficult to achieve at larger events.

Two Immersive Options in 2026
In 2026, Microsoft is highlighting two VSLive! events designed around that immersive model.

VSLive! Las Vegas runs March 16-20, 2026, and is positioned as an accessible option for individuals and teams. The event combines full-day hands-on labs with deep technical sessions, allowing attendees to focus on learning without day-to-day delivery pressure.

VSLive! at Microsoft HQ in Redmond takes place July 27-31, 2026, and adds direct access to Microsoft product teams. In addition to labs and sessions, attendees can participate in conversations with Azure product managers and attend a Meet the Visual Studio PM Team networking event, offering additional context around tooling priorities and roadmap direction.

Registration Incentives for Early Planning
Microsoft is also offering registration incentives for upcoming VSLive! events. Visual Studio subscribers can access discounted pricing through their subscriber benefits, with savings of up to $900 depending on the registration option.

Non-subscribers can use a conference priority code to save up to $600 on registration for either the Las Vegas or Redmond event.

Both conferences include a full week of programming, hands-on labs at the beginning and end of the week, and opportunities to engage directly with engineers and product managers across Visual Studio, .NET, Azure, and GitHub Copilot.

Learning as a Strategic Investment
Harrer framed the strong holiday viewing of VSLive! Orlando sessions as a sign that developers are becoming more deliberate about how they build skills. As AI-assisted development and modern .NET tooling continue to evolve, keeping pace increasingly requires focused, immersive learning rather than incremental updates.

That sentiment was reflected in post-conference feedback from VSLive! Orlando attendees. One survey respondent summarized the experience by saying, "This is the best conference if you want to learn things you can actually use when you get back to the office."

With 2026 approaching, Microsoft is positioning VSLive! as an opportunity for developers to step back, learn deeply, and return better prepared to apply new tools and patterns in production environments.

The VSLive! series of developer conferences is produced by the parent company of Visual Studio Magazine. For more information, visit Welcome to VSLive!.

About the Author

David Ramel is an editor and writer at Converge 360.

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