News

Microsoft Coder Posts Personal Updates About Ukraine Homeland at War

As everybody reading this probably knows, it can be tough to code -- or even write about coding -- amid images of maternity hospitals being bombed and innocent civilians being slaughtered in Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Imagining how hard it must be for a high-level developer at Microsoft who is from Ukraine and whose family may be in danger is simply impossible.

Olia Gavrysh, a program manager on the .NET team, is keeping her followers updated on the situation from her Twitter feed. I have long been one of those followers.

Olia Gavrysh
[Click on image for larger view.] Olia Gavrysh (source: Twitter).

"My sleep is completely broken but I'm afraid to take sleeping pills to not hear if my parents will call me to ask for help," she says in her latest post. "Do you know anything that can help fall asleep but won't completely turn me off?"

I was about to suggest melatonin (I took a second one at 4 a.m. today), but many others already had, among other solutions.

She is all over the unconscionable Ukraine situation, posting up to eight times or more a day.

Many posts are personal:

Why Did They Do It?
[Click on image for larger view.] Why Did They Do It? (source: Twitter).

She posts about how to contribute help. Other posts/retweets are angry. Some are savage. Some are even humorous, even in a macabre setting. Many are just heartbreaking.

"My parents are in a bus trying to cross Ukrainian border. So far standing for 20 hours in a traffic jam and no idea how much longer. My dad just texted me that a woman in their bus just died," reads a March 8 post.

"Kharkiv is under massive attack, many people got injured, lost their houses, need medication and supplies. Here is how you can help: https://t.co/56dX7UmzYS," reads a March 7 post.

So click, and help, and read.

And hope.

About the Author

David Ramel is an editor and writer at Converge 360.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • .NET 11 Preview 5 Focuses on Performance, Productivity and Safer Code

    .NET 11 Preview 5 focuses on under-the-hood runtime performance gains, streamlined APIs and language features that reduce boilerplate, plus built‑in security checks and incremental ASP.NET Core and EF Core improvements aimed at everyday developer productivity.

  • VS Code 1.124 Focuses on Agent Autonomy and Parallel Sessions

    Microsoft's June 2026 VS Code update turns on Autopilot by default and adds background sending for agent sessions.

  • Developing Agentic Systems in .NET: From Concept to Code

    ZioNet founder Alon Fliess previews his Visual Studio Live! San Diego session on building true agentic systems in .NET -- covering the cognitive loop, MCP tool integration, multi-agent orchestration and enterprise hosting and governance with the Microsoft Agent Framework.

  • Mastering AI Development and Building AI Apps with GitHub Copilot

    Two Microsoft experts explain how GitHub Copilot is evolving from a coding assistant into a broader platform for building, customizing and testing AI-powered developer workflows.

Subscribe on YouTube