What a year it has been!

Roughly one year ago, my “lifetime” employment with Microsoft came to an abrupt end after 23 years of service – and what a year it has been…

After publishing my layoff announcement on LinkedIn, which had approximately 1.1 mio views, 7200+ likes and 550+ comments, I decided that my biggest asset was probably my name and reputation. So I created my own company, Freddy.DK ApS, with the goal to stay active in the Business Central community as long as it is rewarding and fun.

And… it has definitely been both rewarding and fun… it is impossible to describe in a few words what I have done, but I will try to list some of the highlights.

Recharging in Greenland

While I truly see my layoff from Microsoft as a gift, it obviously also adds some tension about what’s next. My recommendation to anybody who experience things like this is to pull the plug and recharge, whether you are experiencing Greenland, walking the Camino or doing other adventures is not important, but doing something to clear your mind is truly worth it.

Directions for partners

Torben Kragelund (CEO in the Directions for Partners org) called me before I even announced the layoff and asked me whether I would consider coming and working for the Directions team. The Directions conferences and the Days Of Knowledge events has always been dear to my heart, so I didn’t hesitate in accepting.

And… it has been an amazing journey. From being “on the other side”, to being part of the team has been truly rewarding and you suddenly realize the amount of work needed to pull off conferences like Directions EMEA. I do think that the Directions conferences and the Days of Knowledge events are more important than ever and we need to ensure that we keep evolving these events for partners throughout the world to ensure that the community stays strong and relevant.

I truly believe that every Business Central professional should visit at least one of these events, being Directions, Days Of Knowledge or BC Days – the payback is instant.

Microsoft MVP

From Least Valuable Employee to Most Valuable Professional in less than a year:-)

Having worked with all the Business Central MVPs for a decade, I’ve grown to truly value and respect this group of people. Becoming an MVP and joining the group was a huge milestone for me and I will try to honor this badge to be eligible to many renewals.

BTW – before actually becoming an MVP, I received my MVP of the MVPs award from the Microsoft MVPs. That award is dear to my heart, THANKS!

AL-Go for GitHub

During my last years at Microsoft, I created a product called AL-Go for GitHub and as you might know, this product has now grown to become a central part of app development in Microsoft and with many partners.

While AL-Go for GitHub is plug-and-play, there are still a million settings and ways to setup AL-Go to match your needs. One of my first customers was Bunker Holding Group, who had a very large and impressive setup on Azure DevOps and wanted to move to AL-Go for GitHub. While this sounded easy, it came with a lot demands, requests and new ideas, which wasn’t part of AL-Go.

One of their problems was that their IT department didn’t want people to have admin rights, nor did they want to have people running Docker. This lead to the development of Fkh – Freddy’s Kubernetes Helper, which basically ensures bunker that they are ready when Microsoft stops supporting BcContainerHelper.

So, if you need help on implementing, maintaining or understanding AL-Go for GitHub, you probably won’t find anyone more qualified than me:-)

Fkh – Freddy’s Kubernetes Helper

As already mentioned, the idea behind Fkh (pronounced F-cage) came from my meetings with Bunker Holding to get over the love/hate relationship with Docker running on developer PCs.

Fkh (https://github.com/Freddy-DK/Fkh) is Open-Source and installs in your own Azure Subscription.

Fkh lets authorised GitHub users work with Business Central containers and perform developer tasks on demand — directly from VS Code, a CLI, a Web frontend, or GitHub Actions workflows.

A GitHub-authenticated Azure Function acts as the provisioning gate; Terraform manages all Azure/Kubernetes infrastructure, all Docker containers are running in a Kubernestes cluster, in which you will have a Linux node running MS SQL Server with a persisted drive ensuring that containers doesn’t loose their data and a Windows node running standard Business Central containers connecting to the Linux SQL Server.

Expect many more blog posts about this product…

AI

The impact on AI on the global workforce is/will be huge and it is important to look at AI from many angles. It is very common to look at AI from the angle that AI is going to take our jobs, but I truly believe that there is more to it than that.

AI will definitely destroy jobs, but it will also create jobs and it will redesign jobs. I do think however that tasks and not occupations are the real unit of impact and that the upskilling of the workforce is one of the most important things we can do. World Economic Forum says that 59% of the workforce will need upskilling and training in AI by 2030.

So, while many Tech companies are riding the front of the wave and developers are throwing themselves into agentic development and autonomous agents, many “normal” companies are left in the calm water, not knowing that whether the wave will hit them, thinking: “What now?”

This is one of the reasons why we started a collaboration with Knowledge Partner and are offering AI training for their customers, to get them up to speed on how to use the tools they already have access to, boost personal productivity, but primarily to get an understanding of AI and what it can do for you – in order to get people to think about AI and agents. Read more about this here: https://dalgaskompas.com/

We are planning to extend this collaboration to other partners; running AI training in their name for their customers.

Why Shibas?

One question I got from a lot of people is: “Freddy, why are you always displaying images of a fox?”

It is not a fox, it is a Shiba Inu and the simple reason is, that I am the happy owner of a Shiba Inu, which is probably the most intelligent dog breed that exists, Shiba Inus are famously independent, stubborn, and cat-like and there is a famous saying that goes: a dog may have a master; a Shiba has staff.

The future

The future for Freddy-DK ApS revolves around 4 major pillars:

  • Directions for partners conferences and events
  • Helping customer and partners with AL-Go for GitHub and Freddy’s Kubernetes Helper (Fkh)
  • AI Training and helping partners and customers with their challenges in this area.
  • Community contributions (blogging, vlogging, speaking, open-sourcing etc) to help keep the Business Central community strong and vibrant.

Enjoy

Freddy Kristiansen