What happens after you modernize your data platform?This capstone session closes the Microsoft Fabric series with a first-person look at how American Engineering Testing (AET) is using Fabric not just for analytics, but as the foundation for an AI-first approach to enterprise systems. Rather than treating Microsoft Fabric as a reporting endpoint, AET is using it as a dynamic, governed data layer that grounds emerging AI workloads.In this customer-and-partner conversation, Ludia Consulting and American Engineering Testing walk through the planning and execution behind their Fabric implementation, then explore how that foundation is shaping what comes next: a code-first architecture using Azure AI Foundry, Azure Functions, Dataverse, and Fabric working together.This is not a finished transformation. It’s an honest look at an early-stage journey: what’s working, what’s hard, and what other teams should think about if they want their Fabric investment to be AI-ready from day one.Learning Objective 1Understand how Microsoft Fabric shifts enterprise data from static reporting to a dynamic, analytics-ready foundation that enables AI workloads.Learning Objective 2Identify architectural patterns for activating AI on top of a Fabric data foundation.Learning Objective 3Recognize practical lessons and trade-offs from an early-stage Fabric and AI journey.
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Speakers
Nick Talsma, Senior Manager, Power Platform Technical Solution Architect, Ludia Consulting
Brian Zwart, VP of IT, American Engineering Testing, Inc. (AET)



