logoalt Hacker News

Five Years of Running a Systems Reading Group at Microsoft

114 pointsby Foeyesterday at 5:06 PM31 commentsview on HN

Comments

RomanPushkintoday at 1:02 AM

I've seen such reading groups. I worked for Atlassian, and there was a reading group. My impression is it was organized only as a low effort just to demonstrate that IC is going extra mile for the company. The quality of such reading groups were quite low. And it was expected that you would attend this reading group at a lunch time. You're taking your lunch with you, and instead of enjoying your meal, you're cramped in a small room with coworkers who also got their sandwiches and sugar soda. Horrible experience, and zero value.

show 1 reply
smokelyesterday at 7:45 PM

I understand that in a research lab or in academia, this is common practice. But in the more menial coding industry that most of us are probably in, how do you find time for this? Do people read papers in their spare time and discuss over lunch, or are there enlightened managers who support this during working hours?

show 6 replies
Foeyesterday at 5:06 PM

Hi HN, I've been organizing a systems reading group at Microsoft for five years now. I wrote down some takeaways on what worked (and what didn't). I'd love to hear if anyone else has successfully kept an engineering reading group alive at their company, or if you have any favorite systems papers we should add to our list!

show 3 replies
oa335yesterday at 8:17 PM

I would be interested to hear others experiences with running these types of groups. We’ve tried this a couple of times at my current job and both times it’s petered out - people don’t do the assigned reading and then just stop attending.

Any suggestions on how to keep such a group alive?

show 1 reply
2postsperdayyesterday at 11:20 PM

[dead]

megousyesterday at 7:11 PM

[flagged]