laurenmcman
Administrator

You Showed Up. Now Claim Your Badge.

 

Developer Passport week is officially underway, and if you're planning on tuning in, watching the streams, and leveling up on everything Australia has to offer, you've earned something for it.

 

 

Community Badge - Community - Dev Passport Australia Release Preview - Regular@3x.png

 

 

Using the comments section, answer the two questions below, and you'll receive a limited-edition Developer Passport Community badge on your profile. It's exclusive, it's time-limited, and once it's gone, it's gone for good.

 

Here's all you have to do:

 

Question 1:

 

How helpful was the Developer Passport in understanding what's coming for builders and developers in the Australia release, and how to use said enhancements? Please share any additional feedback you have about this new format for release content (i.e. product-specific livestreams with members from the team that helped create them). 

 

Question 2:

 

Which developer products would you most like to see additional content about in the weeks following the Developer Passport? Do you prefer any specific medium (e.g. blogs, videos, PDFs, etc.)?

 

 

That's it.

 

Drop your answers in the comments below and we'll take care of the rest. Your badge will show up on your Community profile within a few weeks of the deadline.

 

Speaking of the deadline, you have until March 27 to claim it. Don't leave it on the table!

131 Comments
subinsuresh
Tera Contributor

Answer:

The Developer Passport was helpful for understanding what’s coming in the Australia release and how the new features fit together. The livestream format with product experts made the content clearer and easier to follow compared to traditional release notes.


Answer:

I’d like more content on Flow Designer, IntegrationHub, GenAI features, and UI Builder. Short videos and blog posts work best for me, especially when paired with practical examples.

Shaik Dimple
Tera Guru

Hi @laurenmcman 

 

Answer 1:
I liked the way the Developer Passport sessions were structured this time. Spreading the content across days made it easier to follow, and I didn’t feel overloaded. The demos were helpful because they showed how things actually work instead of just explaining features. Since this is my first time attending a release showcase like this, it was a good experience overall.

 

Answer 2:
I usually prefer learning by trying things out, so hands-on practice helps me more. Along with that, short videos or simple guides are useful when starting something new.

I would like to see more content around Flow Designer, Playbooks and also some of the newer AI-related features. It would be really helpful if there are more small use cases or examples that we can try directly in a PDI.

 

Regards,

Dimple Shaik

jacobclark
Tera Contributor

Question 1: I think the dev passport series has been quite insightful and engaging when it comes to new features and functions in Australia. The medium you have chosen is pretty engaging and I'm finding myself learning more than I would if I was just meticulously picking through the release notes. 

 

Question 2: I'm excited to hear more about the release ops product and how we can integrate it into our release process. I do find update set management can get messy quite quickly and hoping this can bridge some gaps, especially with the release notes functionality.

 

2mustang
Tera Contributor

Answer 1: 

 

The passport has been great in helping me understand the upcoming changes. I especially have enjoyed the Flow, Playbook, and ReleaseOps side of things. In each case I have learned something new I can take back to my team and suite so we can better direct our developers. I would like to see more volume of options coming out and even maybe more plugin specific options per release. 

 

Answer 2: 

I would like to see more information on ReleaseOps, Deployment Pipelines, and the Multi Instance Management opportunities. More blogs and videos would be great

alexbt1639
Tera Contributor

Question 1:

 

How helpful was the Developer Passport in understanding what's coming for builders and developers in the Australia release, and how to use said enhancements? Please share any additional feedback you have about this new format for release content (i.e. product-specific livestreams with members from the team that helped create them). 

 

Answer: The Developer Passport for the Australia release is highly effective, replacing the fast-paced TechNow format with a dedicated week of deep-dive, product-specific livestreams featuring product managers. The live demonstrations and real-time, expert Q&A enabled better understanding of new features that interest me!

 

Question 2:

 

Which developer products would you most like to see additional content about in the weeks following the Developer Passport? Do you prefer any specific medium (e.g. blogs, videos, PDFs, etc.)?

 

Answer: Following the Developer Passport, I'd like to see additional content focusing on Flow Designer and Integration Hub. Flow Designer and integration hub.   Interactive, video-based format of content is my most desired medium! 

Jorge_de_Araujo
Giga Guru

 

Question 1

The Developer Passport is helpful in understanding what’s coming for builders and developers in the Australia release. It provided me a structured and accessible overview of new capabilities, which made it easier to connect features with real use cases, instead of digging into the relesse notes.

 

The product-specific livestream format is a good thing. Hearing directly from the teams who built the features adds credibility and context that written documentation alone often lacks. It also helps clarify intent, not just functionality.

 

If I had one suggestion, it would be to complement the sessions with more concrete, end-to-end demos or short "implementation walkthroughs" based on a product like SPM, EA, AppEngine, ... That would make it even easier to translate concepts into actionable steps.

 

Question 2

I would be particularly interested in seeing more content around:

  • Flow Designer & IntegrationHub (advanced use cases, performance optimization)
  • App Engine (scaling apps, governance best practices)
  • UI Builder (real-world UX patterns and customization strategies)
T N_2
Tera Contributor

Question 1:

Developer Passport new format is Awesome! (Intentional Capital A). Much more insightful seeing a preview of the features first-hand [when they work during the demo, perhaps pre-recorded demo in conjunction with readily available instance for ad-hoc questions/answer demonstration purposes)than a flyby announcement of new features ❤️.

 

Question 2:

Additional contents on the playbooks and nested playbook features with deep dive into creating the automation steps and controlling the UI elements/modals to the end user. Videos with attached blogs/PDFs for walkway material 😃. However, what I find most engaging for muscle memory are hands-on labs 🔨.

Nadee33
Tera Contributor

How helpful was the Developer Passport in understanding what's coming for builders and developers in the Australia release, and how to use said enhancements? 

I always prefer watching, listening to someone which I found much more effective rather than going through documents. Of course documents are descriptive. but to get a glance about the key changes, the developer passport sessions were very helpful .  Yet the time restriction plays a key role here, still if someone is interested in any key changes, we have lot more resources to get the deep-diving information. 

 

Which developer products would you most like to see additional content about in the weeks following the Developer Passport? Do you prefer any specific medium

I like videos the most. that helps me to understand the point, effective. 

Also the lab sessions , we can do it and the learn things.

 

Jerome KALIFA
Tera Contributor

Answer 1 :

The Developer Passport gives a clear and practical view of what’s coming in the Australia release from a developer perspective.
The livestream format makes it easier to connect features to real use cases than static docs.

Hearing directly from the teams adds useful context on why things were built and how to use them. It also helps quickly see how to apply them in real projects.

A clearer mapping between new and existing features would help understand faster what has changed and the impact on current implementations.
I'm focusing on ITSM/CSM and AI products.

 

Answer 2 :

Step-by-step “how-to” articles with real use cases are the most useful to understand how things are actually implemented.

More community content (like contests) with real use cases and implementation challenges done by the community would also be super valuable.

AmirHamid
Tera Explorer

Answer 1:

The Developer Passport has been really helpful in understanding what’s coming in the Australia release. While release notes and hands-on practice in a PDI are always useful, seeing features explained in detail makes a big difference. Earlier formats like TechNow were good, but they often felt rushed and covered too many topics at once. What I like about Developer Passport is that it focuses on one subject at a time and goes deeper, which makes it much easier to follow and actually understand.

 

Answer 2:

Going forward, I’d love to see more practical, hands-on content around developer products. Personally, I learn best by trying things out after reading or watching about them. A mix of formats would work well - blogs for detailed explanations and videos for visual understanding.

 

Also, it would be great if the Community focused more on genuine knowledge sharing rather than gamification. Sometimes people post low-quality or AI-generated answers just to earn points, which reduces the overall usefulness. Encouraging real contributions and helpful discussions would make the experience better for everyone.