Dr Victoria Holt: life, the universe and everything
Chaos, complexity, curiosity and database systems. A place where research meets industry
Welcome
"The important thing is not to stop questioning. Curiosity has its own reason for existing" Einstein
Sunday, 26 April 2026
Inside Microsoft’s Responsible AI Framework: What Matters for Data Governance
Tracing my career journey though my blog
I was looking at my blog stats this morning and was really interested to see the geographical spread. I started writing my blog in 2011 and it has been read by 1.18m. I wanted to record all the technical tips I found and technology advancements which were useful to me and might be of use to help others. I started writing on SQL Server and the blog has migrated with me throughout my career through architecture, my PhD research and over the last few years I have been mostly writing on Data Governance, Microsoft Purview, AI Governance and Microsoft Fabric.
I asked Copilot to share some interesting thoughts about my journey for my blog and here is what it thought.
Your blog reveals a journey defined by intellectual curiosity, data‑driven leadership, and a distinctive narrative voice. Here are five evidence‑based, genuinely interesting aspects of that journey.
1. You frame data leadership as a process of unlearning, not just learning
Your post “What data leaders must unlearn to lead in the Age of AI” argues that modern leadership requires shedding outdated assumptions, such as believing governance slows innovation or that documentation equals understanding. This reframing positions you as a thought leader challenging entrenched industry norms.
2. You consistently connect research, industry practice, and philosophical curiosity
Your blog tagline “Chaos, complexity, curiosity and database systems” captures a rare blend: deep technical expertise paired with a reflective, almost philosophical lens on data systems. This fusion shapes your writing style and differentiates your professional voice.
3. You document the shift from AI experimentation to AI industrialisation with governance at the centre
In your coverage of the Gartner Data & Analytics Summit, you highlight how governance has moved from a compliance checkbox to the engine of AI ROI. This shows your role as an interpreter of industry change, translating large‑scale trends into practical insights for practitioners.
4. Your journey is grounded in both academic achievement and community leadership
Across external references, you are consistently described as a Microsoft Data Platform MVP, a PhD researcher recognised with the AOUG Will Swann Award, and a founder/organiser of Data Toboggan. This positions your blog as the narrative thread connecting your academic, professional, and community contributions.
5. Your posts reveal a long‑standing commitment to making governance practical, accessible, and embedded
Whether discussing AI oversight, lineage, behavioural metadata, or Purview governance models, your writing emphasises practical implementation over theory. You repeatedly advocate for governance that is embedded, automated, and literacy‑driven, showing a consistent philosophy across years of posts.
Wednesday, 22 April 2026
SQLBits 2026 Day 1
SQLBits in Wales is happening this week. We have held the conference at the ICC before so all very familiar. The keynote was introduced by Simon Sabin before it moved into an in-depth session on the future of Microsoft One SQL—from on-premises to Azure and into Microsoft Fabric. It delved into the unified, AI-ready relational database that powers modernization and next-gen AI apps. SQL delivers consistency, performance, and some innovative features. The speakers in the keynote were Bob Ward, Anna Hoffman, Priya Sathy, Shiva Gurumurthy.
The Azure SQL Server Hyperscale session talked about Hyperscale which is about the architecture design, not the engine. It is truly a distributed , cloud native architecture with boundless storage that grows automatically with elastic compute at two speed. It uses SQL Server as caches.
