On Sunday night, the sold-out 2026 AI Engineer World's Fair kicked off its orientation at Moscone West. The sheer scale of the event was staggering, featuring an estimated 7,000 attendees — a massive leap from the 1,500 who gathered at the Marriott down the street just last year. Amid this sprawling crowd, the core irony of the event was palpable: every technical talk could easily have been watched from home on YouTube, but instead the room was filled with people looking to be part of the experience IRL. One thing many first-time conference attendees — engineer, marketer, or creative — struggle with is talking to new people. Luckily, that was this gathering's true purpose: creating real human relationships.
Conference organizer @swyx opened the event with a relatable, if surprising, confession to the crowd: as a programmer and a writer, he is not a natural networker. Recognizing this common trait among developers, he introduced "NEO," or New Engineer Orientation, an initiative designed to bridge this social gap. NEO was created to give attendees a structured way to spark genuine connection and build relationships that would stay with them long after the technical sessions ended.
As the industry transitions from cloud computing to AI, the most valuable skills might not be strictly technical. The uniquely human abilities — to smile, laugh, and shake hands; to find community and process shared emotion — are still part of the equation. The AI Engineer World's Fair orientation proved that even in a sold-out crowd of brilliant engineers, people occasionally need a little analog help to break the ice.
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