Thang works as a technical manager for NashTech VN. He has become a Microsoft Azure MVP since 2000. He has over 18 years of experience in consulting, designing and developing scalable systems in outsourcing, product, and startup companies on the various business domains such as ESG (Environmental, social, and governance), real estate, enterprise social networks, media marketing, healthcare, etc... He has deep expertise in cloud computing, cloud-native platform, serverless, and WebAssembly/WASI.He is a creator of Vietnam Microservices Group which has over 20k+ members. With a vision to share and learn modern technologies for Vietnamese people, this group's mission is to gather people who love and are willing to use and apply modern technologies to improve their products, projects, or digital transformation journey in their workplaces. See at https://www.facebook.com/groups/645391349250568He has been awarded MVP for Microsoft Azure since 2020 in the Azure Cloud category which focuses mainly on designing, developing, and building cloud-native apps on the Azure Cloud platform and other cloud platforms.He joins public communities on GitHub, X (former is Twitter), and Facebook to learn, code, discuss and share Open Source Software (OSS).From 2015, Thang researched and built up the secure coding process for NashTech. Using his experience combined with OWASP standards from the security perspective, he customized the software engineering process and practices at NashTech. To ensure NashTech employees can adopt this new security standard, he composed and delivered many training courses about software security for the company.Then around 2017, he led Microservices's design and development at NashTech and roughly worked on re-vamping/modernizing legacy systems to modern applications for his customers, a part of the digital transformation that happens in many companies in various industries nowadays.During his time working with Microservices, he recognized that with a distributed system, the distributed data also creates a lot of problems for reporting and data analytics. So he did research on how event-driven architecture affects reactive programming in distributed system work. He researches and trains many technical architects in NashTech about event integration by using Kafka/Kafka Stream and pushing those events into the data lake, and subsequently opens up for data analytic process. Additionally, he has researched how the CDC (Change Data Capture) mechanism with Debezium works well to avoid inconsistent data in the distributed system.