Andrew Llorente is a Senior Technical Product Manager with 10 years of experience building cloud and IoT platforms, currently shaping the Windows Developer Platform and automotive cloud services in Seattle. He blends product ops discipline with hands-on engineering—driving identity, event management, and multi-tenant, multi-region architectures across Azure and Kubernetes for automotive and hyperscale cloud environments. At Microsoft he led cross-functional delivery for SharePoint Online supply chain and created prototype analytics using R and Power BI to optimize capacity and decommission programs, consistently exceeding operational goals. Andrew is an active open-source contributor to high-profile projects like the Windows Community Toolkit and AdaptiveCards, improving notifications, WPF renderers, and developer samples. He pairs an MBA from Duke with deep systems and supply-chain experience, enabling him to translate complex technical tradeoffs into executable roadmaps and scalable production services. Outside work he ships his own apps (Power Planner), reflecting a persistent builder mindset and empathy for developer experience.
10 years of coding experience
6 years of employment as a software developer
Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) General Management, Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) General Management at Duke University - The Fuqua School of Business
BS in Business Administration Computer Information Systems, BS in Business Administration Computer Information Systems at California State University - East Bay
A new way for developers to exchange card content in a common and consistent way.
Role in this project:
Full-stack Developer
Contributions:183 commits, 105 PRs, 479 pushes in 10 months
Contributions summary:Andrew primarily worked on refactoring and improving the WPF (Windows Presentation Foundation) rendering components for Adaptive Cards, focusing on actions and visibility. They also contributed to the Android visualizer, adding QR sharing functionality. Additionally, the user made changes to the UWP (Universal Windows Platform) Visualizer by adding app icons and configuring .NET Native settings. They also refactored the WPF Visualizer and made it ready for the Windows Store.
The Windows Community Toolkit is a collection of helpers, extensions, and custom controls. It simplifies and demonstrates common developer tasks building .NET apps with UWP and the Windows App SDK / WinUI 3 for Windows 10 and Windows 11. The toolkit is part of the .NET Foundation.
Role in this project:
Full-stack Developer
Contributions:22 reviews, 95 commits, 27 PRs in 2 years 9 months
Contributions summary:Andrew primarily contributed to the Windows Community Toolkit, a collection of helpers, extensions, and custom controls for .NET apps. Their work involved fixing build errors, supporting .NET Core 3.0 for desktop toasts, and enhancing the notifications library by supporting various features like snooze and dismiss activation. They also refactored code and improved the sample app, including integration of the ToastArguments.
mvvmwindows-sdkc-sharpcustom-controlswindows-10
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Andrew Llorente - Senior Technical Product Manager at CARIAD, Inc.