21.May.2011 at 09:40 by Bjørn Wikkeling (10 comments) via api
great talk, thank you for this structured overview
Lorna Mitchell (21.May.2011 at 10:45)
Talk at Dutch PHP Conference 2011 (English - UK)
With Twitter moving its API to OAuth the idea of using tokens rather than passwords for authentication went mainstream. Many explanations of OAuth make it seem complicated whereas in reality the "OAuth Dance" is a series of simple steps executed in sequence. This talk covers consuming and providing OAuth services, includes implementation examples, and is recommended for all technical leads, architects, and integration specialists.
Quicklink: https://joind.in/3243
Track(s): Track 2
Slides: Implementing OAuth
By clicking this button you are declaring that you are the speaker responsible for it and a claim request will be sent to the administrator of the event.
If the claim is approved you will be able to edit the information for this talk.
Are you sure?
21.May.2011 at 09:40 by Bjørn Wikkeling (10 comments) via api
great talk, thank you for this structured overview
21.May.2011 at 09:45 by Anonymous
Great talk! Interesting content, well structured and excellently presented.
21.May.2011 at 09:46 by Alex (11 comments)
Lots of info, good speaker and well spoken. Will have to look at the code back in the office to really get it.
21.May.2011 at 09:58 by Jonas De Smet (12 comments)
I would prefer to have more attention at the 2.0 version because 1.0 will lack of interest in time because 2.0 is easier to implement and is being used in some great website like Facebook.
21.May.2011 at 11:42 by Cal Evans (45 comments)
Great talk, good content. I would have rather had more info on OAuth2 and less OAuth1. As always though, Lorna never fails to entertain.
21.May.2011 at 11:42 by Thijs Feryn (107 comments)
I love Lorna's energy and passion. She seems pretty knowledgeable about the topic and managed to show me how to deal with OAuth.
Unfortunately I'm still confused about the topic, but that's not really Lorna's fault.
21.May.2011 at 12:08 by Bram van den Acker (3 comments) via api
Great basic and clean demonstration of how OAuth works.. When I come home I directly want to found more about it..
21.May.2011 at 16:09 by Bart McLeod (42 comments)
Where should I start? Your presentation style is so impressive it's almost distracting :) We learn from the best.
Yes, more of oAuth 2 would have been nice I guess, but then, you made very clear why you chose this approach and I understand. The teacher in you wants to teach us proper oAuth that we can use without https, before we relax and forget about the nitty gritty.
The dance photograph is great too and I love the laptop handshake picture.
21.May.2011 at 16:42 by Wojciech Sznapka (6 comments)
Very good presentation, clear and easy to understand. Also code samples and diagrams were worth seeing.
21.May.2011 at 16:47 by Anonymous
The only remark is that the speaker should understand that it is not talking to a native English crowd and some expressions where not understood by the audience.
apart from that it was a very good presentation
21.May.2011 at 17:31 by David Eriksson (15 comments)
Very good content and presentation, and now I know what "faff" means. (I think?)
22.May.2011 at 18:59 by Marius Rugan (6 comments)
Very good presentation, excellent content, felt a bit like a tutorial
22.May.2011 at 19:46 by Tim Swann (26 comments)
Great content, the example code was simple and easy to follow. The slides were very clear and easy to read.
As for speaker style, there were two speakers at DPC who stood out above everyone else as being very comfortable in front of others, they could pass for teachers/lecturers. One is of course Lorna and the other Ian Barber.
23.May.2011 at 10:02 by JoBollen (4 comments)
Great presentation, clear code examples.
Stop faffing about and play the OAuth thing !! ;-)
24.May.2011 at 07:56 by Daan van den Berg (42 comments)
Good presentation and entertaining to watch.
Attention to important details and common pitfalls.
Still, some suggestions to improve:
- give 1 or more known real-world examples who is the provider, user and consumer in existing implementations. This will help with the mental picture a lot.
- you could create a diagram with the provider, user and consumer in a "triangle" position. Then explain/show how the dance works step by step using arrows between the three. This could improve the mental image of how this works. bonus points: use images of feet as arrows so it actually looks like a dance!
Still, this talk is worth all 5 thumbs.
21.May.2011 at 09:32 by Steven VAN POECK (14 comments)
Very well structured, clear and informative talk.
Thanks !