A heartfelt, informative and well researched talk that I am sure will help spread awareness, insight and empathy in a way that empowers us to better support each other within our communities and beyond. Whether you are the 1 in 5 or the 4 in 5, this talk packs plenty in information on how we can all get through our struggles in life both individually and collectively.
I've been using docker for a few years and learned some new things from this talk. Good job with heightening focus through the chapter-end quizzes :)
I want to see this talk again.
Spoken with clarity and sincere enthusiasm in an informative manor while demonstrating a good understanding of Docker.
The intermittent pop quizzes were also a great way to highlight useful bits of information the audience may have missed.
I think I could definitely benefit from watching this talk again as I know there were bits went over my head.
~ A docker newbie
Brilliant insight and resources!
Great overview of the approach to machine learning and some of the tools involved. Tooling and framework discussion could be a bit more detailed, and an illustration beyond MNIST classification would drive the points home.
Also, no PHP code at a PHP event made the code samples feel very out of place.
Slides available here: https://www.swipesho.com/kenalger/advSchemaDesign/AdvSchemaDesign/1
I appreciate your honesty in sharing successes and failures, thank you, a lot of great ideas!
I missed most of this talk due to technical difficulties (watching remotely), so this review is based on what I was able catch once the technical issues were resolved.
Mike did a great job of explaining various aspects of git and semver. He even introduced me to Greenkeeper, which is a service I was unaware of but now plan to add to one of my github repos.
As a speaker, Mike has a good, clear voice, so he came across very well via audio.
His slides were well done and were very clear from an accessibility POV.
My one suggestion is brought up due to the audio technical issues. Even though I could not hear the speaker for the first part of the talk, I was able to get his gist from the slides alone (well done!). However, one of the slides said the opposite of his point (something like "Don't use conventional commits." (period). Fortunately, I had the closed captioning to make me realize that this was a point of what not to do.
Great talk!
Great content, great points. Solid opening history of open source.