Talk comments

Interesting information. Learnt quite a bit during this talk.

I think the presentation may be more interesting if the slides contained some more visuals and the things that are discussed are not literary on the slides.

Beside that nice talk!

Anjana is a very clear and crisp speaker! Slides were nicely and the metaphors used were really interesting! I can't believe she is just programming professionally for six months!

Very interesting stuff!

I feel that this talk could have been better would it be a more overview instead of in depth as it was. I can't recall much of what was presented. What I found really nice was the enthousiasm of the speaker. Really passionate about the language.

Also, slides with mathematical expressions.. Wow! :-)

Good stuff here. Am in the middle of the process of slaying a monolith and got some good insights here.

Not sure of the purpose of the message. But since it was an adhoc lightning talk all the compliments to the speaker!

Important principle for creating clean code! Good stuff doing this adhoc!

Having worked for some years in science myself, i like the scientific approach that Felienne takes on the coding of kids a lot. In this talk she demonstrated the ability to condense months of research in a relatively short talk and explain her findings in a very accessible way. The questions afterwards showed that she inspires her audience to start hypothesising about the subject matter themselves, which is awesome.

Knowing that Felienne would speak made me register early :)

I loved the energy that Anjana brought to the stage. The historic take on OOP was very interesting and I liked the biological metaphor a lot. Anjana both communicated genuine enthusiasm and a very clear story on the essence of OOP.

As a rookie on React i found this talk very easy to comprehend and got enthusiastic to try building my own app in React Native - that's a win! The slides and recorded coding were very nice and clean and really supported the talk.

Great to hear a 'war story' on slaying the monolith and 'selling' the micro service vision inside your company. I had the impression that Graham tried to compensate for the time lost on replacing the beamer (not his fault in any way), the speed of talking made it a little hard to comprehend.