Very interesting, I will certainly use what I have learned. I already started to write down what I should do. Two words were repeated: API and DATA. I do not have data, and I will have an API ;-) Thanks for the talk
Overall a decent talk, a nice introduction to profiling for those new to it, a bit more in-depth info would have been nice for the rest. Demo mishap can happen, but a tip for next time; present from a VM, this way your environment is static-sih, and if worse come to worse it's easy to switch laptops.
Great talk, well put together, well brought. Tobias knows how to entertain the audience while giving real in-depth information. Slides put together well, especially the line-highlighting, which made it much easier to listen to Tobias in stead of interpreting the code while he talks.
There are no words to explain in which extend this changed my life. Or should I say the way I look to my life. It's not my fault anymore if I do not understand how to use something, it's the creator's fault that f*** my day ;-) Seriously, if you where not there you missed something, try to catch up.
Interesting introduction, but too much focus on 'what was', and not on 'what is'. Specifically, too much talk about the old techniques for COMET, and hardly any information on WebSockets and the 'new stuff'. Read up on the actual implementation specifics on WebSockets to give it a bit more body in the talk.
Very good talk, a bit implementation specific, but good on content and practical use of Chef. Alistair's presentation skill was also very good, very understandable and funny, Muppet-references in the slides kept me more focused on the actual slides, also looked the part.
It was good to know the topics I never use but that I have to learn before going to the exam.
Besides being a bit superficial for a proper introduction to DDD, the talk was very hard to follow completely for two reasons;
- Flipboard, have the stuff on the slides to begin with
- Accent is not bad, but combined with echo and undertuned speakers made it hard to hear.
Boring talk, Paul spoke only in monotone, not really motivating to get into regardless of content, which was lacking to begin with. Anyone with access to Google can look up the same info in 15 minutes, and come up with a couple of useful implementation strategies in the rest of the time time the talk took.
I preferred the location of last year conference (the choice of beer was better).