This started off real promising but at some point unfortunately changed into a feature listing of the Symfony DependencyInjection component, even though it started with a "this is not your 'yet another DIC framework'" reassurance. Nearly everything in the presentation was implementation detail and really no longer had anything to do with what the talk's topic promised to be in the first 10 minutes. Too bad because the slide about how Events, AOP and DI relate to each other really made me enthusiastic for the topic :)
Great talk about the algorithm of UUID's and the different versions.
Interesting topic presented well!
Not too much new stuff in there for me, but really interesting (and strangely comforting) to hear that Facebook just does it the way that anybody would :)
I really enjoyed the fact that you didn't bother to relate to PHP. And what's not to like about a game? I think it would be worth it to put in a slide that points out a few notable things about the game, such as the fact that it is 2d, turn based etc. I would personally not have focused on the menu because that really took out the fun of the fact that you were telling about a game (damn, back to websites again.....). I'd suggest to dive into the way a turn works in this specific game and then explain how it was implemented using event sourcing, so for example rolling dice, adding/subtracting points based on that, etc...
It was fun :) I couldn't relate to the content that well though. But a talented speaker if you ask me. Can I get his autograph somewhere?
Interesting topic, not the best talk though. I think it needs some work on the structure and the content. For example: it was confusing that at one point we were talking about LinkedIn and a minute later about Github, as an example. It might be better to pick one example and stick by it.
Got me looking into graph databases though, so thanks for that! :)
This might have been the talk that stuck with me the most. Very interesting topic and I enjoyed the fresh way it was brought. Structurally, content-wise and presentation-wise an excellent talk and I am definitely going to dive into the topic more. Fun fact: had a campfire conversation with my two brothers explaining the question about the rectangles and lateral thinking and De Bono, etc. Awesome campfire conversation material, if you ask me :)
This should have had the word "beginner" in the title. In capitals. It was a total disappointment to me.
I think the concept of mutation testing itself should get more attention. My colleague sitting next to me (a bright guy I can tell you) did not even understand what it was. Next time I'd suggest to try to do the talk without the tooling, and explain how one might implement such a tool, starting from the beginning, and trying an example
Oh and please don't sum up a list of command line options and installation methods. That feels like the worst kind of pastime in the department of time wasted :)