Good speaker who seems to have lots of experience. The content was simply good and he was very friendly during a question later on at the conference.
The content was more entertaining than that it actually taught on how to write a virus but this is OK since I didn't expect much more. The speaker seemed well prepared and there were some good jokes which made it a good watch.
Packed with good information, got me really excited to try it myself too.
Great way to introduce designing for security and security principles, comparing to the physical world was very entertaining.
I did not expect this talk to be about the *implementation* of a zero knowledge application and was pleasantly surprised.
It's a surprising topic for a keynote but I always enjoy seeing what happens when you leave charted waters and start poking around.
The code slides with the highlighted sections worked very well, some of the skipping back and forth on the later slides was a little distracting
Good introductory talk summarising the state of PWA today and tomorrow. Struck a nice balance between depth and completeness for me.
Very useful for me, because we happen to be working on building same devops stack. Probably could have been less of the brand self promotion.
First of all i don't think this talk was for dummies lets make that clear. I think it missed context / subject which made it very difficult to understand the concept of functional programming which already is a difficult topic. Other point is that there were used a lot of definitions and theory but those didn't really matched the talk.
Also changing to different programming languages was not a good move to do.
To be very honest i didn't learned much from this talk.
Slightly disappointed though that no actual practical development impact was discussed (for instance: how are cloud providers handling it or is it mandatory to have a database per country). Overall it was still a really good talk from an experienced speaker.