Interesting, but presentation skills could be improved. I missed some pros and cons about certain approaches for maintaining large code bases.
I did not feel like this was an advanced talk, only basic computer knowledge was needed beforehand which can easily be expected from anyone attending.
I did learn some expected stuff about the tools to read memory usage, but I also expected to learn something about what to do with this information in certain circumstances.
Great talk, and I left with some useful ideas. Don't stretch it to 45 mins, unless you can add some completely different insights, because I think it had the right speed.
Talk was ok, but the general theory could have been dealt with far more quickly and I would like to have seen some real world examples because I feel like the two algorithms shown are very difficult to apply to sets with multiple types of data like log files.
Very interesting, though I felt the title of the topic was a bit misleading. The talk was more about architectural patterns around message queues than about message queues themselves. Having CQRS or Service Bus in the title would have made more sense to me.
Very interesting, and I liked a lot that the focus was on the process of BDD instead of just the tools, as in so many other blog posts or talks.
It was a bit hard to follow because some words did not come out fluently and the speaker seemed out of breath for the duration of the talk.
Best talk I went to in the conference. Very interesting and great responses to the audience.
Great insight in how to prevent a model from exploding for different feature. I think it wouldn't be wise to store everything redundant, but there could be use cases where this might be useful.
To much focus on the sports, but interesting nevertheless.
Was hands down my favourite talk of the friday. Miro is a great speaker and listening to him was a great pleasure. He had a good balance between information, examples and a humoristic undertone now and then. I loved this as a counter sound against the test-everything talks that have been popping up last years. Finally some realism! This talk was great of testing-newbies, experienced testers and even for dev-managers!