Talk comments

De Fix at 10:49 on 11 Jun 2019

The talk was very informative and entertaining

Interesting to see behind the scenes a bit

I think the talk was good, while i did not really agree with the main message i think it is worth seeing and definitely make you think

De Fix at 10:46 on 11 Jun 2019

I learned somewhat more especially about testing with Postman/Newman.

Good workshop but i think you go a bit to fast, it is good you stop now and then to let people catch up but also try to give them some time to absorb the information you give.

Usually during a workshop i try to experiment a bit with the information i was given to fully understand what i am doing. I feel in this workshop i did not had the time to do that. Since you finished early i think there was some room to give people a bit more time in between.

Good talk, good speaker. Larry did a great job explaining PSR-14 and explaining why it was implemented the way it is. Some great code samples show the diverse ways this specification can be used.

This talk did not cut it for me. In my opinion, this talk was not about the Attitude Model (if there is such a thing, it was barely mentioned) but about how people can have different ways of thinking. You did a good job on explaining how this can cause conflict between people but can also be used to complement team members and deliver better software. Personally, I felt this was just a little too obvious.

The double design diamond was new to me and something I will try to use in future refinements with my team.

Good explanation of the Interface Segregation principle. I particularly like how you focus on the language we use, this is often forgotten but very important.

Some of the examples you use led to some heated discussions afterwards. For example, splitting up the psr request interface was not something many people agreed with. I think that for some people this distracted them from the actual message.

Loved the talk and how you made it quite interactive. Since I'm not maintaining a (popular) package this was a good way to think more about backwards compatibility.

I loved the talk - Chris made great use of the time available to cover all the elements.

Would love to see the slides.