You tried to cover too much ground. It all started as a story of how you reworked a legacy application but we did not get to hear how this ended. Please pick one of the components of this talk and explain it in depth. Talk about what was good and bad, basically talk about your experiences and give some advice to people that want to attempt the same thing.
I'm sorry, you lost me on this talk. Too many subjects and because you wanted to cover so much ground you were just going too fast for me to fully comprehend it. I feel like you didn't practice the talk before because even in 60 minutes you were not nearly finished with the slides...
This is a shame because you seem very knowledgable and have an interesting topic that many of us can learn from.
I thought you really explained the inner workings of HTTP/3 (and TCP, TLS) without going into too much details. No code samples, no unpacking of network packets and stuff like that. Well done!
Very glad I've attended your talk! The best part is that you have not really talked about anything new or ground-breaking. You reminded us of a simple "pattern" that can be recognised in many different situations. The solution to use value objects is a simple and elegant solution.
I enjoy the topic itself, and the talk was nice. However, I think, the theoretical part of the talk could have been structured a bit better. Looking forward to see the code example in Github, since it is the part which I am interested the most about.
Really nice talk. Explaining some features from SQL-1999 and later standards was almost like eye-opening to me. The only regret I have, is that it is not always possible to use new versions of MySQL and other databases which would support SQL-99+ standard(s).
GraphQL is an interesting topic theoretical part of the talk was quite good, but next time it would be nice to see some practical demo, perhaps, sort of skeleton application (both PHP and client side).
I've heard quite some practical information about the upcoming Xdebug 3.0. I like the way where it is moving to. Nice talk.
Good talk.
Denis gave a clear and comprehensive overview of the messenger component. Personally, however, I was not able to do much of the practical exercise as I was still trying to understand how everything fit together. Nonetheless I have a much better understand now and hope to implement this feature soon.
Thanks Denis.