Talk comments

Very very interesting. Talking with numbers and, in general, some data in your hand you can better face some day-by-day problems in a dev life, like estimating stories.
Mattia has plenty of graphs and suggestion to better measure the work you do, and I spotted some good metrics I can apply right now to become better at my work.

Inspiring. The story Emiliano used to introduce the concept of resiliency is not one of the funniest we can remember (Haiti disaster), but the small tricks they used in that small island to face the disaster fits perfectly the small-but-big changes we can adopt to become better professionals and, why not, better people.

Very very interesting perspective. We generally conduct autopsies on our broken programs: we start to fix an issue after a service-down alert, an error log and so on, when generally is too late.
The idea of monitoring software while building it, the idea to test even performance (in a solid way...) switched up some light-bulbs in my head :)
After that, Michele is a very funny person, I really enjoyed his speech.
Please remember me, next year to attend to DevOps Conference Michele suggested, www.incontrodevops.it.

Inspiring words by a wise man. I look forward to see the video to capture more of Sunil's ideas.
It reminded me about many topics of Gerald Weinberg's "Becoming a Technical Leader" book

This micro-services trend is as good as predictable to me; we discovered now, 40 year after Unix, that doing little thing that does only a (good) job is the key to build flexible systems.
Sam is not exactly a showman; sometimes I think Sam could have been more effective during the telling of the story, but I can't say he didn't say the truth about this topic.
Last part was a bit unclear to me too, but probably was my lack of knowledge in this field.

Inspiring talk, well prepared and clearly explained by Mattia.