The stories-first approach was engaging and put the audience in the role of "detective", thinking of ways to catch the criminal. I learned a ton of good stuff from this presentation, not least that until you figure out WHAT happened, you won't really be able to fix it. Thanks!
This was a great and necessary keynote. We can learn so much from other OS communities-- both what might work for us, and what definitely won't work-- and we don't get off our island enough. Smart, clear, and inspiring.
Ok. so in the two days back to work, this debugging session has come into mind due to work situations many time already! So. That is a good sign of a good session! THank you!
An option instead of less text per slide, is to break it up into more slides.
Sometime the right talk at the right time can break your brain open, exposing new parts that you never realized existed.
That happened to me in this session. It was the right talk at the right time with the right person.
This will make seasoned developers think differently about our project. This is the stuff we need to move forward as a community.
The presentation was well organized and well presented. The best part of the session was the discussion that followed. It was a room full of informed and engaged Drupal professionals. This is want we come to camps for!
Great to see how accessible this is, with typical development tools and environments. The speaker has a strong grip on the subject and the process.
This is a great pep-talk for all of us. The talk was filled with facts and backstory to help us all understand how well we are doing when we use and contribute to make PHP so successful
I really enjoyed this talk!
This is a great talk for anyone looking to understand the state of Drupal Translation. @Schnitzel has a deep understanding of the subject, and this shows in his well organized presentation.
Great!
I am so glad I took this session, and will likely view it again before starting my next multilingual project. He did a great job of both talking about the changes coming to D8 and practical advice for continuing to build and "future-proof" our D7 sites.