The talk was easy to follow and full of good information. I fight with our designers on several of the points (contrast between text on top of images being the biggest issue), so I'm hoping if I share the information from this talk with them, they will finally "get it".
There was a lot of information to digest in this talk. It was more involved than I thought it was going to be, but that's not necessarily a bad thing.
This was a very good overview of OAuth. I wish I had heard this talk before I embarked on a recent project integrating with Salesforce. I have a better understanding of what I did (or stumbled through) after this talk.
I think I would have gotten more from the talk if I worked on more long term projects. But it was interesting to learn about continuous deployment tools and strategies.
Since I'm on a small team, I was really looking forward to this talk, and it did not disappoint. The info on Vagrant was especially helpful.
This talk was so wonderful! There was so much light shining on the ways that we could be better developers by showing compassion and awareness of our users. I loved this talk so much!
I really enjoyed the way you presented this information. There was a lot of detail in the page layout and styling that I don't give much thought to, and it will really help me with future projects. Thanks!
This was a great talk! I really enjoyed hearing the stories and all of the people who help make PHP awesome! I hope someone writes the book for what you need to know about PHP Internals because I would like to not rely on multiple brain dumps to get started.
There was a lot of good information in this talk about making changes to the way you do things. I really enjoyed the talk and got a lot of ideas for changes I want to make!
Despite the tech issues you ran into at the start of the talk, you kept a cool head and even joked about it. I love how you use stories to get your points across. It made me realize that even though I work on pretty straightforward sites, there are still things that I can do to to make users' experiences suck less. :)