Great presentation! Engaging speaker with lots of useful information. Thank you!
Covered core refactoring techniques but also finished with enough time to answer some more advanced/real-world questions. Overall it was highly practical, well-prepared in advance, and had insightful Q&A.
Overall it was rather brief and high-level. I was expecting/hoping for more detail, some practical examples or suggestions. If someone had never heard of retrospectives before today, though, they would probably benefit some from this presentation.
Thank you all for attending and the kind words. The slides are available at: http://blittle.github.io/chrome-dev-tools/
Feel free to pull req the slides as well :)
Thanks for the feedback Richard. I was disappointed that I didn't get to the concurrency slides quicker too.
My slides are available on my github: https://github.com/bgmerrell/presentations
Also, if you want to keep learning more about Go, the tour at http://tour.golang.org is great. We also have the Utah Gophers User Group (at http://utahgophers.com)
I enjoyed the part of your talk I was here for. It's hard to demo something like that where the audience can't really follow along, and it perhaps could have used a bit more organization to keep things moving along, but it's nice to see people doing fun things with hardware. The way you used reaction to real-world events (temperature and RFID) as a trigger for something to occur online (twitter update, SMS text) was a really neat touch. Got me wanting to pull out my pi and do some hardware tweaking =]
BTW, you can edit the presentation on joind.in and put the link to the slides in the presentation details and it'll be a lot easier for us to find than just in a comment.
Could we get a link to those slides here on joind.in?
I found nothing really earthshattering or new in your talk, but that was more because I know the topic too well than any lack in your talk. I found your talk to be very well organized and your examples clear and useful. I would like to see a link to the slides and examples here on joind.in.
Though it wasn't as personally useful to me as I had hoped, it was definitely one of the better planned and organized talks that I attended at OpenWest this year. Thanks for taking the time to prepare adequately -- It makes a very noticeable difference.
"Disabled link" when I try to download the pdf. What gives?