Talk comments

Awesome talk. I think you've managed to get people really interested into Phabricator and the "it's ok to fail" atmosphere in any kind of development environment.

Was really intrigued by the way you deploy on almost a daily basis, going to look further into that way. Thank you for sharing…

I agree with other commenters here about the detail on this one, especially where the coverage deviated (with reason) to the common pitfalls of other caching methods.

Well paced and interesting throughout.

The speaker's passion and knowledge shone through and made this a very useful talk about how implement testing practically rather than completely, and a reminder that it's not necessary to automate the developer out of the testing process.

"Keyboard, Mouse and You"

Sebastian, a great job to compare test frameworks alongside each other, even going beyond the frameworks by looking at the side projects to improve testing and QA. And even though I've read a lot on unit testing, you still managed to introduce me to new things. I humbly thank you for this information.

This talk didn't go into the detail I'd hoped for, but turned out to be one of the most useful ones for me as the speaker had included lots of real-world examples.
Most notable was how the most readable URLs can become so long that they wrap (and therefore break) in some mail clients, and how some sites worked around this to retain their visitors.

Enrico, you've done a great job talking about something that has such a high demand for information but is still surrounded by a fog of uncertainty. And I have to admit, you have done a great job explaining what's coming.

Another awesome speaker. Lots to think about afterwards!

Mic feedback issues were annoying though. Maybe have some of the volunteers trained how to turn the pa down a touch next year :)

Ian, this is probably the best talk you've ever given. Good content, steady flow and a good combination of visuals with your talk. Well done!!!

A really great speaker. Very entertaining and would love to see more talks from Thijs.

Title of the talk sums it up perfectly. Great talk for someone who uses subversion and has no practical experience of git. The slides comparing the features of both really worked well.

Only problem was the length. Even another 15 minutes would probably have given Stefan more scope to cover the things that obviously really set git apart.