Talk comments

In a word - wow! Great talk, well delivered, with plenty of practical examples that showed the power and application of those techniques. I found it inspiring and informative, and made me want to use PostgreSQL for some of my projects! Excellent.

Interesting, but hard to get my teeth into. It would have been nice to see some live examples rather than just the concepts, so that we could see the benefits of it.

Great set of advice, very well delivered. It didn't go into unnecessary detail, but did give tantalising hints at more complex stuff we should look into on our own, so I felt it was pitched at the right level. Very well delivered.

Dear anonymous feedback person

Thanks for the 4-star rating. Unfortunately the video footage is not something I control. The PHPUK conference organizers have a crew that deals with this. I'm pretty sure it will require some time before all footage is edited and uploaded. If you have questions about that, please contact the PHPUK organizers.

In the meanwhile please enjoy the slides I've just uploaded: https://speakerdeck.com/thijsferyn/reverse-caching-proxies-varnish-or-nginx-phpuk15

A bit basic but bisect and some of the advice on when and when not to rebase is always useful to remind people of.

Well delivered.

thanks

Anonymous at 11:47 on 23 Feb 2015

Could you upload the video of the presentation somewhere?

Interesting idea, but sounded increasingly like a conceptual idea rather than something we should all be using right now, and from the Q&A at the end it was apparent that there are potentially some fundamental disadvantages to to the approach that still need to be worked through before it's viable.

Presentation style not authoritative, but it was clear.

Excellent talk. for such a dry subject Joshua kept everyone engaged for the duration and with lots of handy tips and tricks for people of all levels.

Thanks

As some of the other comments have mentioned some of the tone of the talk veered into a telling off which isn't ideal for a keynote with such a positive message.

Such strict do's and don'ts are likely to turn people off which would be a real shame when we want people to work together.

I get what you were saying so I'm sorry to be so harsh.

Sorry

Interesting insight into how WP is developed. Not much I could practically take from that to apply to my own projects though.