Talk comments

Fun but it lost me a little bit by the end. Perhaps I just didn't have enough experience with debugging to be able to keep up...

I agree with others that I would have liked to see a little more "power", however this was an engaging and reasonably useful talk.

Actually I thought this was quite well paced - a lot of stuff was being rattled off at breakneck speeds but I think that was the only way to get a reasonable overview in the time allotted!

Great talk, I expected boring list of vulnerabilities with general examples as they can be found anywhere on the web, but got actually really interesting info. I loved the practical interactive examples and detailing. Really well detailed and well thought through presentation. No flaw in the talk I could find.

A guy who knew his stuff and managed to share it thoroughly but economically. You can't really ask for more than that really.

A hard one to rate because the speaker seemed like a really good human being and it's obvious that communities are a valuable thing that we could all take less for granted. But a nice speaker and a worthy topic don't necessarily make for an incendiary keynote on their own. Still I expect great future things from a young and clearly passionate coder.

ok talk, missing details about Richardson maturity level achieved. Language level was lacking but understandable due to being from France. Good effort in any case.

I especially enjoyed the first half - I think we really do need to question whether our technologies are great just because we've invested so much time in mastering them. Could just be Stockholm Syndrome, right? The actual demo of a possible alternative "future for programming" was a bit anticlimactic, but perhaps anything would have been - or else maybe I'm just not a visual enough thinker and was missing all my lovely text...

great talk, good practical examples and opinions.

A bit bewildering/intimidating from my point of view, but I do really like a talk that shows off the technologies that the speaker is embracing and investing in. To someone else in the audience React.js will probably be exactly the silver bullet they were looking for.