Liked the talk, learned a bit more.
It was a pleasure to listen.
Liked it a lot, good talk.
Noted a few new thingies for use in the future.
A few interesting processes here, but most of the presentation seemed like a demo of their Phabricator tool. No real advice about managing or scaling out an actual team, six week long bootcamps aren't really an option for most companies. Still, an interesting look at how major companies do it.
Side note: considering Facebook's reputation, the speaker would occasionally make mad scientist style comments without realizing how they sounded ("New Zealand is the perfect testbed."). Both amusing and maybe a little creepy.
Best talk of the conference to me. Igor spoke well, perhaps a few too many water pauses but no major complaints. The real star of the talk wasn't React itself but the breakdown of the architecture behind the whole thing. Lots of interesting coverage about structure and patterns used, which is much more interesting than lots of node-alike code samples. In the end, I wasn't sold on using React for any project but still enjoyed the talk greatly.
Great talk, certainly some good tips. I think the talk would benefit from more depth, at times it felt like it was reaching for a "bigger" tone that perhaps wasn't the best for the whole subject matter. The slide contrast was certainly an issue. However, Joe's delivery was clean, he spoke well and knew his topic. A little more work and this could be a killer talk.
As others have said, good talk, learned some new tricks. However, about half of the content was too basic (pull requests, emoji). The semi live format worked really really well for the topic, nice use of cowsay, might benefit from some more practice though.
Heavy for a day after slot but excellent talk. Andrei explained the math background rather well, the use case was interesting, attractive slides and all well presented. Very slick.
Great talk, excellent visualizations and very well presented. For those of us without formal training, extremely interesting. I would've liked to see a better attempt at explaining heap sort but there's little to improve here.
Have work to do to enhance security.
Great talk, not to quick, content to the point.