Talk comments

First and foremost, respect that you did present, even though you really didn't feel well.

Unfortunately it negatively affected your presentation pretty severely. As also mentioned by Jeffrey Cafferata, having candy in your mouth (even though it's to ease your throat) really is a no-go. The same goes for turning around while people are talking to you or asking questions.

As to the contents of the talk, I loved seeing the building blocks, as Mattias described earlier. An improvement of your talk could indeed be to show how they can be combined to a complete CI solution.

I had no prior knowledge of Go and your talk really motivated to try it some time soon. So for that, great job!
What could be an improvement is showing a tad less code and a bit more (real life) examples of possibles application.

As said before, the title and abstract are a bit misleading. I'm one of the people expecting more insights into UI/UX. Since I'm way less familiar with the actual content of the talk, I find it quite hard to give you feedback on the contents. I'm sorry.

What would be a great improvement to your presentation is practicing your English. I feel there's a lot to be gained there and it would make your presentations a bit easier to listen to.

Very informational overview of the most important attacks. Speaker presents very clearly in proper English, so that makes the workshop easy to follow. His preparations are also very good. A couple of days before the workshop we received an email on how to get prepared for the bootcamp. He offered a well-prepared installation (Vagrant) that could be set up within minutes without any problems.

During the workshop Chris tried to achieve a mix between listening and finding out issues yourself. In my opinion there could be a bit more focus on the doing, for example by offering clear assignments.

For example per vulnerability;
* short introduction
* some time to figure out the problem in the provided environment (Notch) without the speaker presenting
* feedback on the found issue and explaining why this occured
* some time to figure out a solution for yourself
* recap on the problem and presenting the best possible solution(s).

That way it may feel more like a workshop, instead of a 3 hour talk.

Thank you for the workshop, I did learn quite some new things and consolidated previous knowledge. It really was worth getting up early for.

This is another talk that I was genuinely interested in. But, I didn't know it until I got there. I loved learning more about how PHP works under the hood. I would actually happily watch an entire conference of talks like this.

I have seen a lot of talks on this subject and I felt that this one had better code than most. However, I would have liked to see a little more focus on philosophy about how crud thinking makes it difficult to reason about applications for both the users and the developers.

I had a blast in this workshop. The pace was just right. We coded along and were challenged to implement our own solutions. I felt emboldened to pursue a goal of mine to implement my own language from the ground up. Anthony and Igor were funny and relaxed and I really don't know what I'd like to see improve.

Thanks for your talk, you gave me a lot of inspiration and a lot to think about. :-)

Very nice talk and specially because of the demo's

The talk went well.
If you are able to be more relaxed and handle better you water breaks, the talk will definitely be improved.