I took away that it is important to reflect on your own method of learning and be attentive to that of anyone you teach to. I did find there was a lot of extra information given in the talk that didn't help me reach the above conclusion, so it felt a bit long.
I feared this talk might just explain how to implement set, stack, queue and some other data types, but it was way better and provided some solid arguments to do things differently. Using generators was the key take-a-way for me.
Emoji's where nice extra to keep the attention.
For me, there was a nice balance between new main features and some exotic things like FFI.
Excellent talk. The world needs more "ops" & "tuning" talks.
I read the other comments, and I can't deny that storytelling always adds to the experience. However, the technical content was so solid, that the alleged lack of storytelling didn't bother me at all.
Jachim is a quality speaker, I'm sure he'll take all the feedback to heart and turn this into a polished v2. I'd love to see it again then.
But let's not forget that this feedback is here to turn a good talk into an even better talk. By saying this, I'm implying that there's nothing wrong with this talk: it's a solid basis that still has more potential.
Keep doing what you do, Jachim!
The food carts are a fun way of serving food, but it was too slow and too cold.
This was a great talk! This insights are directly applicable in new and every existing PHP project.
Thanks for sharing your experience.
Inspiriting talk
The food was really good :)
Very refreshing way to bring the talk: very hands-on! While the questions popped in my head, the answers where given.