I liked the talk
It would cool to have a compare and contrast against rail's turbo links and some of the earlier js libraries that took a similar approach, but not identical approach to this
Really enjoyable talk. For me the comparison between the written directions and the graphical map really ran the idea home that using a GUI is very useful. Thank you for the insight.
Really engaging talk which flowed extremely well. I really liked how you moved about in the talk.
The most entertaining talk and presenter I have had a pleasure of seeing.
Looking forward to the sequel.
Dinosaurs! What's not to love. Andy started off a little slowly, and I was a little confused as to where he was going, but after a few minutes, all was made clear. Now I want to integrate a 'dinosauraas' into the offfice. Some code examples would have been good, but I'm laughing to much to care (nice one Andy)
Nice comic relief. Glad someone drank more than I did.
Uses humour to cover lack of structure, very footloose and winged but funny none the less.
Speaker always hilarious, love the attitude, works fantastically as an end of the night speaker.
Content appears effective, great idea, may implement it in my office.
Good talk with many good points, would have been nice to introduce other tools that make working with git from a gui l easier.
Git comes with a sourcetree equivalent called gitk granted it's not as nice looking as sourcetree but it is fast + reliable
Emacs and sublime with their respective packages also have a good half way house between GUI and cli that I think goes under appreciated in terms of sane defaults and discoverability
I like to switch between Terminal, Sublime, VScode, gitk and Fork (similar to sourcetree) at work and it still feels like they all have their strong points, even though they overlap
A talk that explores the full ecosystem of git tools and their trade offs/ strengths would be cool, atom for example has a git 'timemachine' with a intresting UI