This was my favorite talk of the show. Michelangelo was passionate and specific and it made me 'see the light' about CI. I think I will be adopting all of the technologies and techniques he detailed for my team. I look forward to his completing and posting his source code.
Joe is an expert in the field. As someone who has not yet used Laravel, this topic was beyond me -- a lot to absorb. I did appreciate the time spent on specific features of homestead so that I will know if its a good fit for my team.
I was a newbie to the topic - so there was a lot to absorb. Chuck obviously is an expert at it. I appreciate his sharing real world examples. He spent a good amount of time on the development environment (composer, etc) in order to prep an actual live demo. I personally I would have preferred more time discussing the theory of why this one page method was chosen. This part of the discussion was covered in the Q&A rather than as a part of the planned presentation.
Well done, speaker knows the content thoroughly.
Wow your tips helped me solve couple of problems I came across and opened up the doors to do a lot of stuff in a simpler way!
Many thanks for sharing!
I really enjoyed how Anthony went through the pillars of the PHP world and encouraged everyone to step up in contribute in whatever way is right for them. He was very confident on stage and his slides were easy to understand.
David was very confident while presenting. His talk was full of actionable information for extending Magento 2 as well as links to resources for attendees to dig into on their own time.
I really enjoyed Erika's talk. Her content and slides were easy to understand and full of some pretty great quotes. Erika seemed very confident giving her presentation.
Josh did a great job presenting on these two techniques for Magento 2 development. He was confident in his presentation, shared several resources for digging further later and everything was very organized.
I thought this was a great talk because it focused on a process. In debugging, a process is far more important than any specific tool or technique.