Talk comments

Ben Ramsey at 15:40 on 14 Jan 2016

Adam is a great speaker and is able to clearly articulate and explain this topic. I think the examples presented succinctly and efficiently supported his points.

Ben Ramsey at 15:36 on 14 Jan 2016

Both talk content, premise, and delivery were excellent. I enjoyed Gemma's conversational speaking style, and she's able to quickly build rapport with the audience. This topic is important to me because, though we deal with analytics and data on a regular basis in the practice of software engineering, we don't often look at data and results for the best practices we tout and evangelize. Most of this touting is anecdotal, and it would benefit our industry as a whole to invest in studies and accumulation of data to inform our best practices.

A solid beginner level talk. Love the mix of various topics.

Tom Anderson at 15:21 on 14 Jan 2016

+-+
---------|E|----------
| +-+ |
[9]| [6]|
| |
+-+ [2] +-+ [11] +-+
|F|-------|C|--------|D|
+-+ +-+ +-+
| | |
[14]| [10]| [15]|
| | |
+-+ +-+ |
|A|-------|B|----------
+-+ [7] +-+

The above ascii graph will not render for joind.in' font but it's better than nothing.

I really enjoyed this talk. Frameworks with a blind eye towards academia are doomed to leech bad programming practices into the community. (re)Education is the only solution for programmers educated incorrectly.

I enjoyed this talk. Adam is a fun speaker to listen to, and he obviously knows his stuff. This talk crams a ton of value on a challenging topic into a relatively short time slot.

Really enjoyed the talk. As noted in person, I would have enjoyed more of an intro at the start of the talk, and a few code examples would have been great. However, overall I felt like I learned lots and this will be helpful for my day to day work!

Eli White at 14:54 on 14 Jan 2016

Good talk on the various types & models of access control. Learned a lot about the terminology. Wish that it would have had some more actual details on code (even pseudocode) of how this gets handled/or should be. And would have been good to really go into the reasons of why you'd want to do each in more depth.

Interesting studies cited.
It makes me think about why I am coding the way I am coding.

I am interesting finding studies on good abstraction or managing complexity.

Good basic introduction to graph databases.

Remember the graph next time.