Informative and very interesting given the novelty of the topic.
It seemed like there was some extra time that could have been spent diving deeper, going over common use cases, more tips and tricks or gotchas.
I really liked the principles that Ed discussed. I have worked with some technically talented programmers that are arrogant and prideful and it makes working with them a big pain.
Great insights.
Great live demo. It was great to learn the how and why and then see it in action.
I like the practicality of this talk, even down to the specifics of the tools used to accomplish the goal.
I was a bit skeptical of this at first, but I thought it was excellently done and much-needed.
I liked the various different strategies covered and the pros and cons about each.
I would have liked to hear about some frameworks/libraries/tools that could help with implementing the strategies presented.
I have used mongo for about 2 years, the aggregation framework especially, and I learned quite a few new things and little tips and tricks.
I really like talks in which the presenter shares a "here's what we wanted to do, why we wanted to do it, and our journey of getting it done".
Well done.
I liked the pair coding section. It helped me to resolve to do a 20 minute pair coding session daily with another developer on the team.
It was difficult to hear at times due to the placement of the microphone either on the podium or in his hand.
The history of HTTP was interesting to hear, although
I would have liked to see more "here are the differences, and here is what the matter".
This talk hit home to me and my team, as we do custom client projects as well and face similar challenges.
Eryn presented the content in a entertaining yet informative and logical way. Well done!