Great talk!!!
@Ivan Krickovic: Thank you for your comment, but would be great if you could elaborate just a little a bit on why you did not like it. I really appreciate feedback and want to make my future talks better. Cheers!
This would be excellent talk if it would have lasted 10 minutes.
Maybe the title is not the most accurate for this talk, but I derived some real value from it.
Great speaker, great topic. Something every developer need to hear and start to apply in every day work.
Brendon was great as I expected.
Marco is one of my favorite speakers since PHPDay 2015. Other speakers can learn from him how to present, keep attention, and send important messages to audience.
Who didn't listen to his talk, can also learn from his slides too. Marco is someone you want on your conference, as a speaker and as a listener. He ask a lot, and he ask smart. 5+
Even if you do not agree with him, he will make you think.
There is no reason to repeat one conclusion over and over. Speaker could tell this story in a shorter way with more points in his story.
Topic is great and I am sorry that lot of audience did not learn from this talk. More sliders would be better, and will be easier to keep audience attention. Lot of people leave this talk on a half.
Do not repeat yourself, more slides, point out most important sentences so people can memorize it and apply on Monday when they get to work.
This speaker knows a lot about DDD and architecture. More slides, few lines of code could make his speak much better.
Great speaker, great topic. He showed a lot of code and approaches. He explained multilayer architecture and he keep attention all the time.
Alen explained all important use cases and terms. He showed important difference between IoC container and Service Locator. For juniors and beginners in unit testing this was very important topic and Alan covered all important parts.
Simply great.
@Pawel
I am afraid that such general principles (like SOLID) can hardly be demonstrated by some specific examples that solve specific problems on specific platform. I think that diving into the level of methods as a way to demonstrate SOLID principles is not a good idea, because they are more a way of thinking and a way of planning, rather then implementation. Code samples are mostly good thing, but using code samples as a starting point in elaboration of those principles... I think it is simply a wrong direction. Good direction would be: think properly -> plan properly -> implement properly.
Anyway, I was really happy to learn about e-commerce platform that is modular and that strives to SOLID principles. Only, I do have impression that this talk would be much more well placed on some other subject than this was.
I wish you great success with your product!