This talk was a very good follow-up for a previously held workshop which I attended and it was a nice sequel in my opinion. I liked the step-by-step practical example of how DDD concepts/building blocks can be applied in case of developing information systems for schools.
I guess that this talk was undetermined for all the folks who weren't at the workshop.
I already knew much about the matter of this presentation which I encounter and apply on a everyday work, but I still really enjoyed Rob's talk and the manner in which he explains stuff.
Speaker provided a very clean clarification of a DI concept. Nice overview and comparison of various DI container solutions. I find this presentation very useful for novice developers and beginners.
Excellent clarification of core DDD concepts and definitions. Very profound explanation of all the significant building blocks of a domain-driven design.
Comprehensive lesson on DDD, suitable for intermediate and advanced developers.
Comprehensive and practical lesson on model design giving clear clarification of layering, separation of concerns and decoupling.
I already heard it back in 2014 but was still curious to see are there any new approaches. While I did not hear anything new, talk is much better, transitions between “sins” are smoother and Brandon seems comfortable giving it.
Marco is right. His advice is hard to like. It's extreme and it's not always easy to follow.
That said, all the points he made have a good reason behind them, and are probably a good goal to strive for.
I enjoyed his energy on the stage and his talk was fun to watch.
Brandon was great!
He talked about the 7 deadly sins that all of us succumbed to at least once in our career.
All in all, a great eye opening presentation.
Pivetta had an energetic presentation and had practical examples that were hard to argue against.
Marco is a great presenter.
I haven't worked with Sylius earlier, but this talk provided many useful insights about it, of which some were too detailed in my opinion for this type of presentation. I really liked the idea behind Sylius which is a modular, flexible, customizable system with decoupled components.