This was a great talk, I haven't tried KnpRadBundle but some of the features it has, I've been implementing it in my projects and I got new ideas to keep improving on efficiency and speed when creating new projects.
Definitely, I'll try it on my next Projects if feasible or re-use some of the strategies they're using.
Excellent talk, I've been working with this bundle for some time now, and It's a great library, I wish we would have more time to play with it, so we could share between the attendees how we're integrating into our projects and get feedback from Lukas.
I'd love to see more editions like angularjs symfony edition with fosrest and the best way to integrate it.
This was one of the talks I was expecting to attend and I enjoyed it and learn a lot more about security, reviewing code for security on open source repos was really fun.
The only thing that I wish we've done is to review code in pairs or share some of our own code to review.
Iterators!
:)
I didn't know there were so many or that it was anywhere near as complicated as that. I'm using them mostly behind the scenes and I'll admit that in many cases I should be using them more.
The first part was only mildly interesting. It showecased things that are newer and upcoming, but it felt like a broad overview or something I could pick up from release notes. It was nice to see them all together, though, so maybe I'm being too harsh.
I liked the idea of trying to do something more than building the next snapchat. Not that we can't make money doing things, but finding ways to make a living that also helps better life for other people. I've struggled with that over the years I've been programming so it was nice to see it discussed.
The deployment discussion was interesting as I had never really considered the mid-request swap over and including files after a symlink has changed, but I felt like the focus on the DOCROOT was a little weird? I'd have to explore it more, but most of my code doesn't care about DOCROOT in any way that I know of, but if it DOES behind the scenes, I need to seriously look at my deployment scripts to see what I can do to help mitigate any issues there.
By the end, I felt like the talk was pretty good and it got me thinking about a lot of things. Plus I got a refresher on things going into internals, so that was nice. :) I was very happy that the whole talk wasn't just about PHP features.
This is the second time I've seen this talk and it was just as good the second time. I love the overview of why NIH was such a big part of the culture of PHP and how it was slowly reversed leading up to the last few years of PIE.
I mostly came for the song and you knocked it out of the park! Great job. :) I think that if someone were new to git (I'm not) they probably would have taken quite a bit away from it. Nicely done!
I wasn't expecting this talk to go in this direction. I think you fell into the trap of people expecting "Decoupled CMS" to be specifically aimed at one of your "Decoupled CMS" related projects. Instead, you showed in general what happens if you "decouple your CMS" from an *extremely* high level... so I don't feel it was a bait and switch, I think it was just hard for people to know what to expect.
I enjoyed the talk and I got a few things out of it (like a reminder about prose.io and the new one you mentioned, prismic.io) so I thought it was pretty good.
Great talk, Paul! I think that more people need to be talking about this. You did a great job of walking the line between information and straight up selling Aura. You also inspired me to actually create my first tiny Aura project after sitting on the fence for almost a year. :)
This was an excellent talk, while walking through the slides, I've got new ideas to implement in one of my projects.
The simulator was a great visual tool to keep me engaged during the talk.