I thought the talk was great but you might want to start out explaining that the first few patterns are bad practices. Maybe I missed that comment up front but I watched with my head cocked sideways until the moments at the end of each segment explaining why they were bad. Great content!
git add -p = trip worth it.
This was a great talk. ADR has arrived and Paul presented this in a really engaging way. This topic deserves a full presentation and not just an uncon. The types of presentations that shift the way you think about what you're producing are just fantastic.
I enjoyed hearing about the future of PHP from it's creator.
My first hackathon. Enjoyed it thoroughly. I got a lot of help from my peers, and submitted my first pull request which was approved minutes later.
An excellent presentation!
This topic is a new one for me. Over the last few months, I've been gaining bits and pieces of information, and it is all starting to coalesce in my mind. This talk help confirm the parts that I do understand, and added a few more bits and pieces that weren't there yet.
I love your teaching style. The example code you used is some of the best I've seen.
This wasn't even close to what I thought it would be.
A literal quiz? Yikes!
I've only been working with PHP for two years, so I felt very ill equipped to take that quiz. However, when the stress of it was all done, in the end I did actually learn quite a bit.
I chose to attend this talk because I figured I would learn something about the nuances of the language. I was correct.
I learned a lot about the details of how some exploits work. Things that I had heard of, but never really knew the details of how they were done.
Good information, well presented.
Good information, but I feel that you tried to present more information than the allotted time would allow. I would've prefered spending more time on fewer topics, getting a deeper understanding of the basics, rather than trying to cover so much. I could see the talk being broken into beginner, intermediate, and advanced segments.
However, I did learn a lot, and I appreciate you sharing your knowledge with us.