It's always great to see Josh deliver a talk. This one did not disappoint. He made lots of great points about how developers and teams can deliver quality software.
Excellent talk. Real world examples of why atomic commits work. New commands I never knew I needed. Styling guidelines I never knew I needed. So much to explore after this talk with great examples of each thing in the slide deck is always something I appreciate from a conference talk. Thank you, well done! Way to finish the last session strong.
I actually thought ML was something of a mystery. I thought it was only used to train computers to play chess or make a car go around a track. From the beginning I could tell that this was something I could actually apply to my industry. So I appreciate that. I'm having a hard time figuring out where the talk went long. I would say focus a little less on the theory to leave a little more room at the end to give people the tools necessary to get started and where to look.
Obviously from the crowd this was a topic that a lot of people care about and want to know more. The story did help to follow along with the different examples. I must say though that it did feel a bit rushed. Maybe spend an extra minute on the more complex commands. Or provide other use cases.
I thought this was excellent. It was light-hearted and fun. I can always appreciate someone willing to do live demos at a talk. That's real world excellence right there. Maybe add a little more about security concerns and how to address them since I would guess most people use environmental variables for things like keys, auth codes, etc...
Even though English is not your native language, I thought you spoke very well. I think I would have preferred less theory talk in the beginning and more examples of each of the type of testing that you went over. Even simple examples of how each tool for the different types would work would be great.
I always appreciate someone showing off their own old work and how they went about fixing it. There was a lot of information packed into a short talk and you provided the right tools and pathways to explore more afterwards, exactly what I would like in a talk of this magnitude.
I had no problem with your speaking style and found the examples quite humorous (regardless of your political persuasion). I think humor in complex topics makes them easier to understand. I thought the examples were excellent, easy to follow.
It would be nice to see some examples that weren't so closely tied to Google analytics, such as feature (canary) rollouts to high profile customers.
Very knowledgeable about Redis, funny, and engaging.