Really enjoyed this talk, very different from other keynotes I've seen (live coding keynote!), I was skeptical at first, but by the end I was feeling really inspired and wanting to go and find ways I can create artistic visualisations from the data I work with, not just graphs and pie charts!
I think the live demo was really important to show how easy it is to get started with something simple and how you can then develop that into the spectacular things we saw.
It was a shame there wasn't time to see more of what was on the presentation, perhaps some of the introduction was a little long winded and could be shortened to fit more of the awesome in?
Great introduction to PSR-7. Well presented and easy to follow.
Informative talk with some good points. Definitely got me thinking about my test strategy.
Curran clearly knows his stuff & the talk was cery factual, but felt it could maybe have been a little more engaging.
Awesome, inspiring talk. Well presented and very engaging. Thanks
A great workshop. Was very interesting to look at the planning of changing a legacy system before the actual development actually starts.
The two speakers (Marcello and Konstantin) really know what they are talking about and their knowledge showed when they explained things.
They worked well together and both kept giving great additional information to put their points across. Thanks.
Very easy to understand explanation of a popular topic. Matthias is an excellent speaker (and author) and it's a pleasure to watch him give a talk about something which he is so knowledgeable about.
Hated it! Ciaran presents everything in such a clear and straightforward that first I think to myself 'Only an idiot wouldn't follow what Ciaran is talking about' and only then realize I don't -_-
Thanks Ciaran!
This talk was full of useful information, and covered lots of different testing from a high level. I felt it could have been a little more engaging. There was one point where the speaker asked the audience what was going to break in the code that was on the screen and I think more of that sort of interaction - for example asking the audience to think about how many different paths there are through the same block of code - would really help add some energy to the talk.