I'm suddenly immensely interested in implementing message queuing. Good job creating disciples!
The talk was a bit fast paced, but my only real problem is that most of the crowd was unable to see the code very well, so it was a bit hard to keep up at times. Hard to pack that much useful info into an hour, though.
Useful things I learned: SNI, mod_status (wish it were more intuitive), mod_security (Win!), and mod_rate_limit (shared webhost win).
I was expecting something more narrative, but this smörgåsbord of topics left me with a lot to explore.
Never used XDebug before, but I am going to start. Side note: The tailored installation instructions (http://xdebug.org/find-binary.php) are really cool.
Would have liked to have seen how it integrates with popular IDE's.
I enjoyed this talk immensely. It was just enough information for me to go out and figure out how to practically implement this stuff on my own... which I'm going to do for all my PHP SSH connections :)
XMPP is a protocol I've been interested in for awhile and this presentation gave me a great overview of how it works.
Super helpful information explained very clearly.
Great information, and very nicely presented. Ligaya says it took her a long time to learn it all, but she has saved us that pain by explaining everything in a practical and approachable way. I'll make a point of going to her talks in the future!
Pushing a new framework is always a hard sell in the PHP world. I understand you're trying to change the way people think about code. I do think that the talks needs more real world examples and how to actually use the code. The ideas for the design are interesting but not always the best way to prove why you chose a certain way. Code speaks louder then slides.
You'll have to update your talk again at the rate PHP is going ;) So nice to have a real trunk again
+1 for the three-hour tutorial idea (@jakefolio). Might make a really good interactive follow-along type thing.
Also.. the visuals were really well done btw. I'll have to steal that style of putting slides together if ya don't mind :)