Excellent talk - I would like to see more on mercurial (give it a go) and a bit of (as other people said) distributed vs. central and how to pick would be great
Wincache is awesome, WebPI is great for the non-developer use case. I'd love to see the sqlsrv driver in pecl (and docs on php.net) - keep up the good work (it's great to hear people say my stuff is so much better on windows)
As I'm seeing in a lot of talks (including my own) - although the intro and how to use is great... adding use cases and real world examples would really make it interesting and useful for users (that and I want PECL extension please ;)
Good talk, lots of good "recipes" Thank goodness we can download the slides, I cant write that fast. Also, I like the sense of humor.
I was really excited to learn more about lithium, being php 5.3 framework. I really didn't sense arrogance, it made the talk more fun for me. My biggest issues were the talk focused more on problems with other frameworks or concepts and less on how lithium works. There were a couple of times where it seemed you guys just clicked past code examples instead of spending adequate time explaining it. I think the framework has great potential.
Great talk. Very, very informative. The book looks like a must have.
Thanks guys for all the great work that has gone into improving php on windows. I'm really happy with WinCache and I like the SQLSRV driver. It's really made stored procedure calls far easier. Win2008/IIS/FastCGI stack is really stable, fast, and easy to configure and manage. I'm going to like a bit more closely at Azure and possibly try a test project.
This talk was amazing. I finally feel like I grasp git, now time to implement it. Having this talk immediately after Lorna's SVN in a Distributed world was just perfect a perfect transition. So why 4 stars? Well it seemed like there was just soo much to cover and not enough for a 50 minute talk. I think this needs to be a 3hr tutorial in the future.
Did a very good job with how to use it and benchmarks
I would suggest some when and how examples at the end of the talk. Use cases and real world examples always help.
It sucked.
Not really.