The best thing about this wonderful talk is that It has life lessons for every professional working in every field :) If jessica feels comfortable, the title of this talk could be changed to something more generic so that people who are not just interested in elixir would find it useful :)
I'm so glad Kerr mentioned Kuhn's book. I actually did read that in high school, and lucky me, today I work as backend in elixir. :) coincidence? I think n-I do, I do think it's a coincidence. :|>
Lovely talk. Getting more and more tempted to give Elixir (and maybe Elm too) a go. And thanks for the Brene Brown reference - very timely for me, as it turned out.
Loved the talk! I have a question and would like people's thoughts: Regarding the diagram shown at 45:04, would the microservices be reliant upon other microservices at this point, and if you removed one in the lower layer for example, would it break all of the other microservices and layers? Since the arrows are unidirectional, I'm just curious. Since I've never used Elixir before, I'm not clear on its capabilities.
Man, this lady knows how to give a talk. One of the best tech-inspiring talk for me. I can watch this lady talking whole day
2020 and this talk is still incredible
48:00 quote she wanted was
“Science Advances One Funeral at a Time” - Max Planck
Finally! Something worth jumping into! Elm/elixir/Phoenix.
The best thing about this wonderful talk is that It has life lessons for every professional working in every field :)
If jessica feels comfortable, the title of this talk could be changed to something more generic so that people who are not just interested in elixir would find it useful :)
I need to re-watch this, that is alot to take in
I'm so glad Kerr mentioned Kuhn's book. I actually did read that in high school, and lucky me, today I work as backend in elixir. :)
coincidence? I think n-I do, I do think it's a coincidence. :|>
Lovely talk. Getting more and more tempted to give Elixir (and maybe Elm too) a go. And thanks for the Brene Brown reference - very timely for me, as it turned out.
This is an amazing talk, way more relevant to people than just Elixir
I'm so inspired I can barely contain it
Inspiring talk, deep knowledge simply presented, an example of effective public speaking. Wow.
Awesome talk! Here is the link to Camille Fournier's talk that Jessica referred to: th-cam.com/video/TlU1opuCXB0/w-d-xo.html
I was investigating about elixir coming from the meteor js community.
awesome talk. very interesting. a piece of something for everyone.
+Bangon Kali Same here. Well, It was really inspirational talk by Jessica. Thanks for sharing.
Amazing talk, I am gonna try elixir!
Great Keynote on many levels. More than simply a programmer's talk.
outstanding talk. really inpired me, Thanks for giving and sharing!
Сильная женщина!
awesome talk...
This was a really great talk!
This is a great talk. Thank you Jessica
Awesome talk!
Crazy brilliant talk
Brilliant talk, thanks so much!
great talk
awesome!!! talk
Great Talk, learnt a lot.
"Concurrency without isolation is just noise"
I love the Kuhn stuff!
Loved the talk! I have a question and would like people's thoughts:
Regarding the diagram shown at 45:04, would the microservices be reliant upon other microservices at this point, and if you removed one in the lower layer for example, would it break all of the other microservices and layers? Since the arrows are unidirectional, I'm just curious. Since I've never used Elixir before, I'm not clear on its capabilities.
Isn't it hilarious how after all the high fallutin' haughty concepts and pushing the envelope, we find ourselves back to tired old RPC/SOAP?
"Everyone thinks Microservices need to speak HTTP/JSON" ... haha so true
brilliant talk :)
Mentions Dr. Brené Brown about 33 minute in
brenebrown.com
tfw no elixir gf
I'm making this comment because I have a pure hatred for elixir and small talk