Very intresting, will put def put Phoenix on my roadmap, developer velocity claims and maintanability really caught my attention being in NodeJS and JS fullstack ecosystem that is the most important part.
Funny enough, I took the same languages in my self-taught route. Except for Perl at the start. Because when I was starting, it was already fading away in popularity. Perhaps, I would have also started with it if it was still "the thing" then, 'cause it was quite popularly back then before PHP took over.
Why do all of the back-end development talks always forget about non-website clients? There are mobile applications, desktop applications, other servers. I personally as a mobile dev can not care less about what works for the web. If I am learning about cool back-end frameworks and languages I want to apply them to my domain. Thus all of the Phoenix praise went completely over my head. And it is a big part of the presentation
i don't understand why shaming other languages is necessary? or why crying for no big companies making investment in beam vm. not sure if the session was about elixir or Phoenix. or to praise Ruby
Very intresting, will put def put Phoenix on my roadmap, developer velocity claims and maintanability really caught my attention being in NodeJS and JS fullstack ecosystem that is the most important part.
Very Impressive
Amazing presentation. Thank you.
Amazing presentation. I like his jokes and its funny that nobody laughs ! But he keeps going. I love it!
After watching this I decided to look more into Elixir, and subsequently Pheonix. If I get really into it, it is because of this presentation!
Lars is a great speaker!
This is fantastic I just wish conferences could edit out the breathing mic issues
And the disgusting smacking of the mouth
If you listen at 1.25 speed it is still easy to follow but breaths are shorter and less disturbing ;)
Does it mean if adding live_svelte will cover 100% of use case
Funny enough, I took the same languages in my self-taught route. Except for Perl at the start. Because when I was starting, it was already fading away in popularity. Perhaps, I would have also started with it if it was still "the thing" then, 'cause it was quite popularly back then before PHP took over.
excellent
Why do all of the back-end development talks always forget about non-website clients? There are mobile applications, desktop applications, other servers. I personally as a mobile dev can not care less about what works for the web. If I am learning about cool back-end frameworks and languages I want to apply them to my domain.
Thus all of the Phoenix praise went completely over my head. And it is a big part of the presentation
Even at Double watch speed I find this person's lack of articulation : Intolerable... I'm at 23:38 .. and I just can't handle it...
i don't understand why shaming other languages is necessary? or why crying for no big companies making investment in beam vm. not sure if the session was about elixir or Phoenix.
or to praise Ruby