A curated collection of links, videos, slides, and resources from EmberConf 2016.
EmberConf 2016 Summary is a GitHub repository that aggregates all public materials from the EmberConf 2016 conference. It provides organized links to talk videos, presentation slides, live blogs, photo galleries, and related project references shared during the event. The project solves the problem of scattered conference content by creating a single, structured resource for the Ember community.
Ember.js developers, conference attendees, and anyone interested in the historical talks, announcements, and ecosystem developments from EmberConf 2016. It's particularly useful for those who missed the event or want to revisit specific content.
Developers choose this resource because it offers a meticulously curated and organized archive of an entire conference, saving hours of searching across multiple platforms. Its comprehensive linking and clear structure make it the definitive reference for EmberConf 2016 materials.
A collection of links that cover what happened during EmberConf 2016
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Includes videos and slides for every presentation from both days, as evidenced by the detailed listings under each talk in the README, such as the opening keynote by Yehuda Katz and Tom Dale.
Materials are structured by conference day and talk sequence for easy navigation, clearly shown in the Day 1 and Day 2 sections with subsections for photos, live blogs, and individual talks.
Each talk includes references to related projects and tools, like links to ember-concurrency and ember-electron in the keynote, providing context beyond the presentations.
Aggregates live blogs, photo galleries, and streams from various sources, such as DockYard's live blog and Jeremy Green's photos, offering multiple perspectives on the event.
The content is from 2016, so many Ember.js features and best practices have evolved, making some advice, like early FastBoot or Glimmer 2 details, potentially obsolete for modern development.
As a historical repository, it lacks updates or fixes for broken links over time—for example, some slide links are marked 'TBA' and may never have been added, reducing reliability.
The repository is purely a collection of links in a markdown file with no search functionality, categorization by topic, or embedded media, relying entirely on external resources.