A curated collection of links summarizing all talks, videos, slides, and resources from EmberConf 2017.
EmberConf 2017 Summary is a GitHub repository that aggregates all materials from the EmberConf 2017 conference. It provides organized links to every talk's video, slides, live blogs, photos, and related resources, serving as a one-stop reference for developers who missed the event or want to revisit its content. The project solves the problem of scattered conference materials by curating them into a single, structured resource.
Ember.js developers, frontend engineers, and web developers interested in the Ember ecosystem, especially those who could not attend EmberConf 2017 or want a consolidated way to explore its talks and resources.
Developers choose this over manually searching for conference content because it saves time by providing a complete, community-vetted collection in one place. Its clear organization and inclusion of supplementary links (like GitHub repos and articles) offer deeper context than raw video playlists alone.
A collection of links that summarize EmberConf 2017
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Every EmberConf 2017 talk is listed with direct links to videos, slides, and speaker info, saving time over manual searches as shown in the detailed README structure.
Each talk includes a hand-picked list of relevant GitHub repos, articles, and tools mentioned, providing deeper context than raw videos alone, as evidenced by the extensive links per talk.
Content is organized by conference day and session, making it easy to follow the event's flow, which is clear from the README's sectioning into Day 1 and Day 2.
Part of a consistent series that includes summaries for 2015 and 2016, offering a longitudinal view of the Ember community's evolution, as noted in the project description.
Since it's from 2017, many links may be broken or lead to deprecated resources, and there's no mechanism for updates, making it unreliable for current learning.
The repository relies on manual browsing through the README, with no search functionality or interactive features to quickly locate specific talks or topics.
All content is linked externally; if videos or slides are removed from platforms like YouTube or Speaker Deck, the summary becomes partially useless without redundancy.