From acb4b828253a44fe6aa4506b570c43a815129c7c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Julien Fiegehenn Date: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 12:57:45 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] fix wrong module name --- content/posts/lpw-2024/index.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/content/posts/lpw-2024/index.md b/content/posts/lpw-2024/index.md index 9dd26cd..da8b7a7 100644 --- a/content/posts/lpw-2024/index.md +++ b/content/posts/lpw-2024/index.md @@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ On the whole, I think this event was a big success. We had a lot of first-time a ### My highlights of the conference -What I didn't do was watch a lot of talks. Thus is the bane of the organiser. The few ones I did see were good quality and entertaining. Dave Lambley talking about Perl in AWS, Leon Timmermans giving an intro to XS, and first-time speaker James Green talking about the Web::TelegramBot module he adopted last year, which I have been using myself for a while now, and also Paul Cochrane talking about his debugging journey with crazy maths. I did not have time to give a talk of my own, but I did get to be on stage in a panel discussion with Andrew Solomon about training and teaching people Perl, alongside Dave Cross and – to my delight – the most recent new junior developer in my own team, Jordan Lovett. +What I didn't do was watch a lot of talks. Thus is the bane of the organiser. The few ones I did see were good quality and entertaining. Dave Lambley talking about Perl in AWS, Leon Timmermans giving an intro to XS, and first-time speaker James Green talking about the [Telegram::Bot](https://metacpan.org/pod/Telegram::Bot) module he adopted last year, which I have been using myself for a while now, and also Paul Cochrane talking about his debugging journey with crazy maths. I did not have time to give a talk of my own, but I did get to be on stage in a panel discussion with Andrew Solomon about training and teaching people Perl, alongside Dave Cross and – to my delight – the most recent new junior developer in my own team, Jordan Lovett. I finally managed to have actual conversations with lots of people when we retired to the pub. Catching up with friends and making new ones is always my favourite part of these events. It's lovely to hear that all of the first-timers I spoke to felt really welcome and like they belonged, even if some talks maybe went over their heads. Making people feel part of the community and being open and inclusive is what the Perl community and events have always been about for me. I am really glad we have still got that, even after several years of an enforced Covid break.