It will be at some point. Like most conferences taped by InfoQ, the videos
will be released slowly over time. Those who attended this conference got a
key that they can use to access the video.

Timothy


On Tue, Oct 8, 2013 at 4:32 AM, Leonardo Borges <leonardoborges...@gmail.com
> wrote:

> There's a link to his presentation there actually:
> http://www.infoq.com/presentations/data-types-issues?utm_source=infoq&utm_medium=QCon_EarlyAccessVideos&utm_campaign=StrangeLoop2013
>
> However is says this:
>
> *Thank you for attending Strange Loop 2013*
> This is a restricted presentation that can only be viewed by Strange Loop
> 2013 attendees!
>
> Maybe Alex can comment on whether it's possible for those who didn't
> attend to watch this video at all.
>
> I'd be very keen.
>
> Leonardo Borges
> www.leonardoborges.com
>
>
> On Tue, Oct 8, 2013 at 2:11 AM, gaz jones <gareth.e.jo...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Martin Odersky gave a keynote at Strangeloop this year called "The
>> Trouble With Types" (
>> https://thestrangeloop.com/sessions/the-trouble-with-types) which made
>> me never want to use a type system again (probably the exact opposite of
>> his intention). The video should be coming out on infoq at some point: (
>> http://www.infoq.com/conferences/strangeloop2013/). I've never looked at
>> Scala before and I'm pretty sure I never will after sitting through that...
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Oct 7, 2013 at 9:26 AM, juan.facorro <juan.faco...@gmail.com>wrote:
>>
>>> Thanks for the link! I really liked the interview, it was interesting
>>> and fun to watch.
>>>
>>> J
>>>
>>> On Monday, October 7, 2013 9:49:24 AM UTC+9, brad bowman wrote:
>>>>
>>>> > zcaudate <z...@caudate.me> Oct 05 08:35PM -0700
>>>> > I'm a little bit miffed over this current craze of `types` and
>>>> > `correctness` of programs. It smells to me of the whole `object`
>>>> craze of
>>>> > the last two decades. I agree that types (like objects) have their
>>>> uses,
>>>> > especially in very well defined problems, but they have got me in
>>>> trouble
>>>> > over and over again when I am working in an area where the goal is
>>>> unclear
>>>> > and requirements are constantly changing.
>>>>
>>>> Joe Armstrong and Simon Peyton Jones discuss Erlang and Haskell
>>>> http://www.infoq.com/**interviews/armstrong-peyton-**
>>>> jones-erlang-haskell<http://www.infoq.com/interviews/armstrong-peyton-jones-erlang-haskell>
>>>>
>>>> This interview covers some of the strong-types vs flexible development
>>>> (apparent) dichotomy, but in a playful, open and non-dogmatic way.
>>>> (catmatic?)
>>>>
>>>> Simon Peyton Jones is one of the Haskell leaders, yet admits to
>>>> being envious of type-free generics.  Joe Armstrong of Erlang fame
>>>> also sees the benefit to thinking in and annotating types.
>>>> These two are both leaders of typed or dynamic cults but have
>>>> a pleasant friendly and frank conversation about the issues.
>>>> (Erlang's Dialyzer sounds somewhat like core.typed)
>>>>
>>>> A sample:
>>>>
>>>> SPJ: So, I've told you what I most envy about Erlang. What do you most
>>>> envy
>>>> about Haskell?
>>>>
>>>> JA: All the types. I mean they're very nice. I wish we had them. On the
>>>> other
>>>> hand, wouldn't you love to have all these generic turn-to-binary, these
>>>> sort
>>>> of things? How can you live without them?
>>>>
>>>> SPJ: I have a little bit of residual envy about generics.
>>>>
>>>> JA: You just take anything and compare it to the serializer and then
>>>> send it?
>>>>
>>>> SPJ: That's sinfully easy, and shouldn't be allowed.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> So if these two can agree that there's strengths and weaknesses in both
>>>> approaches, that settles it for me.  It's a matter of knowing your
>>>> trade-offs and choosing your tools appropriately.
>>>>
>>>> My suspicion is that type affinity is related to some trait of
>>>> personality,
>>>> and so trying to "prove" superiority is a likely to work as "proving"
>>>> you
>>>> are right in any other clash of personalities.
>>>>
>>>> Brad
>>>>
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