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  • >> Man, oh, man.

  • I know everybody's been looking forward to this, not supposedly seeing me, but it's the

  • end.

  • So I'm going to try to make this as quick as possible.

  • I don't know, I guess, will my slides show eventually?

  • I sure hope so.

  • Shout out to the AV people, because they're the best!

  • [Applause].

  • All right.

  • The slides are supposed to show any don't know.

  • I hope so, because I'm not going to be able to act this out the whole time.

  • There we go!

  • So, quickly, I mean, I realise that I saw a speaker yesterday, and she kind of like

  • matched her slides with her outfit, so I thought I might do the same.

  • And so, if everything goes right, I'm going to disappear!

  • And I'm going to re-appear again.

  • It's like camouflage!

  • Okay, it worked.

  • Anyway, I thought that was kind of funny.

  • And you're going to find out I'm a bit of a comedian.

  • We will start this with a joke.

  • Is that cool?

  • Can we have a joke?

  • All right.

  • How many JavaScripters here?

  • I mean, it's kind of funny that I don't see all the hands up, but that's cool.

  • So, imagine if naughty by nature went to the TC39 meeting.

  • Hip-hop hurray!

  • Hey - oh, you didn't like that.

  • It's all good!

  • Anyhow, we're going to get things cracking.

  • My name's Henri.

  • My last name isn't Helvetica.

  • I thought it sounded cool.

  • I did anyways.

  • People might recognise me from my nays which is the avatar that I kind of like to.

  • I'm from the greatest city on the planet called Toronto.

  • It's super multi-cultural, and I didn't realise it until I left, and I was like, man, Toronto

  • is actually amazing.

  • If you're in the area, check us out.

  • Here is something you may not have known about Toronto.

  • Anyone own a Commodore 64 back in the day?

  • Commodore was founded in Toronto.

  • No doubt.

  • So we're going to get things going.

  • Welcome to the Shape of the Web.

  • It's a talk I thought about a while back, and sort of just to talk about where the web

  • has gone.

  • A lot of good things have happened.

  • A lot of technology was used to make things really sort of like friendly and - like the

  • great user experiences that we try to create, but I also felt that the technologists that

  • were involved were amazing but some who may have been left behind so we will have a conversation

  • about that.

  • It's really just a conversation.

  • So let's get cracking.

  • Now, first off, I want to thank JSConf EU for having me.

  • I've been watching this conference from a distance on Twitter and look at the photos

  • like this is amazing!

  • Look at the screen!

  • No, seriously, look at the screen!

  • I mean, I only an-wide at home, and I think that this ratio is like 15:2 which is bananas.

  • Talk about neck pains.

  • DevTools would be amazing on this screen, by the way!

  • First of all, X, ten years, and I come from music, so I could appreciate what they've

  • done here, the set-up.

  • I mean, it's absolutely elaborate, but I love that they've done this for a tech conference,

  • so can we please give JSConf a round of applause as well!

  • [Applause].

  • All right, that's enough!

  • I'm going to get jealous!

  • So, they've been around ten years, and I was thinking to myself, like, you know, I was

  • kind of writing this talk up, adding some notes, ten years.

  • Where was I ten years ago?

  • Like I said, I came from music.

  • I was able to pull this photo out.

  • I used to do lectures with the Red Bull Music Academy which is actually based out of Germany,

  • and I was doing a lecture here with Flying Lotus, a big deal for me at the time, ten

  • years a week from today.

  • It's pretty on point and on brand.

  • But the web.

  • The web's actually 30 years old.

  • And I was thinking to myself, like, man, 30 years old, that's kind of like a long time.

  • And I don't know where you were 30 years ago, but I remember when I first accessed the web,

  • the first thing I thought of was this.

  • And I don't know how many of you were able to sort of like be around this time where

  • you had to get a modem, and you made those telephone sounds, and that stuff, just to

  • get on the internet?

  • But it was great because I discovered a lot of things, and there was one place I used

  • to hang out - who remembers newsgroups here?

  • There we go.

  • This is where I hung out a lot, rec.hipohop and yes, I'm going to talk about hip-hop with

  • people I don't know.

  • This is the first time you start to connect with people from all parts of the world who

  • had access to the net.

  • Another thing that I did, as I had more and more access, I used to use search engines,

  • like everyone else, and who remembers Alta Vista.

  • There we go.

  • I was a big fan.

  • When that vanished, I was so sad.

  • But, what I also did was I started to surf the web, and I was a big Netscape Navigator

  • and Communicator fan.

  • Actually, there were a few browsers around thereafter, but this is the one that I was

  • using, and the big part about this one is when it was released, this is what one of

  • the early quotes from Andriesson himself, "This software is going to to change everything."

  • And it did.

  • Another quote came, things started exploding with the invention of the browser because

  • suddenly the internet was accessible to the average person.

  • And I mean, average, we will say sort of like model-class person who had a computer and

  • a modem, but it definitely opened things up.

  • You started to have that delight and discovery that I like to talk about.

  • When Netscape came out, it was extremely popular, 65 million users in 18 months, and part of

  • the reason was the fact that as much as the early web was, like, text, it was very academic,

  • they were actually able to bring images into the fold here, and what then happened is that

  • when we were surfing the net, we were accustomed to the lay-out text, images.

  • It was reading the paper.

  • And believe it or not, there was debate as to whether or not they were going to bring

  • images on to the web.

  • Some mild arguments, and the belief was that if they brought images on, there would be

  • like this onslaught of pornography.

  • And I'm here to say that they were absolutely wrong.

  • Right?

  • But, the fact is, for real, though, they believe that by opening it up, adding some images,

  • and letting people sort of expert, it was going to drive the web forward, and it actually

  • did.

  • Now, today, we are 4.3 billion users online.

  • I think that's phenomenal, but believe it or not, there's still room to grow.

  • And, you know, you might wonder that's an explosive growth.

  • What sort of drove that?

  • Well, this is kind of it right here.

  • This young lady's on a mobile phone.

  • I believe this is nothing that the they expected to see at the time.

  • This is like mid-1990s.

  • Who thought you were going to have a mobile device and be able to surf the web just as

  • powerfully as they did back then?

  • So this has allowed us to do a lot of different things.

  • We've been able to be very productive in life.

  • So what have we been able to do with sort of like little friction?

  • Pretty much everything.

  • I mean, we can make money, we manage money online, we can go on a date, we can go buy

  • clothes.

  • We can actually go rent a car to take your date out.

  • We can order fish, we can listen to one of my favourite songs called Fish, and we could

  • actually get phishing emails from African Princes, right?

  • But all jokes aside, man, we can actually read comics and make them accessible, comic

  • books, shot-out to Jessica.

  • [Applause].

  • No doubt.

  • For all the people that were trying to bring online, we could actually go offline.

  • This is what technology has allowed us to do.

  • Which is absolutely needed.

  • By the way, I downloaded the offline map for Berlin because I was not going to pay those

  • fees.

  • But we could actually create music in the browser as well.

  • Shout-out to Live :JS in the building!

  • This is what the technology has allowed us to do, very important.

  • This is the shape of the web as we see it growing right before our eyes.

  • So, the technology has been extremely important in getting these sort of things done.

  • And this is where we are going to sort of like see even more technology allow us to

  • do greater things thereafter.

  • Now, what about the technologist?

  • We may have been playing some amazing chords on some of the devices that we've seen out

  • there, you know, from keyboards to the MIDI controllers, but, unfortunately, there's been

  • a little bit of discord as well, and we're going to get into a few items that have been

  • bothering me a little.

  • Let's talk about technology.

  • There's an ongoing refrain, we know exactly what is going on, and it saddens me.

  • I mean, you just need to open up Twitter and wait five seconds before it hits you, and

  • I think that's sad.

  • It's been long discussed, you know, what needs to be done to retain talent, to attract talent,

  • and we still go out and sort of like trip over some of the main issues.

  • I mean, what do they talk about?

  • What do women talk about when they leave the industry?

  • The lack of career growth, salary, poor management, and, you know, when I read poor management,

  • I know exactly what they mean.

  • That's just being polite.

  • And the other part is actually what scares me, because the other, I feel, I know exactly

  • what is going on, but, again, it's being polite and not calling people out, because other

  • to me means this.

  • It's not fit for print, but we know exactly what is happening.

  • To me, that's absolutely not the way or the shape of the web needs to take.

  • Further on I'm going to share a little story, something I did did a few years ago.

  • International men's day happens once a year, March 8th.

  • And I got together with some buddies, I'm like let's rap about this.

  • I want to put an event for women to come out and enjoy themselves and listen to other women

  • in the industry.

  • This goes back to something I tried about ten years ago in music.

  • I really wanted to do a show with female producers.

  • I work in a certain pack of sound, and I knew there were producers out there, but when I

  • went knocking on some doors, I couldn't find any sponsors, so it got a little tough, but

  • I never forgot that.

  • When I had an opportunity to do something again, I did.

  • So, every year we put together in event called IWDTO, International Men's Day, and this is

  • a picture of 2015, and we've been doing it for five years now.

  • On the right to left, we have Lisa, who worked at the White House, an Obama hire, by the

  • way.

  • The lady in the middle, someone who I look up to very much, she works in performance.

  • She goes by the name of Tammy Everts who works at SpeedCurve.

  • An amazing person.

  • You need to follow her if you can.

  • On the left, I'm not sure if she is here, Mina Markham.

  • I would be happy for her to come down and share her story.

  • The most important part is the fact that, like I say, we do this every year, and it

  • warms my heart to be able to help out in a way - I might not be the best ally - but I

  • feel I'm doing something to make things work.

  • Why do I want to to this?

  • I want to make sure that we have moments like these, you know?

  • [Applause].

  • Thank you, thank you, thank you.

  • Katie, we know exactly what happened there.

  • A great moment, even though shortly after we saw the trolls come out and sort of question

  • her.

  • Margaret Hamilton, as we know, coined the term "software engineering" but right there

  • she is sitting next to the stack of paper that was essentially her sort of like tracing,

  • or helping get the rockets up to the moon.

  • But one of my favourite photos is this one right here.

  • This is the Indian space research organisation.

  • And they're having a ball right there.

  • Why?

  • Well, they were the fourth team to ever get a satellite around Mars.

  • But they were the first to do it on the first try, not NASA, not the European Space Agency,

  • and not the Russian Space Agency, but the agency out of India.

  • As you can tell, the team is made up of several women.

  • It's actually a short documentary on that.

  • I will be more than happy to put the link out.

  • So I want to see of month of these happening, these moments taking place.

  • The big thing is that the comment thread between the three photos that I showed, I mean, they

  • all had CS backgrounds, degrees, and what not, which brings me to my next malaise, the

  • CS versus non-CS beef.

  • Any CS people in the building?

  • I mean, raise your hand.

  • I've got love for you.

  • You know what I mean?

  • How did this happen?

  • I really don't know.

  • But, I kind of got triggered by this one tweet, and this person's going to go unidentified,

  • reasons why computer science degree is a bad eat.

  • Idea.

  • What?

  • Money, time, CS can be so boring.

  • I thought to myself that was irresponsible because it came from someone who has a large

  • platform, and I actually questioned him on it, but I'm not going to get into that.

  • But, I will get into this, and make some noise when you see a photo that sort of like you

  • recognise the image.

  • [Applause].

  • Okay.

  • All right.

  • Does anyone know what this is?

  • Okay.

  • I'm go the to get into that, but does anyone know what this is?

  • Okay.

  • So, let me go back.

  • Dartmouth Oversimplified Programming Experiment - DOPE.

  • It was the language that preceded BASIC.

  • Why is it important?

  • The author of BASIC, a math wizard worked at Dartmouth, believed that he could get non-STEM

  • students at the university to get into programming.

  • And he basically soldiered on trying to make things work.

  • Eventually, BASIC did become a language, and how did it happen?

  • Because he got a lot of non-STEM students to work along and contribute to the venture.

  • And BASIC was born.

  • That's very important, because even as a non-STEM student you're in BASIC, this is a tweet from

  • Brian Love's words boom!

  • I thought this was so true.

  • You needed to see this because you don't need a CS degree to be successful, but it doesn't

  • mean by having a CS degree you're not going to be.

  • In fact, John's daughter mentioned this: BASIC was basically an incredible project of what

  • is now called an aligned team.

  • I thought that was wild.

  • But speaking of CS, I want to talk about something else real quick.

  • Does anyone know who this is?

  • Probably not.

  • Her name's Lena Soderburg, and most of the CS people, and if you're in performance, you

  • might know this performance, Lena?

  • We know someone here knows?

  • But you might recognise her when I do this.

  • Now, this is the photo that's been internationally accepted as the test image when you do any

  • kind of image processing, compressing, et cetera, et cetera, which is totally cool.

  • But here's what is not so cool.

  • This is where it came from.

  • I remember doing some research one day, and I could not believe it.

  • We've been using an image from Playboy for 40-some years.

  • Do you know that two million images are uploaded to the web daily?

  • Did I say two million?

  • I meant two million images.

  • They're uploaded to the web daily, but somehow we have the photo of a centre fold as the

  • test image for image compression.

  • You know, for a second, I was thinking, it's the 1940s, we're going to get over it, whatever.

  • It's going to fade.

  • This happened in 2018.

  • Someone presented a talk and just like talked about centre folds - 2018.

  • How are you supposed to retain talent?

  • How are you supposed to attract talent when you have this kind of comportment out in the

  • wild?

  • This is not the shape of the web to come.

  • And with that being said, I mean, I tweeted this out just moments before I got on stage.

  • I will ask anyone who wishes to do so to vote whether or not the Lena image should remain

  • the standard in image processing.

  • Now, we kind of know what this means, the World Wide Web.

  • A developer I know likes to wall it the "wealthy Western web".

  • Okay, I'm good, because I think this started early.

  • I'm watching the clock and this flashing president the wealthy Western web, because we like to

  • design and create apps for the West, but what if I told you this is the list of the top-ten

  • internet users by country?

  • Okay?

  • What if I told you the greatest growth by country looks like this: now, these two lists

  • are the reason why documentation is important, and it's important to trans late.

  • Think about this.

  • Remember that German spoke yesterday who said, he spoken a few times on stage but it was

  • his first time speaking in English.

  • First time.

  • And you have developers out there that are trying to get in the fold, but documentation's

  • not in their native language.

  • That's something we definitely have to look into.

  • Why?

  • Because you have situations like this.

  • And this sort of caused a little bit of kerfuffle on Twitter.

  • And I was watching it.

  • And this tweet came out.

  • I'm not going to name the person, because I didn't ask whether or not I could use it,

  • but this happened thereafter.

  • Same tweet.

  • Now, we are talking about, you know, creating an inclusive community, an inclusive web.

  • I mean, I don't know how you're going to get more inclusive than having documentation translated

  • properly so that other developers can have some input.

  • Think about your framework that may sort of like mature so much faster because you have

  • contributions from all over the globe because they have documentation in their native tongue.

  • I think it's very important to remember.

  • That being said, what is next in 2020?

  • I don't know.

  • I think we will still be developers, and we're all still going to love the web and go to

  • conferences, and network, we're all still going to have great discoveries.

  • I mean, there's so much web we've yet to discover.

  • There are so many more people that we can help the light in discovery.

  • I mean, there are so many more applications we have yet to engineer.

  • People, neighbours, so many people we can learn from, experiences, you know?

  • Just is that we can make tweaks to our applications.

  • At the end of the day, I know we are good people by default.

  • I mean, I truly believe that.

  • I don't think that we are born with, like, sort of like evil within us - at least I sure

  • hope not.

  • My hope is that we keep it as you have.

  • I mean, we get maybe one day to enjoy another JSConf EU, because I would love to come back.

  • And, with that being said, thank you very much for your time.

  • Come visit me in Toronto.

  • And let's party tonight!

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • Exit stage left.

  • I don't know!

  • Is anyone coming!

  • Is there a gong I'm supposed to hit?

  • [Applause].

  • >> I've got it, thanks.

  • I'm just joking.

  • Thanks, everyone, sorry.

  • We would like to thank everyone for coming.

  • And we would like to start with - we're going to thank a lot of people now.

  • We want to thank all our speakers.

  • Please raise the roof for the speakers while all the speakers come on stage to receive

  • your roof-raising, everyone, please!

  • All the speakers, please come on stage!

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • All right, so, ... [Applause].

  • So we have had a meeting about this, and I'm glad you can see all the speakers and you

  • can do another applause, but then I need you to go down for theatrical reasons which I

  • totally screwed up, very sorry.

  • One more big applause for all the speakers.

  • Thank you very much!

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • Now, we all need to go again so people can see the slides we've prepared.

  • Sorry!

  • >> That's the main problem.

  • We have to ask speakers to leave the stage again.

  • We need the screen!

  • Sorry.

  • Move to the side again?

  • Thank you.

  • Sorry for the confusion.

  • >> There was a meeting, and we talked about it in Slack, and we got confused, mostly me.

  • It end like it started, with at least some misunderstanding!

  • >> Very well prepared, yes, thank you.

  • Please, all the emcees and stage managers, please stand up and receive your well-deserved

  • applause!

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • And the next group of persons and companies we want to thank you are our sponsors.

  • Many of them joined us for more than one year, some of them for almost ten years, and we

  • think that is worth a round of applause for our sponsors!

  • [Applause].

  • >> People working at a company who is sponsoring us currently, please stand up for a second!

  • Woo!

  • [Applause].

  • And also, sponsorship is our scholarship supporter list.

  • That's the main reason why we need the screen, because this list is really huge.

  • Please, everybody, stand up who is on that list, and everybody else should give a warm

  • applause to all these people who made it possible to include 150 people to our conference at

  • no cost.

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • And also, we want to say thank you to the company called Attribute, who is bringing

  • all these parts together.

  • Attribute with Bjorn, Juliana, Andre, Philip and the whole team is planning this event

  • to us and sets everything up with us, and they're at least co responsible for everything

  • that you see here, and they're full of ideas, and helped us growing over the years.

  • They joined us seven years ago, I think, and it's a really great collaboration with them

  • so far, so thank you, Attribute, Bjorn, Juliana, and everybody else!

  • [Applause].

  • The other companies that are here are Wecap.

  • Julia is doing our mood videos, Julia is doing 50 per cent of the photos alongside Shahin

  • who is doing the rest of our photos.

  • We want to thank the right?

  • Arena for hosting us for the last three years, the Textile Press with us for three or four

  • years.

  • We had frozen yoghurt, and first time #nailconf.

  • We would like to thank Harald and his team for the great food from the last three days.

  • We would like to thank you White Coat Captioning who is captioning every stage at every time

  • of day and night via Skype calls set up from all these stages.

  • We want to thank you the Bahn for the coffee, and thank you to serve you for the Wi-Fi which

  • made roughly 200 megabits per second on average.

  • We want to thank you for childcare, the team from Kids' Event, the medical response team

  • which helped us one or two times for difficult situations this time, and we would like to

  • say thank you for those building the stuff where you're sitting here.

  • Thank you!

  • [Applause].

  • >> Oh, wait?

  • I can already see what is happening ... . Oh, my God!

  • That wasn't planned!

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • >> I've joined the luxurious land of post-conference organisers, it's fantastic.

  • Can you all hear me?

  • Yes!

  • There we go!

  • Reaching out from the beyond to welcome all of the JSConf EU organisers into the happy,

  • happy zone thereafter from - can everyone give them a tremendous round of applause,

  • because tomorrow morning, they wake up without worrying about yet another conference!

  • Congratulations, everybody!

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • Make them embarrassingly happy!

  • Congratulations.

  • If I make take a moment, we should reminisce and appreciate the first time the JSConf EU

  • went off, I was in the same sort of role, doing a video conference.

  • Clearly, I've not fixed this problem.

  • But things are as they are, so, I wanted to take a second and congratulate everyone who

  • has organised JSConf EU throughout the years, being a host, and many wonderful things, sliced

  • fingers opening for controllers, node.js, housing one of the most inclusive and incredibly

  • diverse conferences, to proving that you can do conferences outdoors in bubbles - yay!

  • - and you know what crazy people - and all have a wonderful inviting, and wonderful experience.

  • You've done a tremendous amount of benefit for the JavaScript and technology community,

  • and our thanks cannot - even if we thanked you ever single day, it would not be enough.

  • Thank you, thank you, thank you!

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • [Applause].

  • >> That's all I've got!

  • Auf wiedersehen.

  • >> All right, give it up for Live: JS!

  • [Applause].

  • Some of you have probably seen the talk yesterday where they talked about how they created this

  • amazing experience.

  • You've seen them play over there.

  • They have not slept much over the last week, and the weeks before this, it's been an incredible

  • amount of work, so, again, thank you very much to Live:JS.

  • [Applause].

  • On top of that, we had a great set of artists, who helped with the visuals, and especially

  • the mural over in the side track.

  • John was the person creating the audience's programming, trailer, that ran at the start

  • of our opening show, and then we have the group that created the absolutely incredible

  • computer of one's own exhibition that you saw at the back of the of the hall.

  • We saw this earlier, you can now purchase those.

  • Follow the link on our Twitter.

  • [Applause].

  • And then, Thursday, the week of last week, so nine days ago, I messaged our internal

  • Slack for speakers, scholarship recipients and volunteers saying we would like to do

  • a choir.

  • Can any one of you sing?

  • The response I got which what I was hoping for we are a choir, we know what this is.

  • We're the awareness team, we're there anyway.

  • Can we help?

  • That saved our idea, and we had speaker and scholarship recipients joining in our opening.

  • It was incredible.

  • They practised this the night before.

  • They had never met before, so give it up for them.

  • Thank you very much.

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • >> We had the honour to get to have Wiebke this year, she managed the sponsorship from

  • both conferences, and into and we could not be more thankful to have her.

  • Big applause for Wiebke!

  • Such a big event couldn't be done without the help of a team.

  • A big shout out to them.

  • They helped us for many things.

  • Thank you, Niko, Martin, Zeno, and Olivia!

  • [Applause].

  • This year, we had more volunteers than ever before.

  • And they are the reason why we, the organisers, could be a bit more relaxed this year.

  • They helped at the registration community launch, BIPoCiT space, live captions, and

  • much more.

  • Thanks to all our volunteers.

  • [Applause].

  • So, who of you has been to the community lounge?

  • They shared great stories, right?

  • The community lounge is a small conference running in the breaks since 2017.

  • Thank you, Michelle, and Vanessa, for being part of our team and putting in so much effort

  • in organising the community lounge.

  • [Applause].

  • This year, for the first time, JSConf EU had an inclusionary space for black, indigenous,

  • and/or people of colour.

  • Thank you Lauren, Darren, and Vanessa for putting so much effort into the BIPoCiT space.

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • Also, for the first tile, we had a team which was here for you in case you needed support

  • or had any issues.

  • Thank you to the team for their great work and to Tui for organising it.

  • [Applause].

  • >> Our scholarship programme was organised this year by Princya, Olivia, and Thuy.

  • Give it up for them.

  • [Applause].

  • JSConf EU would not be what it is without the continuous help of the CSSconf EU team.

  • Thank you, Lukasz, Kristina for all your help over these years.

  • >> Can you tell we didn't rehearse that bit!

  • Okay, thank you so much to the organisers.

  • I think that it's pretty obvious that this is the most welcoming generate conference

  • in the world.

  • [Cheering and applause].

  • I think it's also really obvious that it's changed the lives of probably 100s or thousands

  • of people, not just the in the room tonight, but the people you spoke to, spread the word

  • to, and said, hey, the JavaScript community is welcoming, friendly, and you can been a

  • part of it.

  • Thank you to all of you as well.

  • [Applause].

  • Okay, final announcement: we're selling the portraits back there.

  • They are tweeted on the JSConf EU Twitter.

  • The money is going to go to the artist that created them.

  • Next steps is in a second, we are going to take a family photo.

  • It's going to happen straight behind us.

  • I need you to form a triangle, so narrower in the front.

  • Ah, okay, more announcements, then we're going to do the photo.

  • The photo's going to be shaped in a triangle.

  • Right now, let's remind you to get your things from the coat check after we all come on stage.

  • So, first, everybody ... >> I would say no, because I think I know

  • what I want.

  • Everybody who has helped this year organising this great event, and who could not be on

  • stage because the slides are too big, please come up.

  • We want you all here, and we want a warm applause for all of you.

  • [Applause].

  • And now we would like to have the speakers come to the stage again, please.

  • [Applause].

  • We would also like to have the speakers from the BIPoCiT space and the community lounge

  • come to the stage.

  • [Applause].

  • Are our emcees already on stage in where is our emceeing team?

  • Yeah!

  • Thank you, everyone for being here for helping us, and please apologies for the unorganised

  • closing here.

  • We love you all, and I think we can go to the family photo soon, but it's great to have

  • us all here, so thanks, everyone, again!

  • [Cheering and applause].

>> Man, oh, man.

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アンリ・ヘルベチカによるShape Of The Web|JSConf EU 2019 (Shape Of The Web by Henri Helvetica | JSConf EU 2019)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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