Bet that was great seeing/hearing Tillman speak. 
It was, and I was really grateful that he showed up to moderate one of the discussion panels.
Also, many of the pilots' stories have been absolutely amazing. I've heard stories from combat pilots of most of the US combat aircraft in WWII (P-51, P-47, P-38, P-40, F4U, F6F, TBM, SBD, B-29, B-17, B-24, B-25, P-61) and some RAF planes (Spitfire, Mosquito, Beaufighter, Wellington), pilots who gained aces status in P-51's (Bud Anderson and others), P-47's (Steve Pisanos, George Novotny, and others), P-38's (George Chandler and others), F6F's (Hamilton McWhorter and others), F4U (Dean Caswell and others), and the Mosquito (Lou Luma), every theater, pilots who participated in the Battle of Midway (including Harry Ferrier, who was on the only TBM to make it back to Midway), the Marianas (F6F pilots and TBM pilot Warren Omark, who put a torpedo into the Hiyo), Market Garden (Spitfire pilot Witold Herbst), North Africa, bombing Tokyo, over Germany, France, and Italy, different roles (fighter, fighter-bomber, divebomber, torpedo bomber, bomber, recon), a guy who was on the USS Bunker Hill when it was hit by the kamikazes, a guy who shot down an Me 262 (Clayton Gross), a guy who shot down an Me 163 (Art Jeffrey).
The Museum of Flight near Seattle has been an amazing place. I feel very lucky.