On the Road to Aspen (BoostCon 10)

Hi, The road to Aspen starts now. I've been to all three BoostCon events since its inaugural conference in 2007. I can tell you, the experience is definitely amazing. I've been a Boost developer since 2001. Boost is like a virtual family to me. From 2001, I've known and collaborated with countless people, many of which I haven't actually met, until the first BoostCon in 2007. Amazing people like Hartmut Kaiser, Dan Marsden, Eric Niebler, to name a few, were just names. Before BoostCon, I often wished to get to see the faces behind the names. It was exhilarating to finally meet these folks, have a couple of beer (and Pizza!), talk about C++, library development, the wondrous mountains of Aspen, the trees, the bears and coyotes (hah!). If this looks too much like a friendly post, well, it is! I'd like to break a bit from the highly technical discussions taking place in these mailing lists and point you to a FaceBook group named, ermm, "BoostCon" :-) http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=125839305706 My task is to invite you guys to join in. You do not have to be a former BoostCon attendee. Everyone here is invited to join. If you want to see the "faces" behind the names, get to know more of the people behind Boost, get to know more friends that share your passion for Boost, C++, templates, etc., in a more relaxed venue, this is the place. If you have even the slightest inkling to attend a future conference, well, join in. Here we can discuss things like sharing rooms to cut cost, where to find the best food in town, car pooling etc. In preparation time prior to the conference, we can discuss matters like which kind of talks you want to see, keynote speakers you'd be interested in seeing, etc. For past BoostCon attendees, here’s a chance to meet up again. Hey, even if you are not planning to attend, I'd like to invite you anyway. Consider this group as a friendly face of Boost :-). Hopefully, the friendly atmosphere will make you attend anyway ;-) Cheers, -- Joel de Guzman http://www.boostpro.com http://spirit.sf.net

Hi, I just found out the difference between a Facebook "group" and a Facebook "page". Quoting Luann (Abrahams): "FYI, we have an FB *group*. Marketing for organizations and produds works on FB via *pages*. Pages work like individual (human) profiles and will give status updates etc. to people who become fans of it. A group is more of a social/bb function." One annoying thing about our FB BoostCon group is that updates on groups won't send notification to the group members whereas a "page" does. Confusing! I know. Anyway, let me invite you to a newly created BoostCon page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/BoostCon/142117573574?ref=mf Please join in and tell people about it. Thank you! See you in FB and BoostCon 2010! I'm keeping my original post below: Joel de Guzman wrote:
Hi,
The road to Aspen starts now. I've been to all three BoostCon events since its inaugural conference in 2007. I can tell you, the experience is definitely amazing.
I've been a Boost developer since 2001. Boost is like a virtual family to me. From 2001, I've known and collaborated with countless people, many of which I haven't actually met, until the first BoostCon in 2007. Amazing people like Hartmut Kaiser, Dan Marsden, Eric Niebler, to name a few, were just names. Before BoostCon, I often wished to get to see the faces behind the names. It was exhilarating to finally meet these folks, have a couple of beer (and Pizza!), talk about C++, library development, the wondrous mountains of Aspen, the trees, the bears and coyotes (hah!).
If this looks too much like a friendly post, well, it is! I'd like to break a bit from the highly technical discussions taking place in these mailing lists and point you to a FaceBook group named, ermm, "BoostCon" :-)
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=125839305706
My task is to invite you guys to join in. You do not have to be a former BoostCon attendee. Everyone here is invited to join. If you want to see the "faces" behind the names, get to know more of the people behind Boost, get to know more friends that share your passion for Boost, C++, templates, etc., in a more relaxed venue, this is the place.
If you have even the slightest inkling to attend a future conference, well, join in. Here we can discuss things like sharing rooms to cut cost, where to find the best food in town, car pooling etc. In preparation time prior to the conference, we can discuss matters like which kind of talks you want to see, keynote speakers you'd be interested in seeing, etc.
For past BoostCon attendees, here’s a chance to meet up again.
Hey, even if you are not planning to attend, I'd like to invite you anyway. Consider this group as a friendly face of Boost :-). Hopefully, the friendly atmosphere will make you attend anyway ;-)
Cheers,
-- Joel de Guzman http://www.boostpro.com http://spirit.sf.net http://tinyurl.com/facebook-jdg

Hi Joel, You can also create a twitter account and link your Facebook page to this twitter account, mirroring all your facebook status updates to your twitter account. This increases visibility and give the possibility to your fans to choose the medium they like to follow you. Kind regards. -- EA On Tue, 29 Sep 2009 17:25:49 +0800, Joel de Guzman: <joel@boost-consulting.com> wrote:
Hi,
I just found out the difference between a Facebook "group" and a Facebook "page". Quoting Luann (Abrahams): "FYI, we have an FB *group*. Marketing for organizations and produds works on FB via *pages*. Pages work like individual (human) profiles and will give status updates etc. to people who become fans of it. A group is more of a social/bb function."
One annoying thing about our FB BoostCon group is that updates on groups won't send notification to the group members whereas a "page" does. Confusing! I know.
Anyway, let me invite you to a newly created BoostCon page:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/BoostCon/142117573574?ref=mf
Please join in and tell people about it.
Thank you! See you in FB and BoostCon 2010!
I'm keeping my original post below:
-- EA

Edouard A. wrote:
Hi Joel,
You can also create a twitter account and link your Facebook page to this twitter account, mirroring all your facebook status updates to your twitter account.
This increases visibility and give the possibility to your fans to choose the medium they like to follow you.
It could be interesting to see syndicated Twitter and Facebook updates on the boost.org :) Best regards, -- Mateusz Loskot, http://mateusz.loskot.net

On Tue, 29 Sep 2009 10:40:35 +0100, Mateusz Loskot <mateusz@loskot.net> wrote:
It could be interesting to see syndicated Twitter and Facebook updates on the boost.org :)
I agree, if you do the above, it's just a question of adding an HTML list somewhere on your web page and calling a Javascript on Twitter website. 5 minutes work (provided you know where to put your list :p). -- EA

Edouard A. wrote:
Hi Joel,
You can also create a twitter account and link your Facebook page to this twitter account, mirroring all your facebook status updates to your twitter account.
This increases visibility and give the possibility to your fans to choose the medium they like to follow you.
Thanks, Edouard. Done. BoostCon Facebook Linked to Twitter (@BoostCon) http://www.twitter.com/BoostCon Regards, -- Joel de Guzman http://www.boostpro.com http://spirit.sf.net http://tinyurl.com/facebook-jdg
participants (3)
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Edouard A.
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Joel de Guzman
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Mateusz Loskot