I would attend. I had RSVP'd last year but there was no room when I
arrived. The previous year was at the same place and the food was meh,
the service was horrible, and it took forever to pay our checks.
Whatever we decide, it should be somewhere different.

michael


On 5/31/17 21:08, Jon Kalb wrote:
>
>  
>
> *BoostCon Planners*,
>
>  
>
> tl;dr Would you like to see the Boost Community Dinner at CppCon be
> held as a buffet in the Meydenbauer?
>
>  
>
> When talking about the Boost presence at CppCon, I try to tread
> lightly because of my obvious conflict of interests. Boost is a very
> important part of the C++ community that CppCon serves and it should
> have a presence. But I try to tread this line very careful because of
> my roles in both organizations. Boost isn’t even a community sponsor
> of CppCon. (That may be because the condition of community sponsorship
> is to exchange logos and links on the website and I only recently got
> a link to C++Now on the boost.org website. If it is that hard to get
> boost.org to link to BoostCon—and without a logo, yet—then how can we
> have a logo exchange with CppCon?)
>
>  
>
> We’ve had a Boost Community Dinner at every CppCon. These were never
> official CppCon events. They were planned and organized by CppCon
> staff, but no CppCon funds went toward the events.
>
>  
>
> What we did was announce the event on various Boost/C++Now lists and
> take RSVPs. Then we arranged for an event of that size. This has, in
> general, not worked out very well. We always get more people to show
> up than RSVP. Last year we had so few RSVPs relative to our guarantee,
> that we kind of panicked and sent out the word to “bring a friend.”
> This resulted in a way too many people and chaos ensued. By the time
> people paid their checks, it was about 21:30, meaning that everyone
> missed the evening session. My bad on that.
>
>  
>
> I brought up the issue to our contact at VisitBellevue (who represents
> the city’s tourism interest) and this resulted in the Meydenbauer
> making us an offer that is more reasonably priced than any previous
> dining offer.
>
>  
>
> Here is how it would work.
>
> ·         We’ll add a new ticket to EventBrite registration for the
> Boost Community Dinner.
>
> ·         We’ll promote it on the usually Boost/C++Now mailing lists
> (and probably to registered CppCon attendees).
>
> ·         It would probably be on Thursday at 18:45.
>
> ·         It would probably cost about $40-$45.
>
> ·         There would be a cash bar, but soft drinks would probably be
> included.
>
> ·         We’d have to stop selling tickets about two to three weeks
> before the event because we need to let the Meydenbauer know our final
> number.
>
> ·         It would be at the Meydenbauer so we don’t need to worry
> about directions or time and transportation to some other venue.
>
> ·         It would be a buffet and paid in advance, so people can
> leave to go to evening sessions (starting at 20:30) at any time.
>
>  
>
> Unlike our previous events, this one would involve CppCon funds
> because the conference would collect the funds through Eventbrite and
> then pay for the dinner. The goal would be to make the event revenue
> neutral, but if soft drinks are offered free, then we can only guess
> what the cost will be.
>
>  
>
> Comments?
>
>  
>
> If you are planning to attend CppCon, does this appeal to you? Do you
> think this is good for the Boost/C++Now community?
>
>  
>
> Jon
>
>  
>
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