advanced sessions. Someone that is only interested in ColdFusion can not go
to a CF session appropriate to their level in every time slot at MAX (after
taking repeats into account). The fact is if you're only interested in CF
and are an intermediate or advanced developer, the session choices are
limited. There are some good advanced sessions (don't miss mine!) but not
in every slot. At CFUN, there were 5 tracks (well, 4 depending on how you
count it) and almost all were CF specific and many were advanced sessions.
MAX is geared towards a different (introductory) audience and has sessions
for many MM products. Now that CFUN has advanced to the point where it is a
major conference with tons of content, it really is a better CF conference
than MAX is. If you're a CF+Flash developer or are interested in Flex (and
can afford it), then MAX is great. But for typical CF developers, CFUN is
far better in my opinion.
Sam
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Dave Watts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 10:48 AM
> To: CF-Talk
> Subject: RE: MAX 2004 (MVC's Session)
>
> > sure, those sessions are fine, but there are a lot of us, and
> > probably a lot that dont attend, simply because the sessions
> > are dumbed down for the masses. id love to see a track of
> > sessions that were fairly hardcore/hands-on and spanned the
> > whole conference....good stuff i think.
>
> From my own experience, I can say it's really hard to put together a
> "hardcore" hands-on presentation, simply because you don't
> have enough time.
> The pre-conference training events, on the other hand, are
> longer, and have
> more time to walk you through useful examples.
>
> Dave Watts, CTO, Fig Leaf Software
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