January 9Jan 9 Conferences are never just about the talks — they’re about time, travel, tradeoffs, and the people you meet along the way. After a year of attending several C++ events across formats and cities, this post is a personal look at how different conferences balance technical depth, community, and the experience of being there. 2025, A Year of Conferences by Sandor Dargo From the article: This year I had the chance to attend three conferences onsite, plus one online, and even a meetup in my hometown, Budapest. Depending on who you ask, maybe it’s not a lot — I know some speakers do twice as many. But if you ask my family, you’d probably get a different (and understandable) answer. For me — for us — it’s a lot. It’s also an honour and a privilege in many ways. To express my appreciation and gratitude toward the organizers and the community, I do two things: I try to prepare well for my talks. I post trip reports soon after each event — usually within a week. Those trip reports are moderately personal: I share which talks I liked and also some of my impressions, but I try to make them useful rather than purely personal. Still, I think that once in a while, a more personal, less serious post has its place — and that’s what this one wanted to be originally. At one of the social dinners at CppCon, a developer working for a FAANG company in New York asked me which conference I’d recommend. My answer: it depends on your goals — and your budget and constraints. View the full article
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