A repository containing presentation materials from the C++Now 2013 conference, covering C++11, Boost libraries, and advanced programming topics.
C++Now 2013 Presentations is an archive of slide decks and materials presented at the C++Now 2013 conference. It provides access to technical talks on C++11, Boost libraries, concurrency, systems programming, and other advanced C++ topics from that year's event. The repository serves as a reference for developers studying historical C++ advancements and best practices.
C++ developers, researchers, and educators interested in the state of C++ in 2013, particularly those focusing on C++11 adoption, Boost libraries, or advanced systems programming techniques.
It offers a centralized, freely accessible archive of expert presentations from a major C++ conference, preserving knowledge that might otherwise be lost. Unlike generic tutorials, these materials provide deep, practitioner-oriented insights from leading figures in the C++ community at a pivotal time in the language's evolution.
This repository archives the presentation slides and materials from the C++Now 2013 conference, a premier event for the C++ community. It serves as a valuable historical and educational resource for developers interested in the evolution of C++ and its ecosystem.
The repository is maintained to preserve and disseminate knowledge from the C++Now conference, supporting ongoing learning and reference within the C++ developer community.
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Provides first-hand perspectives on the then-new C++11 standard, with talks like 'A Zephyr Overview of C++11' and deep dives into features such as concurrency and allocators.
Includes expert presentations on Boost libraries like Spirit, Graph, and Asio, offering practical usage examples and design discussions directly from the README's session list.
Preserves niche knowledge from 2013 on topics like template metaprogramming, binary compatibility, and systems programming, as seen in talks by Boris Kolpackov and others.
Offers direct links to PDF slides and some source code (e.g., pipereader.zip), facilitating easy download and reference without paywalls or registration.
Focused solely on C++11 and 2013-era Boost, lacking updates for modern C++ standards (C++17/20/23) and contemporary library developments, reducing relevance for current projects.
Consists primarily of static PDF slides with occasional code snippets, missing video or audio recordings that provide presentation context, demos, and speaker explanations.
Some presentations are split into multiple parts due to GitHub's blob limits, as noted in the README, requiring manual cloning or download to access original unsplit files.
Listed only by day and session title without categorization, search, or metadata, making it difficult to browse or find specific topics beyond raw file scanning.