Releasing the 5th Track for Meeting C++ 2025

published at 08.10.2025 19:05 by Jens Weller
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I am excited to announce that with the recent changes to the schedule, Meeting C++ 2025 has now 5 tracks: 4 onsite and 1 online track. This new track is possible thanks to better funding from sponsors and exhibitors enabling even more C++ content at Meeting C++ in Berlin.

For onsite attendees there is a new batch of hotel tickets and team tickets available. The current hotel ticket batch sells until Mid October. 

New talks at Meeting C++ 2025

These are the new talks which are now at the conference:

7 of these 9 talks are in the new track, as two of them had to replace talks by speakers not able to attend Meeting C++ this year. Which leaves 4 more interesting options for the new track. I hope that some of them will be filled by sponsors, but the other plan is to add a few AMAs or Panels to the conference. We do have a few former and potential future keynote speakers at the conference after all.

So in total Meeting C++ 2025 will feature 44 talks in Berlin! This plan already existed for 2024, but things like this are not possible without funding from sponsors and exibitors. So thank you to think-cell, KDAB, Bloomberg, Woven by Toyota, Jetbrains, Hudson River Trading, the Qt Company and Flow Traders.

Scheduling, rescheduling and the onsite attendee survey

With the 5th track there had to be some minor changes made to the schedules layout. As everyone can always attend Track A, I do give it now the full space.

Right now I'm running a survey amongst the onsite attendees to get a feeling how good the scheduling currently is for Berlin itself. As the voting for the talks does not represent the onsite attendance anymore that well. This gives additional data for optimizing the schedule, not only for the biggest room but also for the smallest. One track will have to be hosted in Bernstein, where we used to have the lounge in pasts years. This years lounge will be a bit quiter on the second floor.

So the survey amongst onsite attendees will continue to give us a hint if talks could be rescheduled. The voting already has given good results for this and lots of other things play a role in where to schedule which talk. So by next week I'd like to be done with most scheduling, which I think will be minimal. 

My plan for next week is to bring speakers and talks to the static website, and then start also working on the static schedule. A pure html page is a bit better suited for handling the high conference traffic, so I will make sure we have this again available this year. Also its what stays on the website when the live schedule displays the current year.

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