No sponsoring. No money involved. The readings can and should be in living rooms. Guests can bring food. And drinks. Everyone is welcome. We could even split it up in C Major for the Elder of The C and C Minor for the younger folks. You get the idea. Let's just do it. I will open my living room on the 3rd of October and hope others will too :). So. #Munich. 3rd of October. I can host around 10-15 people max.

6/6

#COnThe3rd

And if we get this concept up and running at various places all over the world, you can join a C Reading when you travel and meet new people :) Wherever you are on the third, there might be a C Reading you can join!

5/6

#COnThe3rd

The meetings are always on the 3rd of the month. (C is the third letter in the alphabet). And having it on the third and not something like every 2nd Wednesday means that it will be on different days of the week, giving more people that chance to join. Some people just never can go on a Wednesday.

4/6

#COnThe3rd

The first rule is: You have to bring your own copy of the book. That's the entrance badge. No book, no problem, though. You can still join. But when you return for more than one time, you should get a copy. We will help with that. (Just kidding, but I really do love the book)

The second rule is: No computers. Paper and whiteboard only. People that interact. That's the goal.

3/6

#COnThe3rd

You can join at any time. You can go at any time. You can stay just for the reading (which will be without interruptions, no discussions, no questions). Guest speakers that wrote the code on the whiteboards and printouts. Birds of a feather, lightning talk style. No fundamental discussions. Just celebrating the language and the code in an open and inviting way. It could actually work :)

2/6

#COnThe3rd

A book club. Where we sit in a circle and read out loud, chapter by chapter, the C Programming Language, 2nd Edition. And at the end of each session we stand up and call out names of Open Source and Free Software written in C without which our modern society wouldn't run. Dress code: 1970s.

After the reading session we gather for food and drinks in a room full of whiteboards (no computers!) where we discuss what we heard. With real code printed out from the projects we named.

1/6

#COnThe3rd