Wednesday, September 19, 2007

When Vermont.NET does not have a sponsor to cover the cost of pizza & soda, the attendees pay for their own - $5 each. This was the case at Monday's meeting. Additionally, we were doing a fundrasing raffle for the first time ever, using a license to Infragistics NetAdvantage that was donated by Infragistics. The raffle was $5. There were about 25 people at the meeting.

Usually, collecting the money is a subtle thing that happens in the background and I have not even had to do it in years as another user group member has been grabbing the cash on my behalf. But I was doing it on Monday and wouldn't you know it, but everyone had 20's. Nobody seemed to have change. In over 5 years and 70 meetings, this has never happened before. It took a good 15 minutes or more to get it all sorted out. While I'm laughing about it now, it was totally chatoic and embarrassing at the time. We had a bunch of new attendees and our speaker, Mark Mullin (who helped come up with change for a 20) from New Hampshire. I could only imagine what they were thinking!

So my lesson? I guess from now on, I'll just have to add in "20's not accepted".

 

Wednesday, September 19, 2007 9:17:06 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #     |  Comments [3]  | 
Thursday, September 20, 2007 10:19:38 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)

That's really funny. I'm a student so I always have less than $20. I would like to join this group. I attend Champlain College as a Software Engineer. I work for a local company writing software for Sharepoint Services, and I am just now getting into Workflow foundation.

Christopher Paquette
Christopher Paquette
Thursday, September 20, 2007 10:27:38 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Hi Christopher. We'd love to have you come to our meetings! I won't be at the next one (Oct 8th), but be sure to introduced yourself. You can sign up for membership on the website. Look for "membership" on the menu on the left.
Saturday, September 22, 2007 12:07:50 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I wouldn't worry too much. Lack of change is a common problem (granted one that rarely gets repeated a second time)

Keep in mind this is a group of programmers who probably live out of vending machines at work. That barely anyone had anything less then a 20 was a huge suprise.
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