Blog

ColdBox Community Workspace

Luis Majano November 10, 2009

Spread the word

Luis Majano

November 10, 2009

Spread the word


Share your thoughts

A few days ago I blogged of how we are migrating our ColdBox projects to Assembla and how we created a space called ColdBox Community.  This space is for open consumption of the ColdBox community.  What does this mean? Well, if you are a developer that wants to have a free repository to use for anything ColdBox related, online chat, online wiki, messaging, ticketing and more, you CAN!

The initiative is to offer a nice place where ColdBox developers can share their projects and develop them.  Even if you don't want to use the included repositories, you can interact with the workspace.  This is just an opportunity for the community to come together and share.

If you would like to be part of this space, just email us at info@coldbox.org with a request for user credentials.  We will need your email address and a written consent that you are willing to share your code and projects.  You can find more information about our collaboration agreement here: http://www.coldboxframework.com/index.cfm/about/contribute.

Add Your Comment

Recent Entries

Partner with BoxLang and Ortus at Into the Box 2025: Empowering the Future of Modern Software Development!

Partner with BoxLang and Ortus at Into the Box 2025: Empowering the Future of Modern Software Development!

At Ortus Solutions, we’ve always been at the forefront of innovation in the ColdFusion ecosystem. From pioneering modern ColdFusion practices to developing cutting-edge tools and frameworks, we’ve been passionate to help and sup[port the community into shaping the future of web development.That’s why we decided to build BoxLang, our new JVM programming language that not only builds on the strengths of ColdFusion but takes modern software development to the next level.

Maria Jose Herrera
Maria Jose Herrera
December 23, 2024
Why BoxLang When You Have Kotlin, Groovy, Scala, and more…

Why BoxLang When You Have Kotlin, Groovy, Scala, and more…

As we approach a stable release of BoxLang and our continued marketing reaches more folks, many have asked about its purpose. Why create a new language when the JVM ecosystem already includes established languages like Kotlin, Groovy, and Scala, to name a few.

Luis Majano
Luis Majano
December 18, 2024