When ColdFusion Developer's Journal was launched eight years ago, it was the first printed periodical exclusively by and for ColdFusion developers. Over the years there have been many changes in format, authors, and publishing/editorial staff. One thing has remained constant, however: the focus of the magazine has always been to serve the CF development community with the best content possible.
Over the course of this summer, we have formed a CFDJ Editorial Board that consists of community leaders and very experienced developers. Many of the board members are seasoned CFDJ authors, some are relatively new to the magazine itself, but all bring years of experience and community leadership, as well as vision and a strong desire to help contribute to making CFDJ the best that it can be.
Care was taken to ensure that we also have experts who have specialized in specific topic areas, and that the collective specialties of all board members create a very well-rounded panel capable of offering insight into every aspect of ColdFusion development. In addition to contributing articles, editorial board members are responsible for soliciting and tech-editing articles for those issues of CFDJ that they do not choose to contribute articles of their own.
This well-rounded coverage of specialties will allow CFDJ to bring content covering a wide array of topics like never before. CFDJ will continue to cover "traditional" topics dealing with writing ColdFusion code, but will now cover much more than just that. On a regular basis CFDJ will include articles that focus on topics including but not limited to:
I am remaining as editor-in-chief to assist our editorial board any way that I can, helping them to solicit articles, and will have a focus of my own - making sure that the overall content remains well rounded. Some readers expressed concern about the amount of attention and focus that CFDJ has given Flex 2 lately, for example, and I am happy to lay those concerns to rest. We'll have one article every month related to creating next-generation Web applications using Flex 2, AJAX, SPRY, or what-have-you for those interested readers, but the overall focus of each issue will remain completely targeted at discussing topics specific to a larger majority of ColdFusion developers.
It is with great excitement that I announce the 2006-2007 ColdFusion Developer's Journal Editorial Board as follows:
There is still one key ingredient necessary to making CFDJ the best resource available: feedback and editorial contributions from you, our readers. I strongly encourage all of our readers to contact me and/or any of the CFDJ editorial board members listed above, with any questions or concerns, as well as with any interest you may have in contributing content to CFDJ, the ultimate resource available to ColdFusion developers.