Alejandro Forero Cuervo scripsit: > Another thing I found useful was using what we call the "pre-rendered > model": http://wiki.freaks-unidos.net/pre-rendered%20model
Somewhat more globally known as "baked not fried". http://www.reutershealth.com , which I worked on from 1999 to 2005, is 100% baked except for the internal search engine -- even the lists of current headlines are baked by an hourly cron job. There are about 10^5 pages, most of which are baked multiple times on the day of publication and then never touched again. I saw the limits of pre-rendering reached in my next job at the Associated Press (http://hosted.ap.org), where each of about 10^4 stories per day had to be rendered in accordance with about a dozen binary specifications set by the client (e.g. all-caps vs. mixed-case headlines), requiring each page to be baked about 4096 ways. When I left, the system was being replaced by a more usual on-the-fly rendering model. -- A rose by any other name John Cowan may smell as sweet, http://www.ccil.org/~cowan but if you called it an onion [EMAIL PROTECTED] you'd get cooks very confused. --RMS _______________________________________________ Chicken-users mailing list Chicken-users@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/chicken-users