On May 31, 1:20 am, "Vagmi Mudumbai" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Check out Google Gears.http://gears.google.com
There's a lot of interesting things about Google Gears...
It provides a browser local SQLite accessible via Javascript.
It provides a local HTTP server for storing/retrieving cached
Check out Google Gears. http://gears.google.com
On 5/30/07, Tom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
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> On May 23, 2:51 am, Robert Coup <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> > Rob Hudson wrote:
> > > Cool. What's the best way to coordinate the effort? A wiki page to
> > > start with?
> >
> > Current
Rob Hudson wrote:
> Cool. What's the best way to coordinate the effort? A wiki page to
> start with?
>
Current trends seem to be to use Google Code for projects that aren't
likely to become part of the core django distro. A link from the Django
wiki is probably a good idea though.
> 1)
Cool. What's the best way to coordinate the effort? A wiki page to
start with?
Coming up in the next month or so I'm going to have to dedicate work
time to this but for now I'd like to just lay out the groundwork and
do it in such a way that it benefits the Django community.
1) Cross Platform
On 5/22/07, Rob Hudson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm curious if there are others who could use this functionality but
> for Django. If so, perhaps we can all collaborate and come up with a
> solution that runs on Mac, Windows, and Linux. Data syncing would be
> nice but can come later.
I'd
I have a need for a way to run Django-based websites offline as an
installable application. I recently read about Joyent Slingshot:
http://developer.joyent.com/
I'm curious if there are others who could use this functionality but
for Django. If so, perhaps we can all collaborate and come up
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