They are slowly getting convinced, but they adamantly want to stick to ChicagoBoss over Zotonic if we are going to use Erlang which we will, since I have had a very good experience back in 2001 when I was involved (as a partner not as a developer) in creating a layer 5 switch totally built in erlang.
As I had mentioned previously we are building a site that is similar to Trip Advisor but for the online gambling industry, so if we are going to be starting from scratch with CB and would have to create all the following modules 1. CMS (with all the standard functionality such as seo modules, RSS feeds, support for media embedding 2. Forum 3. Social Media integration (Facebook login and registration and profile synching) 4. Review modules Could something like this be done in 6 months with 4-5 developers using CB? Thanks again! On Friday, January 24, 2014 3:13:00 AM UTC-6, David Welton wrote: > > > Thanks for your reply, I have decided to use some sort of Erlang > Framwework > > to develop a site that is similar in features to > > Trip Advisor, we have thrown away 3 complete rewrites in PHP, my biggest > > issue right now is that my developers are pushing > > really hard to go with Django, and they tell me that Erlang is not well > > suited to this type of project and there are no large scale > > websites that use Erlang, and information I can use to prove my point > would > > be of great help. I do have to say that they have > > no experience with Erlang but my take is that they can definitely learn > it. > > If you hired them to code, presumably they know what they are doing > and are giving you good advice, no? > > For *most* new sites, the difficult problem is finding product/market > fit - can we get the right mix of features/community/whatever to make > it successful? This often requires rapid iteration - adding new > stuff, trying new ideas, and with something like Django, or Ruby on > Rails, or even PHP, you're more likely to find a lot of code to use > out of the box. > > Where Erlang is really good is that it uses fewer resources to > accomplish the same thing. One area where Erlang *really* shines is > if you need to use web sockets. Those just aren't a good fit for > Rails or Django. For some kinds of projects, these things are > critical - for many, though, they are not. > > There are certainly large and well-known projects that utilize Erlang. > Whatsapp. Facebook used to use it for their chat system > > -- > David N. Welton > > http://www.welton.it/davidw/ > > http://www.dedasys.com/ > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "ChicagoBoss" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/chicagoboss. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/chicagoboss/ef921faa-8d6b-4003-a2cc-3670b957f77a%40googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
