But exactly what *is* the legal issue? That AMFPHP reverse-engineered Flash
Remoting's binary file format?
The MacroMedia web site has a tutorial on using it:
http://www.macromedia.com/devnet/flash/articles/amfphp.html . I wouldn't
think they're t erribly concerned, making the plumbing available encourages
more use of Flash with a variety of back ends.
Miles
At 10:44 AM 1/26/2006, Mike Britton wrote:
It's the legal issue -- this implies risk where other options don't.
Personally I love AMFPHP and have never observed it blowing up; it's
far faster than ColdFusion remoting in my experience. Legal issues
aside, I'd go with it for enterprise-scale projects.
Mike
On 1/26/06, Simen Brekken <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >Hello Flashcoders,
> > >
> > >Question:
> > >What's your opinion and/or practice of using AMFPHP for client's
> > >project?
> > >
>
> AMFPHP is production ready (we run 20+ pretty big sites on it) but
there's no
> warranty that it won't blow up and you'll have someone to call when it
does.
>
> Regards,
> Simen Brekken
>
>
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>
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