Bravo! If I can speak for others, we are amazed at the resiliency of the Laszlo framework and it's continued relevancy. I discovered it in 2006 as a way to make applications without cross platform headaches and have recommended it to everyone I've met along the way since. I'd say "May I live to see the 100,000th" but i believe it will take much less then that to keep Laszlo working great. Carry on!
James Robey Laszlo Enthusiast, Denver, Colorado On Jul 15, 2011, at 1:30 PM, Amy Muntz wrote: > It seems that somewhere we should mark the event of the 10,000th JIRA issue > being filed yesterday. That's a lot of issues, a lot of new features, and a > lot of improvements. It also represents a lot of fixes, contributions, and > hard work. What a ride! > > I still remember when we moved to JIRA in 2005. We were just getting ready > to release OpenLaszlo 3.0. In fact, we were doing our second and final beta > release in advance of OpenLaszlo 3.0. The very first JIRA task we filed was > to implement dynamic libraries (http://jira.openlaszlo.org/jira/browse/LPP-1), > followed by the implementation of SOLO mode ( > http://jira.openlaszlo.org/jira/browse/LPP-2) or serverless deployment as we > called it back then. We've come so far! > >> From then until now, over 6 years have passed and OpenLaszlo has been > fortunate to have the expertise and contributions of so many talented > developers and contributors. To all of you out there that have supported > OpenLaszlo and come along for the ride - thank you! > > And now, it's onward to HTML5... and another 10,000. > > Best, > Amy
