Gary Thornock wrote: > That means, though, that you require the user to have a web > server installed on his computer (either because your installer > put it there, or because he already had one). This brings me > back to a comment I made several days ago: sure, I *can* install > a LAMP application on my Powerbook, but I don't think it's > reasonable to require every user of the system to do so.
I don't think so either, and that's why I'm not suggesting LAMP. I'm suggesting what you said later: > - Programs that include their own custom HTTP servers We don't even have to build the HTTP server, since dozens of Free custom HTTP servers already exist. All the program has to do is open a listening port and respond to HTTP requests. HTTP servers can be really, really simple when you don't care about advanced HTTP capabilities. Shane _______________________________________________ Ldsoss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ldsoss.org/mailman/listinfo/ldsoss
