FusionReactor - Development server

2012-04-14 Thread Bobby

I figured if anyone knew the answer to this (outside of FR Support), it
would be someone on this listŠ

I may have dreamed this because I can't find it again but I thought I read
that if you bought a FusionReactor enterprise license, you were also allowed
to install a second copy on a development server at no extra cost.

Does anyone know whether or not that is true?

Thanks





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RE: FusionReactor - Development server

2012-04-14 Thread andy matthews

Looks like you might have been dreaming:

http://www.fusion-reactor.com/fr/faq.cfm#licencing1

Each physical or virtual server requires one FusionReactor license - all of
the instances which are installed on that server are covered by the one
FusionReactor license. So, if you have (say) 6 physical boxes, then you need
6 licenses. Note, that on a single box you may have multiple instances
(ColdFusion, JRun, Tomcat, JBoss) installed on it, but you still only need 1
license for that (virtual or physical) server. Virtual Machines (VM's) are
also classed as separate physical servers and therefore require a license.


andy 

-Original Message-
From: Bobby [mailto:bo...@acoderslife.com] 
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 8:31 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: FusionReactor - Development server


I figured if anyone knew the answer to this (outside of FR Support), it
would be someone on this list©

I may have dreamed this because I can't find it again but I thought I read
that if you bought a FusionReactor enterprise license, you were also allowed
to install a second copy on a development server at no extra cost.

Does anyone know whether or not that is true?

Thanks







~|
Order the Adobe Coldfusion Anthology now!
http://www.amazon.com/Adobe-Coldfusion-Anthology/dp/1430272155/?tag=houseoffusion
Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-talk/message.cfm/messageid:350694
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Re: FusionReactor - Development server

2012-04-14 Thread Bobby

I saw that but it doesn't mention development. Their license does talk
about a development license but doesn't talk about cost in the license.

You ever have one of those dreams that seems s real? Apparently I have
:-)



On 4/14/12 10:23 AM, andy matthews li...@commadelimited.com wrote:


Looks like you might have been dreaming:

http://www.fusion-reactor.com/fr/faq.cfm#licencing1

Each physical or virtual server requires one FusionReactor license - all
of
the instances which are installed on that server are covered by the one
FusionReactor license. So, if you have (say) 6 physical boxes, then you
need
6 licenses. Note, that on a single box you may have multiple instances
(ColdFusion, JRun, Tomcat, JBoss) installed on it, but you still only
need 1
license for that (virtual or physical) server. Virtual Machines (VM's) are
also classed as separate physical servers and therefore require a license.


andy 

-Original Message-
From: Bobby [mailto:bo...@acoderslife.com]
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2012 8:31 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: FusionReactor - Development server


I figured if anyone knew the answer to this (outside of FR Support), it
would be someone on this list©

I may have dreamed this because I can't find it again but I thought I read
that if you bought a FusionReactor enterprise license, you were also
allowed
to install a second copy on a development server at no extra cost.

Does anyone know whether or not that is true?

Thanks









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Order the Adobe Coldfusion Anthology now!
http://www.amazon.com/Adobe-Coldfusion-Anthology/dp/1430272155/?tag=houseoffusion
Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-talk/message.cfm/messageid:350695
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TOT: Amazing interview with David Heinemeier Hansson creator of RoR

2012-04-14 Thread Gerald Guido

http://bigthink.com/ideas/21596

Very inspiring. Just swap out RoR with CF. The similarities are striking.

My favorite lines:

On the Web, there's no such thing.  It's an open standard.  As long as you
 can generate HTML, which is something that everybody has sort of agreed
 upon how it should be read, you can use whatever you damn please.


To me, at that point programming was just something I had to do to get
 programs.  It was sort of just a functional thing I unfortunately had to go
 through in order to realize the ideas that I had for programs.  For me,
 Ruby just changed that such that the act itself was pleasurable. And I
 think that's just a magic moment. * When you change over from not just
 being able to do the job to actually enjoying the job. That's just a huge
 difference. *  And I think that the product in the end also reflects
 that.


To me that is CF in a nutshell.

G!
-- 
Gerald Guido
http://www.myinternetisbroken.com


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Re: TOT: Amazing interview with David Heinemeier Hansson creator of RoR

2012-04-14 Thread Gerald Guido

Oh yeah, as a professional courtesy, he uses strong language that may may
be NSFW or for suitable for the gentle ears of young ones.

G!

On Sun, Apr 15, 2012 at 1:22 AM, Gerald Guido gerald.gu...@gmail.comwrote:

 http://bigthink.com/ideas/21596

 Very inspiring. Just swap out RoR with CF. The similarities are striking.

 My favorite lines:

 On the Web, there's no such thing.  It's an open standard.  As long as you
 can generate HTML, which is something that everybody has sort of agreed
 upon how it should be read, you can use whatever you damn please.


 To me, at that point programming was just something I had to do to get
 programs.  It was sort of just a functional thing I unfortunately had to go
 through in order to realize the ideas that I had for programs.  For me,
 Ruby just changed that such that the act itself was pleasurable. And I
 think that's just a magic moment. * When you change over from not just
 being able to do the job to actually enjoying the job. That's just a huge
 difference. *  And I think that the product in the end also reflects
 that.


 To me that is CF in a nutshell.

 G!
 --
 Gerald Guido
 http://www.myinternetisbroken.com





-- 
Gerald Guido
http://www.myinternetisbroken.com


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