On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 17:49, Jenna Fox wrote:
> I think the trouble with streaming over the rack interface is that it's
> confusing. I'm fairly good at ruby, but I'm not entirely sure how it would
> even work. I guess I need to run my app in a threaded web server, running
> every request in it's
Not to forget Perl (who would have thought that?) which currently
has the best web framework I've ever seen: http://mojolicio.us/
I would have thought it - my sometimes co-developer opened my eyes to
Titanium:
http://mark.stosberg.com/blog/2008/12/titanium-a-new-release-and-more.html
and no
I think the trouble with streaming over the rack interface is that it's
confusing. I'm fairly good at ruby, but I'm not entirely sure how it would even
work. I guess I need to run my app in a threaded web server, running every
request in it's own thread? Then inside the each iterator in the resp
# Sorry for ranting a little
all very interesting
# even the unabridged code is far from readable
# I think my attraction as a novice to Camping was for its clarity
these two things are inconsistent? but this brings it around:
# I'm being incoherent
# quickly I ended up using models in my apps t
On Wed, Apr 18, 2012 at 15:07, Daniel Bryan wrote:
> Thought I'd weigh in for what it's worth,
Thanks, I find it very interesting.
> My naive first impression of Camping basically took no notice of the whole
> 3/4k thing. I appreciate that it's a cool programming feat, and I love the
> attitude
Daniel - that's a great reply and echoes much of my own experience
(although my Camping is much more on the tinkering side). The point
about Camping being an educational tool is a good one, which I've even
tried to apply to students (unsuccessfully - but that's my problem),
and it would be
Woah.
Okay! I'm convinced! Lets make Rails 4.0!
—
Jenna
On Wednesday, 18 April 2012 at 11:45 PM, Matthias Wächter wrote:
> Am 13.04.2012 17:40, schrieb Jenna Fox:
> > An A4 piece of paper has a little over 9kb of data storage if storing in
> > binary at 300dpi
> >
>
>
> A4 is about 2
Am 13.04.2012 17:40, schrieb Jenna Fox:
An A4 piece of paper has a little over 9kb of data storage if storing in
binary at 300dpi
A4 is about 21*30 cm², i.e. 630 cm² or 97.65 sqin. 300 dpi means 90,000
dpsqin or about 8.788 MdpA4. Without accounting for encoding,
redundancy, synchronization e
Thought I'd weigh in for what it's worth,
My naive first impression of Camping basically took no notice of the whole
3/4k thing. I appreciate that it's a cool programming feat, and I love the
attitude that lead to it, but at the time my focus was on trying to figure
out what all these hidden insta
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