> Would it be an idea to setup an Zend 'linked in':
> http://www.linkedin.com/ account and join everyone who's interested
> up on this?
The Ajaxian plan seems to have been modeled off the MySpace "friends" model,
where with LinkedIn and other professional networks you /don't/ want to link
with peo
Chris,
Super. Regardless of whatever we adopt, with or without a CLA for the
three popular implementations (see link below), any of us can write some
quick tests for all three of these email verifiers, including testing
performance and memory usage.
Given the popularity of these three, usin
Would it be an idea to setup an Zend 'linked in':
http://www.linkedin.com/ account and join everyone who's interested up
on this?
The company i work for is often interested in finding people with the
right skillset for various projects, and were always open to buisness
opportunities too, and linke
Hi,I'm new to the Zend community, however I've been working with ZF for about two months now and quite love it.One other thing that is often done on other OS projects I hack on is for someone to put together a weekly development blog surmising what has been done and what changes have been made to t
As for all subscribing and registering as a
profile however, linked-in supports a 'groups' feature which would be a lot
more appropriate. Two groups, one for 'Zend Framework Contributors' and one for
'Zend Framework Users' might be cool for keeping up with stuff. The problem is
someone need
Hi AndriesJust wanted to say nice work on the new wiki-style docs - it's a lot more accessible with the collapsible folders.I have a request, but wasn't sure of how much work it would be to have tabs associated with the documentation. The default tab is what you have now, the middle could be the do
I wanted to oversimplfy it...
This is a mailing list for the Zend Framework and
not for job hiring, nor for making new contract or networking.
Anyone who is in need of that or wants this can
google for it...
When his company is in need for PHP'lers they
should announce in the right chann
I think thats oversimplifying it and slightly
ignorant.
Linked-in can be a useful non-email way to social
network and keep up with what people are doing. When its working, it can be an
excellent way to make new contacts. [I know I've personally landed several
contracts that I would not hav
It's just a job hiring...
They want you to do their work ;-)
And when you've done their work good you will get a
donut as reward ;-)
Greetings
Thomas
- Original Message -
From:
André Hoffmann
To: Chris Chabot
Cc: fw-general@lists.zend.com
Sent: Sunday, October 01, 20
I just threw a glance at it and I didn't seem to find informations on the purpose of this site. What exactly would the benefits be like, if we all registered?On 10/1/06,
Chris Chabot <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Would it be an idea to setup an Zend 'linked in':http://www.linkedin.com/ account and jo
Pavel Shevaev wrote:
Zend_Http_Server will (partly) allow you to
do this. Classes loaded before
the server starts listening will be available to all child processes
without
further loading/parsing. Classes loaded by the child processes
themselves
will be freed/loaded each t
I disagree. Having a consistent style allows you to ignore the formatting
and concentrate on the content of the code itself. Differing coding styles
are unnecessarily distracting. I used to code in the BSD style, but now I
prefer OTB. Whenever I update old code, though, I revert back to the
And on that note, it should probably specify that functions and variable
names are in English, even though it seems obvious.
-Matt
- Original Message -
From: "Steven" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Gavin Vess" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Zend Framework General"
Sent: Friday, September 29, 200
Gavin Vess wrote:
> http://www.nabble.com/forum/ViewPost.jtp?post=5512516&framed=y&skin=16154
>
> Still looking for a community volunteer to help contact the 3 authors
> above, and review their popular implementations.
I'll contact Cal. Assuming he agrees to sign the CLA, that should mean
that an
Would it be an idea to setup an Zend 'linked in':
http://www.linkedin.com/ account and join everyone who's interested up
on this?
The company i work for is often interested in finding people with the
right skillset for various projects, and were always open to buisness
opportunities too, and linke
Zend_Http_Server will (partly) allow you to do this. Classes loaded before
the server starts listening will be available to all child processes without
further loading/parsing. Classes loaded by the child processes themselves
will be freed/loaded each time.
I presume this is going to be a PHP
On 10/1/06, Stefan Koopmanschap <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 10/1/06, Pavel Shevaev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I think PHP applications could benefit of this approach as well and
> the question remains - is it possible?
I think the only way to really do this is to write php daemons. This is
Pavel Shevaev wrote:
These fat server processes with preloaded application
environment are
sitting in the memory waiting for requests to come and once they come
there's no IO penalty for loading Ruby code because it's already
loaded. The good thing is that since the server is written w
That's the point...
If I'm interested in the framework my first look is at the homepage.
And all I could find there is 0.1.5... a couple of months old.
At this point most of the people will loose their interest and search for
another framework.
Weekly builds will give interested homepage users
Hi Thomas and all,
I would also second this suggestion to make a weekly developer version
available for everybody who is interested to test it.
I noticed a couple of discussions in the last week from people thinking
that the Zend Framework is already dead before it started just because
the last v
On 10/1/06, Pavel Shevaev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I think PHP applications could benefit of this approach as well andthe question remains - is it possible?I think the only way to really do this is to write php daemons. This is possible, however, PHP is not the best language to do this in. What y
Well...
If there is a bug... the user should think of upgrading to the actual
developer release and see if the bug is fixed...
And if it's not already in our bug tracker he should write a new bug report.
Maybe we will get some bug's doubled... but I don't think this will be a big
problem for
Thomas Weidner schrieb:
1+ for this Idea!
and another think is that there will no reports about bugs already fixed
2 month ago (where 1.5 released)
Hy Frameworker,
I've just talked with Andries in our channel.
We found that today it's a massive problem with response from the
community.
All
Pavel Shevaev schrieb:
The question is how to preload some PHP code *before* any request
processing happens.
[...]
I think PHP applications could benefit of this approach as well and
the question remains - is it possible?
I read once that it is impossible with the way php works, but I dont
rem
Hy Frameworker,
I've just talked with Andries in our
channel.
We found that today it's a massive problem with
response from the community.
All bugfixes and new classes should be tested and
used before we release them.
But as no one knows they exists, and others
can't handle SVN this is a
On 9/30/06, Craig Webster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 30 Sep 2006, at 07:58, Pavel Shevaev wrote:
> I wonder if it's possible to have something similar for Zend
> Framework(and other PHP applications) as well.
PHP can use FastCGI as well. Here's an example of PHP/Lighty/FCGI:
http://trac.li
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