On Mon, Jul 10, 2006 at 04:21:02PM -0600, Jesse Stay wrote:
I'd love to pick it up, but the process may be a slow one - I've got 2
contractual things going on at the same time right now. Let me know what
you've got and I'd love to build a client for it.
The whole webservices thing is built
Justin R Findlay wrote:
On Fri, Jul 07, 2006 at 09:53:53AM -0600, Christopher Phillips wrote:
...
Copyright law is seriously b0rk. You have my sympathy for having to
regularly deal with it's insanely restrictive terms.
According to the New York Times, the verb to bork might be defined as to
The whole webservices thing is built on Gedcom.pm.It hasn't had a
proper release yet, but you can access my subversion repository athttp://pjcj.sytes.net/svn/Gedcom/It seems to work quite well for me,and a couple of other people have reported success, but it will no doubt
need some work when a
On Tue, Jul 11, 2006 at 06:30:16AM -0600, Steven H. McCown wrote:
Applying the definition of the word b0rk to Christopher's use of the word
regarding copyright, I would have to also agree that copyright is being
destroyed through a concerted attack on [its] character. I further agree
that
I think that using existing repositories is a great idea whenever possible, especially for any type of content that might have values to a bigger audience. However I think there is enough LDS themed content that a completely separate directory would be helpful in order to facilitate the setup of
Besides being only for code, sourceforge isn't a model of user
friendliness that you would expect Sunday school teachers will need
in a site.
I'm a proponent of using existing content repositories where possible
(not reinventing the wheel). The downside is that sites like
You might consider the new AJAX Framework that Google has released:
http://developers.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/05/17/127214http://developers.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/05/17/127214
Google released a new http://code.google.com/webtoolkitAJAX
framework based on Java. From Google's
On Monday 10 July 2006 10:04 am, Tom Welch wrote:
I've used Dia in the past for Linux. I've not used Umbrello but it
looks like it should do the trick just fine. Also, to model the data,
have you given MySQL Workbench
http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/workbench/1.0.html a try?
thanks - I will