On Aug 14, 2008, at 12:00 PM, Mark Armendariz wrote:
digitalUs - The installation had p5 strict issues (un-initialized vars
throwing notices, which could be easily caught with __get methods -
also some method signature differences. once fixed (and @'d), ran
fairly well).
typo3 - only required
On Aug 14, 2008, at 12:42 , Ajai Khattri wrote:
On Thu, 14 Aug 2008, Mark Armendariz wrote:
I've been hoping to find a branch, at least, for strict p5 support.
It seems Cake 2.0 is headed in that direction.
I should also point out that symfony has always been pure PHP5 from
day
one (symf
On Thu, 14 Aug 2008, Mark Armendariz wrote:
> I've been hoping to find a branch, at least, for strict p5 support.
> It seems Cake 2.0 is headed in that direction.
I should also point out that symfony has always been pure PHP5 from day
one (symfony-project.com).
> If I had the time to keep a blo
On Thursday 14 August 2008 10:25, you wrote:
> Well, that may be good for corporations, but regular people usually don't
> change their residence permanently just lower their tax burden.
Usually not, but there is an effect - especially among those who can afford to
move, which are exactly they o
On Wed, Aug 13, 2008 at 1:26 PM, Mark Armendariz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Can anyone recommend an open source CMS (or possibly commercial if
> worthwhile) that works natively on php5 (e_strict)and MySQL 5
> (strict).
Unfortunately most webhosts and end users are still reluctant to
commit fully
On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 10:31 AM, bzcoder <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Mark Armendariz wrote:
>>
>> Can anyone recommend an open source CMS (or possibly commercial if
>> worthwhile) that works natively on php5 (e_strict)and MySQL 5
>> (strict).
>
> I think you will run into problems as most popular
At 10:25 AM -0400 8/14/08, David Krings wrote:
Wow, another innocent developer question entirely derailed just due
to my doing. Sorry about that.
David
David:
Yes, but derailed for a good purpose. :-)
Unfortunately, while we have the freedom/right to say whatever we
want about our US gover
I was wondering if anyone else has been using FirePHP? I find it great
for inherited websites where I need to troubleshoot problems on live
servers, as I can have all the debug/variable dump/etc crap dump to the
FirePHP console so it doesn't show up on the website while I'm trying to
track dow
Mark Armendariz wrote:
Can anyone recommend an open source CMS (or possibly commercial if
worthwhile) that works natively on php5 (e_strict)and MySQL 5
(strict).
I think you will run into problems as most popular CMS creators, Open
Source or Commercial, are unwilling to tell the majority of t
sbeam wrote:
That's why a messy union of loosely federated states is preferable to a single
central government. State competition is sometimes bad for the environment
etc., but it has its benefits. If there was your 10% national sales tax
(which would, at least, be Constitutional, as opposed
Or you could just build your own specifically to suit your needs and
workflow using CakePHP :-)
-- Mitch
On Wed, Aug 13, 2008 at 10:22 PM, Néstor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Mark et all,
>
> I am trying to use drupal 5 and I am reading the documentation and tutorails
> and I still not able to
On Thursday 14 August 2008 07:18, David Krings wrote:
> CT?? I moved from CT to NY and stuff is way cheaper here. Gas is cheaper,
> food is cheaper, and especially beer is cheaper...and sold on sundays...and
> sold in pharmacies (very convenient when picking up the liver pills).
May be cheaper at
At 9:06 PM -0400 8/13/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm no tax accountant either, but it seems to me that the location of your
dropshipper is irrelevant. He is not the one selling the product to your
customer. He is selling it to you. And you don't have to pay sales tax
to him because you shoul
sbeam wrote:
such is the genius of the NY legislature - business has left the state, and
residents have one more reason to move to NJ, CT or VT (or NH, in my case :).
By increasing tax revenue they decreased it. They are apparently hoping 49
CT?? I moved from CT to NY and stuff is way cheaper
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm no tax accountant either, but it seems to me that the location of your
dropshipper is irrelevant. He is not the one selling the product to your
customer. He is selling it to you. And you don't have to pay sales tax
to him because you should have a state resale cert
(Margaret) Michele Waldman wrote:
That's crazy. If the store is in NJ, it should pay NJ taxes. That's where
the product is being sold and shipped from.
You would definitely need a cron job to keep track of the changing sales
taxes.
There are varying approaches and they idffer from state to s
bzcoder wrote:
Jerry B. Altzman wrote:
As far as I can tell, NY is making any "large" retailer ANYWHERE
nowadays collect and submit sales tax to NYS on your behalf. vis.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/02/nyregion/02amazon.html
Bad example, Amazon has a distribution center in Queens. I thi
Jerry B. Altzman wrote:
As far as I can tell, NY is making any "large" retailer ANYWHERE
nowadays collect and submit sales tax to NYS on your behalf. vis.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/02/nyregion/02amazon.html
Bad example, Amazon has a distribution center in Queens. I think their
arguem
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