Ok I will look at that, but can I have a yahoo pipe originate from my domain?
On May 31, 2010 1:26 PM, "Gary Mort" <garyam...@gmail.com> wrote: > You might want to take a look at Yahoo Pipes. Instead of defining an > interface yourself, you can create a yahoo pipe for your current processes, > and then access the pipe programatically using any one of a number of > classes already built for pulling from yahoo pipes. > > On Sun, May 30, 2010 at 8:57 PM, Justin Dearing <zippy1...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hi, >> >> I've recently started working at an ad firm, and as such have been exposed >> to facebook development. One thing I discovered about facebook is there >> proxy for making cross domain ajax calls. Basically, the call is made server >> side, and the json or XML that is returned is returned through the proxy, >> which solves the cross domain issue. >> >> Anyway, I often have to make such proxies for the sites we do, for various >> reasons. My proxies are generally of the one off type, but a "one size fits >> all" approach such as facebook's would be nice. So I have two questions: >> >> >> >> 1. Is there a facebook like proxy for ajax calls that already exists? >> 2. The guy that gave the hiphip talk said "we don't open source more >> stuff because we don't know what people find useful" So does anyone know the >> right channel to make such a request. >> >> Justin >> >> _______________________________________________ >> New York PHP Users Group Community Talk Mailing List >> http://lists.nyphp.org/mailman/listinfo/talk >> >> http://www.nyphp.org/Show-Participation >> > > > > -- > ---- > Hudson Valley Sudbury School > What GPL is for application users > Our school is for students > Help your children grow, change, and learn > Let your child direct, control, amend > Check out http://www.sudburyschool.org
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