My one thing to say on this is u2 does not = green screen - i have not
written a green screen app for many many years - but i still use u2 and
other DB's extensively.

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of phil walker
Sent: 01 February 2011 19:34
To: U2 Users List
Subject: Re: [U2] What do you do with CallHTTP?

 

This is starting to go off on a tangent. But we seem to have this
discussion on a regular basis.

The way I see it is this:

As an end-user of an application you should not or do not care what
backend system is used. So after application capability, a match with
the existing environment or cost of ownership is going to be the driving
force behind your decision.

As a developer of the application in the modern world you are going to
stay with what you know. Unfortunately, if you stay on Green Screen you
are probably going to not pick up new customers and will slowly lose
existing ones. So you have a choice, carry on banging on about how U2 is
so great, (who really cares apart from some of us), or look at
modernising your application. I would pick the latter, and I would do it
in such a way that my new application architecture would enable to pick
a chose different technologies at the different layers (including DBMS)
going forward. The match of the application functionality to the
business requirements is what is going to sell it, not the fact that it
runs on DBMS x or y.

By using something like Microsoft SQL and its various versions, I can
develop something and then scale it up as my user count
increases.....also all the tools that I am using are fully integrated
with it already without having to buy 3rd party addons....

My 2c....



> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:u2-users-
> [email protected]] On Behalf Of Symeon Breen
> Sent: Wednesday, 2 February 2011 8:15 a.m.
> To: 'U2 Users List'
> Subject: Re: [U2] What do you do with CallHTTP?
>
> I find the whole licencing issue a real pain.
>
>
>
> Compare to sql server - express edition for free comes with 100 pooled
> connections as default - ok there is a max DB size
>
>
>
> I can then progress to a server licence - again any number of
connection
> pools.
>
>
>
> Connection pools on unidata i get about 5 for the same kind of money
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> From: [email protected]
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David
> Wolverton
> Sent: 01 February 2011 17:58
> To: 'U2 Users List'
> Subject: Re: [U2] What do you do with CallHTTP?
>
>
>
> @George - you're probably right -- I found the doc on that link was
dated Feb
> / Mar of 2010 -- that was well into Rocket-realm, but perhaps they
just 'wrote
> up' the logic IBM used to make the change. And yes -- it appears the
any
> 'socket' sets iPhantoms. The problem is that the logic does not
address
> specifically the uses that could be 'abused' - but rather ALL uses.
>
> @Jeff / Symeon - That I can see, you don't 'consume' a 'purchased'
seat
> running a phantom UNTIL you do a anything 'socket' - even if that
Socket Use
> has the same use as a 'disk read'. As for use of cURL, WGet, etc -
these are
> examples of the issue as I see it. Those are still an option to do
exactly what
> we could do BEFORE this rule went into play, and we can still do those
even
> now without a license 'ding'.
>
> To me, that's the core of this issue: the change didn't 'fix' anything
except to
> create a barrier to adopting the Rocket-provided toolsets since
CallHTTP can
> no longer work in a Phantom without 'expense' to the customer.
> I mean, they spent the time and money to develop CallHTTP, but now I
can
> never use it again -- and sounds like a great number of people never
used it
> or already 'jumped ship' as well. And are still doing EXACTLY what the
change
> was designed to prevent!  So what good was the 'effort' and 'hassle'
> for the change?? Did they really pick up additional revenue?? Or just
make
> people find 'non-U2' solutions??
>
> So - As I see it, there was a logic error in the decision made by IBM,
> continued by Rocket. I (probably crazily) hope that they will revisit
the issue
> for CallHTTP.  But from comments posted here, appears no one else is
> "impacted" by the Phantom license change. I am guessing people either
just
> silently re-wrote their code to 'skip over' CallHTTP rather than
complain, or
> had never adopted CallHTTP in the first place (used cURL/wGet before
> CallHTTP existed and never moved.) - So I will just work around it as
> everyone else did since it is not a 'group issue' worth pushing.
>
> Now, if they ever hamper the ability to run cURL/wGet, I guessing
there will
> be the massive outcry that didn't happen over this issue! LOL!
>
> Have to get started -- Sadly, no one is going to pay me to fix this.
And I write
> enough issues on my own without someone else creating issues for me!
> So...  Goodbye CallHTTP -- Hellllo cURL!
>
> DW
>
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