MilesTogoe wrote:
> Except that the language is Ruby and the framework is Rails.

Whoops. Good catch.

> Also under
> Python, the 2 most popular frameworks are Django and Turbogears (vers 2
> includes Pylons).  I just like webpy since it's very lite, like
> codeigniter.

Cool, added to my list.

> Also Smalltalk is certainly not strange to most
> programmers and some of the top programmers have talked about Seaside as
> interesting - do a google.

I first heard about seaside on FLOSS Weekly. (twit.tv) I was saying
strange in the sense that no other web stack I know of behaves anything
like how it does. Saving someone's session as a virtual machine isn't
the usual way of doing it. Cool, but not common.

> One other note - as a company you want a framework that has an strong,
> active community (something that will last and be improved) and of
> course clearly documented open source so if it does cease or is
> replaced, you still have access to the version code all your IT is based
> on.   ie Kohana might be a great framework but at the moment I've never
> seen it mentioned on any planet and I would never base an important IT
> project on something little mentioned or risky.

Good stuff. I decided to look into Cake yesterday and it isn't quite so
intimidating after going through the blog tutorial. (Still fairly new to
object oriented programming also.)

Frameworks

PHP
    Cake
    Zend Framework
    Symfony
    CodeIgniter
    Qcodo
    PHP on Trax
    Kohana

Python
    Django
    Turbogears
    WebPy

Ruby
    Rails

Smalltalk
    Seaside

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