Jacqueline, let me take a precise example.. i'took a license for sygodact. It's an "old" CGI stack. So I had to install an "old" runrev engine in the CGI folder. It would be simpler if the new on-rev engine accepted stacks like the old one :
- It would make it easier for you to promote Zygodact. It would allow revIgniter to sell his what seems (not yet digged into it enough) great framework. And Andre Garzia to promote a nice tutorial about the basic of CMS. And thus creating a kind of market because others might like/want to produce nice tools... that would in the end make it easier for the whole lot to produce more things. I do beleive that sharing things here and there and "selling" libraries at a reasonnable "friendly" price is a great benefit for all of us potentially. - Lastly, if I go and see a potential client, and promote the on-rev server technology offering to build their site. I'd rather leave on their server my work as a protected stack rather than a bunch of .irev files, with which I'm happy on my personnal on-rev sand box server. Until then on-rev will only be useful for developpers themselves or their hosted clients sites. It smells a little bit "closed shop". I personnaly would hesitate as a client to be locked in 100%. Unless you present it no more as site building and hosting but as a "communication on the web service" like Rodéo.. ! But I beleive that there is a nice intermediate niche of CMS sites to be really adapted to users but more efficiently with on-rev xtalk. And for that having irev-cgi stacks running on on-rev servers would be, for me, the starter sign! -- View this message in context: http://runtime-revolution.278305.n4.nabble.com/Thoughts-on-Kevin-s-announcement-tp2172675p2216388.html Sent from the Revolution - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
