Congrats everyone! Does this mean we can expect an Ubuntu package distro sometime in the near future? :)
Cory On Wed, Jul 14, 2010 at 9:21 AM, Simon Metson <[email protected]> wrote: > +1 - w00t! > > On 14 Jul 2010, at 14:05, Niket Patel wrote: > >> Big milestone, congratulations everyone. >> >> On 14-Jul-2010, at 6:30 PM, Jan Lehnardt <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> OMG PARTY! >>> >>> My sincere thanks to everyone! >>> >>> Cheers >>> Jan >>> -- >>> >>> >>> On 14 Jul 2010, at 14:57, Noah Slater wrote: >>> >>>> Hello, >>>> >>>> Apache CouchDB 1.0.0 has been released and is available for download: >>>> >>>> http://couchdb.apache.org/downloads.html >>>> >>>> This is a huge milestone for the CouchDB community, and we'd like to >>>> thank every single person who's helped us get this far. This project would >>>> be nothing without its community, and we are fortunate enough to be blessed >>>> with a very healthy one. >>>> >>>> Changes in this release: >>>> >>>> * More efficient header commits. >>>> * Use O_APPEND to save lseeks. >>>> * Faster implementation of pread_iolist(). Further improves performance >>>> on >>>> concurrent reads. >>>> * Added authentication caching >>>> * Faster default view collation. >>>> * Added option to include update_seq in view responses. >>>> >>>> This builds on the changes made in 0.11.1, also released today. >>>> >>>> Apache CouchDB is a document-oriented database that can be queried and >>>> indexed in a MapReduce fashion using JavaScript. CouchDB also offers >>>> incremental replication with bi-directional conflict detection and >>>> resolution. >>>> >>>> CouchDB provides a RESTful JSON API than can be accessed from any >>>> environment that allows HTTP requests. There are myriad third-party client >>>> libraries that make this even easier from your programming language of >>>> choice. CouchDB’s built in Web administration console speaks directly to >>>> the >>>> database using HTTP requests issued from your browser. >>>> >>>> CouchDB is written in Erlang, a robust functional programming language >>>> ideal for building concurrent distributed systems. Erlang allows for a >>>> flexible design that is easily scalable and readily extensible. >>>> >>>> Relax and prosper, >>>> >>>> N >>> > >
