Florian,
I just discovered your earlier post.
In your scenario it in fact makes a lot of sense to me that you use
CouchDB's replication to push documents to the server and get them from
possibly other servers. You can do replication on a per document basis
or as far as I know even use a filter function.
Mirko
On 12/10/10 10:53 AM, Nils Breunese wrote:
Florian Leitner wrote:
As I never used node.js, I gave it a look just now - and found
something rather worrying with respect to my needs: node.js does not
support Windows (natively, only via Cygwin), and after checking their
mailing list, it seems the developers behind node.js are not planning
any support for it, either - and not even much for their "Cygwin
port". So, essentially, a LivelyCouch app can only run on Mac and
Linux, right? (Not that I like or even support Windoze, but I assume
many users of a desktop-based application using CouchDB will...)
I haven't looked into LivelyCouch, but AFAIK node.js is a server-side thing, so
I guess app end users can run whatever OS they like. If LivelyCouch is about
using node.js on the client side of things, then I might be wrong. :o)
Nils.
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