ramblings on PHP, SQL, the web, politics, ultimate frisbee and what else is on in my life
[1] « 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 » [70]Doctrine coming along
Konsta recently formulated quite ambitious goals for the rest of the Google Summer of Code project. The goal is to have an 1.0.0 RC1 by August 31st. This would of course mark a significant milestone in the development of Doctrine, as this would finally give people the promise of a stable API to work with. Until then a number of things need to be done.
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Session clustering, who is online and replication lag
So I need to create a portal site, where we will require multiple frontends. As most portal's we need to store some state information inside a session. We also need to show how many users are online, but more importantly be able to filter searches in the member database by who is online (we do not need to filter by how long the last site interaction as been, but you never know with changing requirements).
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++ Peep-peep ++ Calling out to web hosters ++
A recent post by Rasmus really reminded me of something I have noticed often before, but never really done anything about. The fact that we do not seem to have any ISP's active inside the PHP community. This is kind of odd, considering that PHP seems to be driving the business of hosters quite a bit. Why have none of them decided that PHP is important enough for their business that its worthwhile to ensure that their interests are taken into account?
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The PHP4 dilemma!?
I think there is something wrong with Matt’s argument in that he overlooks the fact that we are talking about open source here. The developers of said applications are probably all among the people that have servers available. So if the decide to move on, its only a question of the hosters flipping the switch to increase the number of machines they deploy their PHP5 images on.
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Open source catalog
Optaros, the company I am working for, released an open source catalog which lists close to 300 so called "enterprise ready" OSS applications. I guess most of you reading my blog are not exactly in the target group as to me it mostly seems to be directed about people that lack deep networking into the various OSS communities. That being said I still think that it might be worth a look, even if its just to blog about how we totally got the rating on a specific piece of software totally wrong.
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