Heaven Sakes no What I am saying , is if you want to open up the mod_perl market you have to look at why people are not moving to mod_perl
This is a valid reason for not coming over to the mod_perl ranks, because some people don't see mod_perl as being faster/better than c apps What I am saying is that, as a marketer trying to help mod_perl, you would take these reasons for not using mod_perl and you try to find a way to let people know/ understand that , say in this instance, mod_perl is comparable with c speeds , or whatever The point is to listen to the reasons people give for why they choose (or choose not to) go with mod _perl and try and use that to help educate the market > -----Original Message----- > From: Frank Wiles [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: November 30, 2004 11:39 AM > To: Clayton Cottingham > Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: mod_perl marketing > > On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 11:34:31 -0800 > "Clayton Cottingham" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > What ever the case it's a valid position for not approaching perl, > > from a marketters POV > > So C is the only language that is acceptable to marketters? Is > that what you are saying? > > --------------------------------- > Frank Wiles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > http://www.wiles.org > --------------------------------- > > > -- > Report problems: http://perl.apache.org/bugs/ Mail list info: > http://perl.apache.org/maillist/modperl.html > List etiquette: http://perl.apache.org/maillist/email-etiquette.html > > -- Report problems: http://perl.apache.org/bugs/ Mail list info: http://perl.apache.org/maillist/modperl.html List etiquette: http://perl.apache.org/maillist/email-etiquette.html