On 08/03/07, Robert Landrum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
As far as coding is concerned, CPAN has proved to be the most valuable
resource. In writing in other languages, I often find myself having to
search hi-and-low for source, libraries, or documentation on how to do
common, trivial things... T
Martin Moss wrote:
Many thanks to you all for your posts, Much food for
thought... ultimately the decision is out of my hands,
which is why I'm looking for useful perl based
alternatives to propose to the powers that be.
My favorite perl based alternative is HTML::Mason. Simple, fast, and
goo
> To be fair to Zend... you should checkout their
> products, as it's not just about the support, but the
> fact that they have a whole integrated developer
> studio and deployment mechanism... And many other
> whistles and Bells...
I'm sure that's true. if that's appealing to you and you'd like
Many thanks to you all for your posts, Much food for
thought... ultimately the decision is out of my hands,
which is why I'm looking for useful perl based
alternatives to propose to the powers that be.
To be fair to Zend... you should checkout their
products, as it's not just about the support, bu
Martin Moss wrote:
I just had a demo of the Zend Platform and framework
for php.
It's got some really nice stuff, but ultimately the
reason we may decide to ditch perl and move to php
(h I know booo) will be down to support. OR
lackthereof for Perl...
I've been writing perl for 10 years no
If you are looking for a commercially supported modperl distribution
for 1.3/2.0/2.2, and you happen to fall into one of Windows Server,
Linux x86, Solaris x86 or sparc, hpux parisc2 or aix ppc/power you might
want to investigate http://www.covalent.net/solutions/ers/index.html
[Disclaimer: I'm the
On Mar 8, 2007, at 12:33 PM, Chris Shiflett wrote:
That's why Yahoo, Wikipedia, Flickr, Digg, and others don't use Zend
products. They like the buggy and insecure PHP. Or, maybe you don't
know
what you're talking about. I can't decide.
aren't yahoo and flickr still using the zend encoder
Chris Shiflett wrote:
Zend makes their money by releasing a better version of PHP
that is less buggy and has less security issues.
That's why Yahoo, Wikipedia, Flickr, Digg, and others don't use Zend
products. They like the buggy and insecure PHP. Or, maybe you don't know
what you're talking
Jonathan Vanasco wrote:
> A lot of the issues that Zend address in their products are
> fixing up the general release of PHP which is filled with
> security issues and configuration problems.
Care to back that up?
> Zend makes their money by releasing a better version of PHP
> that is less buggy
On 3/8/07, Martin Moss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Is there
an equivalent PERL based commercial entity who will
provide support for a medium sized web outfit?
There are places to buy Perl support. In addition to ActiveState,
Stonehenge Consulting spring to mind.
- Perrin
Martin Moss wrote:
I just had a demo of the Zend Platform and framework
for php.
It's got some really nice stuff, but ultimately the
reason we may decide to ditch perl and move to php
(h I know booo) will be down to support. OR
lackthereof for Perl...
So my question is, given I'm not a php
On Mar 8, 2007, at 10:38 AM, Martin Moss wrote:
I just had a demo of the Zend Platform and framework
for php.
It's got some really nice stuff, but ultimately the
reason we may decide to ditch perl and move to php
(h I know booo) will be down to support. OR
lackthereof for Perl...
So my que
On Thursday 08 March 2007 09:38, Martin Moss wrote:
> I just had a demo of the Zend Platform and framework
> for php.
> It's got some really nice stuff, but ultimately the
> reason we may decide to ditch perl and move to php
> (h I know booo) will be down to support. OR
> lackthereof for Perl..
I just had a demo of the Zend Platform and framework
for php.
It's got some really nice stuff, but ultimately the
reason we may decide to ditch perl and move to php
(h I know booo) will be down to support. OR
lackthereof for Perl...
So my question is, given I'm not a php fan, Is there
an equiv
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