Carl J. Van Arsdall wrote:
> Hey everyone, another question for the list. In particular i'm looking
> for comments on some of the distributed technologies supported in
> python. Specifically, I'm looking at XML-RPC, RPyC, CORBA, and Twisted.
>
> Before you offer any comments let me talk about wh
Piet> Python Web services developer: Messaging technologies compared
Piet> http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/library/ws-pyth9/
Note a couple things. One, the article is four years old. You can't assume
the various technologies have remained static since then. Two, the authors
apparentl
> "Carl J. Van Arsdall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (CJVA) wrote:
>CJVA> Hey everyone, another question for the list. In particular i'm
>CJVA> looking for comments on some of the distributed technologies
>CJVA> supported in python. Specifically, I'm looking at XML-RPC, RPyC,
>CJVA> CORBA, and Twisted.
Paul McGuire wrote:
>>
>
> What you describe sounds very much like pyro, which should probably be added
> to your list.
>
Pyro looks nothing short of amazing. I will definitely spend some time
studying this technology as well. Does anyone here use pyro or any of
the other technologies e
"Carl J. Van Arsdall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Hey everyone, another question for the list. In particular i'm looking
> for comments on some of the distributed technologies supported in
> python. Specifically, I'm looking at XML-RPC, RPyC, CORBA, and Twisted.
Hey everyone, another question for the list. In particular i'm looking
for comments on some of the distributed technologies supported in
python. Specifically, I'm looking at XML-RPC, RPyC, CORBA, and Twisted.
Before you offer any comments let me talk about what i'm doing a little
bit. Right