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In his biographical sketch DHH says he's a product of Danish design, and some of those Western European countries are known for their liberal language. In one of the presentations at the Rails site, DHH responded to complaints about some things that were left out of the project management application at 37Signals, which are normally found in project management applications, by saying something to the effect "maybe we need to be more clear about the design... we didn't want to include those types of features". He evidently came up with an abbreviated expression to answer such concerns. Regarding the security flaw, would the following help? http://tinyurl.com/mfz5y It's not quite clear to me where Rails fits. Should it be trusted for a mission critical application? A high volume store front? Large scale application development? Those are good questions. If you're a technician doing biological research and working with a team, recording and analyzing test results in a database, would it be better to hand the team a Citrix connection and an MS Access database, or use Rails and MySQL? Nathan. ----- Original Message ---- From: Joe Pluta <joepluta@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: Web Enabling the AS400 / iSeries <web400@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Wednesday, August 16, 2006 6:28:57 PM Subject: Re: [WEB400] Ruby On Rails on the iSeries
From: Nathan Andelin People are beginning to wonder if Rails will throw J2EE and .aspx development on their respective ears. I agree that's pretty imaginative. How could a few young programmers, collaborating in an open-source environment, challenge some of the most powerful corporations on earth?
Before actually beatifying the language you might want to take the time to read about the security flaw of August 6th, and how the Ruby clique handled it. This will also introduce you to the inventor of Ruby, the infamous "DHH" (an example: http://tinyurl.com/nfgxd). Or read his blog (http://www.loudthinking.com/). Then tell me you plan to run your mission critical systems on a tool that depends on this guy. Joe
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