On Tuesday 09 February 2010 15:12:21 Brice Leroy wrote: 
> Would you eat some food not cook by a professional ?
> 

I would be very wary of a person who hasn't cooked before... The difference is 
in experience. 

> > Because you can, doesn't mean that you should...
> >
> > It's this type of mentality that leads to security holes and bad web apps
> > that hurt server performance and many different things...
> 
> Not everybody needs to run facebook.
> Your approach seams to be "if it's not perfect it should not be used".
> Don't you think it's a little to extreme ?
> 

No, I may lose a bit of perspective because I don't think in terms of the 
layman, but at the same time I'm not about to get into something unless I know 
enough about it first and if that means taking classes at community college... 
That's what I do. 

I'm more against something like my mom putting together a website because she 
won't do the neccessary homework first. I think that without knowledge of what 
you're doing, you're doomed to fail. If webservers were either all VPS's with 
limits monitored by the host os or dedicated servers for each site, then I 
wouldn't say much on this, but virtual hosting is another story, where you 
have the potential to hurt others.  This is the main problem here is that we 
think in terms of how it affects ourselves only.  what about others?

> > A bad django app made this way can hurt django's reputation.
> 
> That's pretty severe.
> 

Maybe, but public opinion is easily swayed and django is still fighting 
against other more popular systems.

Mike

-- 
Big M, Little M, many mumbling mice
Are making midnight music in the moonlight,
Mighty nice!

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed message part.

Reply via email to