This is a very good idea..., but, how do I use the xmlsocket facilities from OpenLaszlo?
Thanks you for your advice,
On 4/25/06, Mo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
hoi,
you might want to try out MINA, a java framework for network
applications, which is capable of supporting more than 10000 user
connections per server. combined with the xmlsocket facilities of the
flash player it might be exactly what you're looking for.
greetings
- mo
Fernando Germano wrote:
>So, the conclussion about "Persistant Connections" is that they are good but
>there is no hardware capable of support a massive site, am I right?
>I'll be very interesting to see what's the max quantity of users a simple
>server could handle (like the one that every hosting company has).
>
>And, if it is not practical to implement this mechanism, what would be the
>alternative?, maybe WebServices with some DB backend?
>
>On 4/24/06, Raju Bitter < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>>Hi Adam,
>>
>>Thanks for the response. Had a discussion on OpenBC.com (European
>>bussiness
>>network) in the last few days. A company asked me why they should use
>>OpenLaszlo if Flex licenses where so cheap. Well, a few posting and a few
>>days later I could convince them to consider switching from Flex to
>>OpenLaszlo. The question which came up there was if OpenLaszlo supported
>>server-side pushing of data. So I checked the documentation and the
>>mailing
>>list. Actually the information in the documentation doesn't really
>>encourage
>>developers to use that feature. Your reply made the whole thing a lot
>>clearer. Thanks!
>>
>>Besides that some prasing: The company using flex said they checked
>>OpenLaszlo a year ago. I told them how cool OpenLaszlo is and they took a
>>2nd look. The response was incredibly good: Word's fell like "After
>>rechecking OpenLaszlo now we are deeply impressed by the improvements" and
>>"We are about ready to uninstall Flex from our systems".
>>
>>If anyone is interested in following the discussion, here's the link:
>>(sorry, only in German)
>>
>>https://www.openbc.com/cgi-bin/forum.fpl?op=showarticles&id=1501616&articlei
>>d=1526650#1526650
>>
>>- Raju
>>
>>
>>-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
>>Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>>Gesendet: Montag, 24. April 2006 17:12
>>An: Raju Bitter
>>Cc: OpenLaszlo development and bug reporting
>>Betreff: Re: [Laszlo-dev] Persistent Connections
>>
>>We have had customers deploy applications using this feature. In these
>>cases
>>they used some pretty serious hardware and planned to never have more than
>>40 or 50 users online concurrently. The feature does work ok in
>>production;
>>the problem is that it scales horrendously.
>>
>>If you aren't stuck with port 80, then an alternative is to use the Flash
>>XML Socket (which actually also supports plain text transmission.) This
>>isn't officially supported within Laszlo right now, but it's likely to be
>>in
>>a future release.
>>
>> http://livedocs.macromedia.com/flash/mx2004/main_7_2/wwhelp/wwhimpl/common/h
>>tml/wwhelp.htm?context=Flash_MX_2004&file=00001089.html#wp71517
>>
>>A
>>
>>
>>_______________________________________________
>>Laszlo-dev mailing list
>>[email protected]
>>http://www.openlaszlo.org/mailman/listinfo/laszlo-dev
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
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