On Friday 10 Apr 2009, Rick Mason wrote:
I suspect it will happen and it will be one of the open source distros.
The next Ubuntu should, for instance.
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Helping to simultaneously visualize functionalities as part of the IT team of
the year, '09 and '08
Tom Chiverton
Developer
Tel: +44
How long til we get CFML on there?
http://jeffgladnick.instantspot.com/blog
FWIW there's been a discussion on the Open BlueDragon list about running a
modified version of OpenBD on the Google App Engine for Java.
Adam,
That's terrific news if Vince succeeds. Pete Freitag just posted to his
blog this morning about his attempts to get it working.
http://www.petefreitag.com/item/697.cfm
I think now it's just a question of when.
Rick
On Sat, Apr 11, 2009 at 10:31 PM, Adam Haskell a.hask...@gmail.com
http://groups.google.com/group/openbd/browse_thread/thread/a9da36320b64d5d6
:-D
That being said it's worth mentioning that without large amounts of
re-engineering Railo and ColdFusion will have a harder time running in the
AppEngine mostly due to how they compile CFML.
Adam
On Fri, Apr 10,
I suspect it will happen and it will be one of the open source distros. Not
certain that it will require any effort on Google's part to make it happen.
I've experimented with AWS but competition is a good thing.
Rick
On Wed, Apr 8, 2009 at 8:33 PM, Dave Watts dwa...@figleaf.com wrote:
I suspect it will happen and it will be one of the open source distros. Not
certain that it will require any effort on Google's part to make it happen.
Google App Engine supports only the languages that Google chooses to
support. It isn't a virtualized environment the way that Amazon EC2
is.
That said, with Java (or more properly, the JVM) being support, any
Java application that follows the AppEngine rules can run on
AppEngine. Out of the box, I doubt any of the CFML engines follow the
AppEngine rules, but making that the case is a job for the CFML engine
vendor, not Google.
I think that it's interesting on several fronts. Not everyone who wants to
show everyone else what they're working on can afford their own VPS. Not to
mention the advantage to entrepreneurs to try out ideas without investing
anything but their time.
The advantage of never having to worry about
From: Barney Boisvert bboisv...@gmail.com
Out of the box, I doubt any of the CFML engines follow the AppEngine
rules,
While I think it would be cool to run CFML on Google's App engine, I think
one of the major hurdles would be files system access. Log files, temp
directories, and even
On Wednesday 08 Apr 2009, Jeff Gladnick wrote:
How long til we get CFML on there?
Isn't BroadChoice Workspace running on AWS ? So not long ?
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Helping to continuously target eligible real-time high-yield materials as part
of the IT team of the year, '09 and '08
Tom Chiverton
Developer
How long til we get CFML on there?
http://jeffgladnick.instantspot.com/blog
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How long til we get CFML on there?
Donno.
But both the Aptana cloud and Stax.net offer Java cloud hosting. Stax even
mentions Adobe CF by name. http://www.stax.net/index.jsp
I read a blog this week about someone getting Railo working on Aptana. IIRC
They had issues with Railo running within
How long til we get CFML on there?
My guess - and as a Google App Engine developer and Google Enterprise
partner, I like to think it's an educated guess - is never. There are
a couple of reasons for this. First, it's largely proprietary. Second,
it's not used by Google itself for anything else,
Yeah, what Dave said.
Cloud Computing is truly fascinating. It really captures my imagination. I
watch it with a keen interest. And as Dave said Amazon is a big player. BTW
There are Amazon VMs for both Railo and Open BD. You can build a monster
server farm in a matter of minutes.
G!
On Wed,
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