On Tue, 2007-12-18 at 15:12 -0500, Sam Berlin wrote:
> No problem.
>
> LimeWire uses HttpCore & HttpNIO to power all of its uploads (and
> hopefully soon, all of its downloads). HttpComponents has been a
> breeze to work with, and integrates seamlessly with LimeWire's custom
> NIO layer.
>
> Th
No problem.
LimeWire uses HttpCore & HttpNIO to power all of its uploads (and
hopefully soon, all of its downloads). HttpComponents has been a
breeze to work with, and integrates seamlessly with LimeWire's custom
NIO layer.
That ok?
Sam
On 12/18/07, Oleg Kalnichevski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mon, 2007-12-17 at 13:06 -0500, Sam Berlin wrote:
> Definitely OK to use LimeWire. :)
>
> Can even link to our http extension component if you want. Javadoc:
> http://www.limewire.org/nightly/modules/http/api/ , FishEye:
> https://www.limewire.org/fisheye/browse/limecvs/components/http .
>
>
Definitely OK to use LimeWire. :)
Can even link to our http extension component if you want. Javadoc:
http://www.limewire.org/nightly/modules/http/api/ , FishEye:
https://www.limewire.org/fisheye/browse/limecvs/components/http .
Sam
On 12/17/07, Oleg Kalnichevski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Fo
Folks,
How do you feel about putting together a 'powered by HttpComponents'
page on our new site to help promote the project a little? We already
have some major open-source projects among our users: Synapse, Limewire,
Axis2. This fact should probably be reflected at out web site.
Sam, Paul, wou