Perrin Harkins [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
This sort of begs the question: why not use DB 3.x? Is there some new
feature you need in DB 4?
Anecdotaly, I believe the OpenLDAP and Cyrus projects have both found
DB4 to be more reliable under load than DB3.
Mike.
Rob Bloodgood [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
DW also speaks WEBDAV natively, but emacs does not.
Not natively, but there is a DAV mode for emacs, apparently fairly
new. From the Debian package:
Package: eldav
Priority: optional
Section: net
Installed-Size: 61
Maintainer: Fumitoshi UKAI [EMAIL
Matt Sergeant [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The one thing I think AxKit does really well, that other
templating solutions aren't really designed for, is allowing you
to build your whole web site with that solution. So for example,
Mason and EmbPerl are really great for building the dynamic parts
Matt Sergeant [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
It depends a *lot* on the type of content on your site. The above
www.dorado.com is brochureware, so it's not likely to need to be
re-styled for lighter browsers, or WebTV, or WAP, or... etc. So your
content (I'm guessing) is pure HTML, with Mason used
Vivek Khera [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
This has infinite more flexibility than squid, and allows me to have
multiple personalities to my sites. See for example the sites
http://www.morebuiness.com and http://govcon.morebusiness.com
If when you say "multiple personalities", you mean virtual
Slava [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I tried to install Apache::Request both way: manualy and
using perl -MCPAN -e shell. It does't work on Debian.
it tries to find some header files from apache. The same with
libapreq-0.31
Install apache-dev
Mike.