Chuck Esterbrook schrieb:
> I was referring to the rash of unsubscribes that followed shortly
> after the roadmap.
Just reread what I wrote, because this made me a bit sad, too.
Actually I only wanted to start a *discussion* about the future of
Webware, not pinpoint a fixed roadmap already. I th
On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 6:32 AM, Christoph Zwerschke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
>> But I was a little surprised that after all the work you recently put
>> in, you would then immediately outline a roadmap that sounds like "how
>> to evaporate Webware" at which point its har
- "Chuck Esterbrook" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm also interested in hearing what people on the list have to say,
> especially those that maintain existing apps.
Over the last number of years I (and others at PeaceWorks, the company I work
for) have developed several Webware-based applic
Chuck Esterbrook wrote:
> But I was a little surprised that after all the work you recently put
> in, you would then immediately outline a roadmap that sounds like "how
> to evaporate Webware" at which point its hard to imagine using 1.0 for
> anything. I *wasn't* surprised when several unsubscribe
Thanks for the kudos.
But I was a little surprised that after all the work you recently put
in, you would then immediately outline a roadmap that sounds like "how
to evaporate Webware" at which point its hard to imagine using 1.0 for
anything. I *wasn't* surprised when several unsubscribes followe
You're welcome :-)
My thanks go to Chuck Esterbrook for inventing this extraordinary
project (maybe the prime father of all Python web frameworks ;-) and to
the other developers who contributed so much good stuff over the years.
It seems almost incredible, but Webware is in fact over 8 years now
- "Roger Haase" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> --- On Sat, 11/29/08, Christoph Zwerschke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Date: Saturday, November 29, 2008, 6:20 PM
> > The historic Webware for Python version 1.0 has finally been
> > released.
> > It runs with all Python versions from 2.0 to 2
--- On Sat, 11/29/08, Christoph Zwerschke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Date: Saturday, November 29, 2008, 6:20 PM
> The historic Webware for Python version 1.0 has finally been
> released.
> It runs with all Python versions from 2.0 to 2.6.
>
Congratulations Christoff and a big thank you for al
The historic Webware for Python version 1.0 has finally been released.
It runs with all Python versions from 2.0 to 2.6.
A lot of bugs have been fixed, and a few small improvements and changes
have been made since the last release. See the release notes for WebKit,
MiddleKit, TaskKit, CGIWrappe