I sure will... and I read your thread again - I started playing with
web2py since the very early releases and coming from a j2ee
background, the reduction in effort for creating a good application is
amazing. :)

Having said that, there are hundreds of web frameworks out there, and
web2py is still very very young; the best way to evaluate a framework
is to actually use it or watch it in action on a public app like ours.
The framework makes development so fast developing an app will be
faster than posting a thread. :)

On May 11, 6:33 pm, Anthony <av201...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Now that's what I'm talking about (http://groups.google.com/group/
> web2py/browse_frm/thread/9f653dcf0493593d)! Very nice work.
>
> If you're willing, maybe mention web2py on the "Credits" page.
>
> On May 11, 5:40 am, Adi <aditya.sa...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I saw some discussions flying around about web2py applications and
> > users out there (http://groups.google.com/group/web2py/browse_thread/
> > thread/606b6e90744ab3b5)
> > and thought it would be a good time to talk about my application.
>
> > Radbox (http://radbox.me) is a video bookmarking service. Its still a
> > very young product, but I believe its pretty good at what it does.
>
> > Right now we're using web2py 1.77.3 for the application.
>
> > It has quite a few interesting features from a web2py developer's
> > perspective:
>
> > - custom auth_user table
> > - Facebook integration for sign-up and (very very soon) publish to
> > wall
> > - generic embedded video display using swfobject
> > - Twitter @anywhere integration (this is only in the view layer using
> > javascript)
> > - url rewrite using routes.py
> > - RSS feed (only for users, not visitors)
> > - Ajax "Like" and "Archive" implementation for every video
>
> > Many other things are under development. I mentioned the above because
> > lots of questions in this group are asked about these features.
>
> > Please take the app for a test drive, let me know your feedback and
> > questions on the implementation. My team and I are more than happy to
> > recommend web2py for full-blown professional web applications, and
> > we'll continue to bug this community (specially Massimo and Theadus)
> > every time we hit a rough patch. :)

Reply via email to