Dear Smalltalkers,
It is my pleasure to announce two anniversaries of Aida/Web web application framework: - 10 years of continuously running Aida/Web application: Gas Billing System (GBS) for our national gas operator, surviving big business changes like country tax system change to VAT, deregulation of EU energy market, split of company to gas trader and gas transport operator, and recently currency change to Euro. It is running on VisualWorks and Gemstone/S; - 1 year of our new website - see graph of first page visits on our website: http://www.aidaweb.si Currently we have near 100 first page visits per day, which maps roughly to 100 daily visitors. After June spike (announcement of Squeak port), past month had a record visit. You can track statistics by yourself here: http://www.aidaweb.si/stat.html And conclusion? Aida/Web is becoming more and more known around and with active and increasing community it is a good choice for web development needs on many fields, from business applications to regular websites. And we didn't say a final word yet. Stay tuned! Janko Mivšek -- Janko Mivšek AIDA/Web Smalltalk Web Application Server http://www.aidaweb.si |
Contratulations Janko!
This is a very good new and deserve some reflections: 1. The open source really works! 2. Not need to change the systems each 2 or 3 years (as is the interest of most of "big players") 3. A single motivated and smart guy may develop anything comparable and better than the products of "big players" 4. "Write your own reflection here" :) Cheers. Germán. 2008/2/1, Janko Mivšek <[hidden email]>: > Dear Smalltalkers, > > It is my pleasure to announce two anniversaries of Aida/Web web > application framework: > > - 10 years of continuously running Aida/Web application: Gas Billing > System (GBS) for our national gas operator, surviving big business > changes like country tax system change to VAT, deregulation of EU energy > market, split of company to gas trader and gas transport operator, and > recently currency change to Euro. It is running on VisualWorks and > Gemstone/S; > > - 1 year of our new website - see graph of first page visits on our website: > > http://www.aidaweb.si > > Currently we have near 100 first page visits per day, which maps > roughly to 100 daily visitors. After June spike (announcement of Squeak > port), past month had a record visit. You can track statistics by > yourself here: > > http://www.aidaweb.si/stat.html > > And conclusion? Aida/Web is becoming more and more known around and with > active and increasing community it is a good choice for web development > needs on many fields, from business applications to regular websites. > And we didn't say a final word yet. Stay tuned! > > Janko Mivšek > > -- > Janko Mivšek > AIDA/Web > Smalltalk Web Application Server > http://www.aidaweb.si > > |
Hello Germán,
Germán Arduino wrote: > Contratulations Janko! Thanks! > This is a very good new and deserve some reflections: > 1. The open source really works! Yep. Even that Aida was open-sourced two years later, in 2000, it was this action which helped me a lot. Now Aida is developed side by side with my other commercial products and already by help of community as well. So a good mixture of open-source and a commercial activity is a way to go, I think for Squeak too. > 2. Not need to change the systems each 2 or 3 years (as is the > interest of most of "big players") Agreed, but that's easy to understand, those players have a profit out of such frequent changes. > 3. A single motivated and smart guy may develop anything comparable > and better than the products of "big players" This is a very interesting observation indeed. How much more you as an individual can actually do comparing to hordes of coders in these big players. Well, maybe from a commercial viewpoint we are not welcome? At the end it is somehow more profitable to have a factory of such coders instead of few dedicated individuals. Strange I know, but looks true. > 4. "Write your own reflection here" :) HEre others are invited to join! :) Best regards JAnko > > Cheers. > Germán. > > > > 2008/2/1, Janko Mivšek <[hidden email]>: >> Dear Smalltalkers, >> >> It is my pleasure to announce two anniversaries of Aida/Web web >> application framework: >> >> - 10 years of continuously running Aida/Web application: Gas Billing >> System (GBS) for our national gas operator, surviving big business >> changes like country tax system change to VAT, deregulation of EU energy >> market, split of company to gas trader and gas transport operator, and >> recently currency change to Euro. It is running on VisualWorks and >> Gemstone/S; >> >> - 1 year of our new website - see graph of first page visits on our website: >> >> http://www.aidaweb.si >> >> Currently we have near 100 first page visits per day, which maps >> roughly to 100 daily visitors. After June spike (announcement of Squeak >> port), past month had a record visit. You can track statistics by >> yourself here: >> >> http://www.aidaweb.si/stat.html >> >> And conclusion? Aida/Web is becoming more and more known around and with >> active and increasing community it is a good choice for web development >> needs on many fields, from business applications to regular websites. >> And we didn't say a final word yet. Stay tuned! >> >> Janko Mivšek >> >> -- >> Janko Mivšek >> AIDA/Web >> Smalltalk Web Application Server >> http://www.aidaweb.si >> >> > > -- Janko Mivšek AIDA/Web Smalltalk Web Application Server http://www.aidaweb.si |
In reply to this post by Janko Mivšek
My congratulations!
> - 10 years of continuously running Aida/Web application: Gas Billing > System (GBS) for our national gas operator, surviving big business > changes like country tax system change to VAT, deregulation of EU > energy market, split of company to gas trader and gas transport > operator, and recently currency change to Euro. It is running on > VisualWorks and Gemstone/S; Interesting expirience. Very good for promotion. Could you also tell how much objects in it and how big size it is. Does it has a long historic data? I also just looked at the performance comparison with Seaside. Looks like AIDA performs twice faster than Seaside. Then it's interesting how AIDA/Web and Seaside compares in development time efforts and simplicity, maintainabillity. |
Hi,
> My congratulations! > > > > - 10 years of continuously running Aida/Web application: Gas Billing > > System (GBS) for our national gas operator, surviving big business > > changes like country tax system change to VAT, deregulation of EU > > energy market, split of company to gas trader and gas transport > > operator, and recently currency change to Euro. It is running on > > VisualWorks and Gemstone/S; > > Interesting expirience. Very good for promotion. > > Could you also tell how much objects in it and how big size it is. > Does it has a long historic data? > > I also just looked at the performance comparison with Seaside. Looks > like AIDA performs twice faster than Seaside. > > Then it's interesting how AIDA/Web and Seaside compares in development > time efforts and simplicity, maintainabillity. I worked with both frameworks. Aida/Web is a lot easier to understand, and it works "as you expect", there is no surprise. If you need to manage users, groups and security, Aida is also a very good choice: it's secure by default, and has a built in complete users and groups managment. Both frameworks use components, it's called WebElement in Aida. About maintainability, I think both frameworks are a good choice. Another thing, Swazoo is a very good web server, better than Kom IMHO. But I think Seaside can work with Swazoo too now. Cheers! Nicolas > -- Nicolas Petton http://nico.bioskop.fr ___ ooooooo OOOOOOOOO |Smalltalk| OOOOOOOOO ooooooo \ / [|] -------------------------------- Ma clé PGP est disponible ici : http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xE788C34D signature.asc (196 bytes) Download Attachment |
In reply to this post by Janko Mivšek
Hi Janko:
2008/2/2, Janko Mivšek <[hidden email]>: > Hello Germán, > > Germán Arduino wrote: > > > 2. Not need to change the systems each 2 or 3 years (as is the > > interest of most of "big players") > > Agreed, but that's easy to understand, those players have a profit out > of such frequent changes. > Yes, sure, that is the question. Such "big players" sell that illusion of innovation to the managers and decision makers that don't understand nothing of the technical side. Such managers are "sitting duck" to the big software companies (by example M$) and they don't need much effort to sell its "licenses". Arguments as "All world is using these products, I can't fail using the sames", some gifts and trips to exotic conferences make the rest. > > 3. A single motivated and smart guy may develop anything comparable > > and better than the products of "big players" > > This is a very interesting observation indeed. How much more you as an > individual can actually do comparing to hordes of coders in these big > players. Well, maybe from a commercial viewpoint we are not welcome? At > the end it is somehow more profitable to have a factory of such coders > instead of few dedicated individuals. Strange I know, but looks true. > I think that several factors must be considered: * Motivation (May be present (or not) in a single guy or in an employee of a big software factory). I tend to think that all of us are more motivated when work in our own projects. May be a sort of human behavior? I read that Google permit its employees some time at week to work on their own projects, indeed some reasons must exist. * Having a small group of dedicated hackers need also a counterpart of correct attitude in the boss/owner of the company. Seems very hard that a common entrepreneur (that only want to make money) can manage hackers. They need another style of work and thinking, even if they also need the money. Here is were I presume the "hordes of coders" have their space. Not all are hackers, not all are doing software development loving the task........but not all are doing superb software. This is the difference. * About not welcomed......may be not, but the "big players" have the money to buy anything they consider interesting/innovative, the problem is that they have only a partial vision about good software/innovation (IMHO). Cheers. -- Germán S. Arduino http://www.arsol.biz http://www.arsol.net |
In reply to this post by Vladimir Pogorelenko
Hi Vladimir,
Vladimir Pogorelenko wrote: > My congratulations! > >> - 10 years of continuously running Aida/Web application: Gas Billing >> System (GBS) for our national gas operator, surviving big business >> changes like country tax system change to VAT, deregulation of EU >> energy market, split of company to gas trader and gas transport >> operator, and recently currency change to Euro. It is running on >> VisualWorks and Gemstone/S; > > Interesting expirience. Very good for promotion. > > Could you also tell how much objects in it and how big size it is. Does > it has a long historic data? Last time I asked them they had about 2 GB big database, while I don't know the number of objects. There is a historical data in time series, that is a hourly flow on pipeline measure points. But the point is not much on quantity of data as on complexity of billing rules (tariff system) and changes of that rules through the time. History of the rules and corresponding billing parameters is so exact that the system is able to recalculate any bill in the past exactly as when it was issued, even back in 1998. > I also just looked at the performance comparison with Seaside. Looks > like AIDA performs twice faster than Seaside. > Then it's interesting how AIDA/Web and Seaside compares in development > time efforts and simplicity, maintainabillity. Nicolas answered you better than could I because of his experience with both frameworks. Best regards Janko -- Janko Mivšek AIDA/Web Smalltalk Web Application Server http://www.aidaweb.si |
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