saying that SqueakSource down.
or it is down only for me , such an unlucky guy? :) -- Best regards, Igor Stasenko. |
On 7 February 2012 15:08, Igor Stasenko <[hidden email]> wrote:
> saying that SqueakSource down. > > or it is down only for me , such an unlucky guy? :) Looks like it's dead. The machine's alive, and the HTTP server's alive though. frank |
Isn't there a mirror somewhere? Seems like it's always down.
On Tue, Feb 7, 2012 at 7:58 AM, Frank Shearar <[hidden email]> wrote:
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On Tue, Feb 7, 2012 at 6:38 PM, Steve Wart <[hidden email]> wrote: Isn't there a mirror somewhere? Yes, in Chile. Search the mailing list. I however, choose something different: http://marianopeck.wordpress.com/2011/11/08/migrating-projects-to-squeaksource3/ Seems like it's always down. -- Mariano http://marianopeck.wordpress.com |
In reply to this post by Frank Shearar-3
On 07 Feb 2012, at 16:58, Frank Shearar wrote: > Looks like it's dead. The machine's alive, and the HTTP server's alive though. Where is SmalltalkHub ? Last time it was publically available for testing it looked quite good. What is holding it back ? Sven |
New priority job for me: move all my stuff from squeaksource to ss3.
About SmalltalkHub I think that need more time yet (taking in account the lack of news) then the only real option is ss3 imho. Cheers. 2012/2/7, Sven Van Caekenberghe <[hidden email]>: > > On 07 Feb 2012, at 16:58, Frank Shearar wrote: > >> Looks like it's dead. The machine's alive, and the HTTP server's alive >> though. > > Where is SmalltalkHub ? > Last time it was publically available for testing it looked quite good. > What is holding it back ? > > Sven > -- Enviado desde mi dispositivo móvil ============================================ Germán S. Arduino <gsa @ arsol.net> Twitter: garduino Arduino Software http://www.arduinosoftware.com PasswordsPro http://www.passwordspro.com greensecure.blogspot.com germanarduino.blogpost.com ============================================ |
In reply to this post by Sven Van Caekenberghe
On 7 February 2012 21:35, Sven Van Caekenberghe <[hidden email]> wrote:
> > On 07 Feb 2012, at 16:58, Frank Shearar wrote: > >> Looks like it's dead. The machine's alive, and the HTTP server's alive though. > > Where is SmalltalkHub ? +1 > Last time it was publically available for testing it looked quite good. > What is holding it back ? +2 while ss3 is better than sqs, SmalltalkHub is more appeal to me. :) > Sven -- Best regards, Igor Stasenko. |
I passed the info to nicolas and he will probably reply.
stef On Feb 8, 2012, at 1:11 AM, Igor Stasenko wrote: > On 7 February 2012 21:35, Sven Van Caekenberghe <[hidden email]> wrote: >> >> On 07 Feb 2012, at 16:58, Frank Shearar wrote: >> >>> Looks like it's dead. The machine's alive, and the HTTP server's alive though. >> >> Where is SmalltalkHub ? > +1 > >> Last time it was publically available for testing it looked quite good. >> What is holding it back ? > > +2 > > while ss3 is better than sqs, SmalltalkHub is more appeal to me. :) > >> Sven > > > > -- > Best regards, > Igor Stasenko. > |
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What was Nico's reply? |
Hi folks!
Nicolas will of course reply - I think he was planning to write a post the other day but might have forgotten - but I can chip in some info: SmalltalkHub has gone through some technical evolution which has taken some time. Especially various persistence schemes were tested and most of them ended up problematic, Nicolas tested a LOT of variations I think. The latest stack looks very promising though - and the reason I can describe it is because I am trying to help out a bit with it - though haven't had much time yet. The client is a full Amber app built with Bootstrap 2 from Twitter. It is very nice looking and responsive. It communicates with the backend using plain jQuery REST. The server side is built with Seaside-REST which then uses a domain model described with Magritte 3 (Nicolas just switched) which is persisted using RiakDocument + Phriak for persistency. An interesting twist here is that Magritte is being used to produce the JSON RiakDocuments to store. End result? A very strong and interesting architecture and the performance looks outstanding so far. Riak also buys us really strong robustness since it has redundancy built in. All questions regarding availability, time schedule etc I will leave for Nicolas to answer. :) regards, Göran |
Am 28.02.2012 um 10:13 schrieb Göran Krampe: > Hi folks! > > Nicolas will of course reply - I think he was planning to write a post the other day but might have forgotten - but I can chip in some info: > > SmalltalkHub has gone through some technical evolution which has taken some time. Especially various persistence schemes were tested and most of them ended up problematic, Nicolas tested a LOT of variations I think. > > The latest stack looks very promising though - and the reason I can describe it is because I am trying to help out a bit with it - though haven't had much time yet. > > The client is a full Amber app built with Bootstrap 2 from Twitter. It is very nice looking and responsive. It communicates with the backend using plain jQuery REST. > > The server side is built with Seaside-REST which then uses a domain model described with Magritte 3 (Nicolas just switched) which is persisted using RiakDocument + Phriak for persistency. An interesting twist here is that Magritte is being used to produce the JSON RiakDocuments to store. > > End result? A very strong and interesting architecture and the performance looks outstanding so far. Riak also buys us really strong robustness since it has redundancy built in. > > All questions regarding availability, time schedule etc I will leave for Nicolas to answer. :) > What puzzles me is what RiakDocument is doing in this mix. Is it published somewhere? Norbert |
On 28 February 2012 10:38, Norbert Hartl <[hidden email]> wrote:
> > Am 28.02.2012 um 10:13 schrieb Göran Krampe: > >> Hi folks! >> >> Nicolas will of course reply - I think he was planning to write a post the other day but might have forgotten - but I can chip in some info: >> >> SmalltalkHub has gone through some technical evolution which has taken some time. Especially various persistence schemes were tested and most of them ended up problematic, Nicolas tested a LOT of variations I think. >> >> The latest stack looks very promising though - and the reason I can describe it is because I am trying to help out a bit with it - though haven't had much time yet. >> >> The client is a full Amber app built with Bootstrap 2 from Twitter. It is very nice looking and responsive. It communicates with the backend using plain jQuery REST. >> >> The server side is built with Seaside-REST which then uses a domain model described with Magritte 3 (Nicolas just switched) which is persisted using RiakDocument + Phriak for persistency. An interesting twist here is that Magritte is being used to produce the JSON RiakDocuments to store. >> >> End result? A very strong and interesting architecture and the performance looks outstanding so far. Riak also buys us really strong robustness since it has redundancy built in. >> >> All questions regarding availability, time schedule etc I will leave for Nicolas to answer. :) >> > Sounds good. I work with Seaside-Rest and Magritte3 on a daily base. This time with MongoDB using MongoTalk. So I'm quite confident that the choice of the stack is superb :) I decided to use MongoDB because it did not want to be content agnostic. My client approach however is the opposite using seaside with jquery extension. Using amber with Rest style access is surely the better approach for a site like SmallHub. > What puzzles me is what RiakDocument is doing in this mix. Is it published somewhere? > > Norbert > > > -- Best regards, Igor Stasenko. |
On 28/02/12 14:05, Igor Stasenko wrote:
> On 28 February 2012 10:38, Norbert Hartl<[hidden email]> wrote: >> >> Am 28.02.2012 um 10:13 schrieb Göran Krampe: >> >>> Hi folks! >>> >>> Nicolas will of course reply - I think he was planning to write a post the other day but might have forgotten - but I can chip in some info: >>> >>> SmalltalkHub has gone through some technical evolution which has taken some time. Especially various persistence schemes were tested and most of them ended up problematic, Nicolas tested a LOT of variations I think. >>> >>> The latest stack looks very promising though - and the reason I can describe it is because I am trying to help out a bit with it - though haven't had much time yet. >>> >>> The client is a full Amber app built with Bootstrap 2 from Twitter. It is very nice looking and responsive. It communicates with the backend using plain jQuery REST. >>> >>> The server side is built with Seaside-REST which then uses a domain model described with Magritte 3 (Nicolas just switched) which is persisted using RiakDocument + Phriak for persistency. An interesting twist here is that Magritte is being used to produce the JSON RiakDocuments to store. >>> >>> End result? A very strong and interesting architecture and the performance looks outstanding so far. Riak also buys us really strong robustness since it has redundancy built in. >>> >>> All questions regarding availability, time schedule etc I will leave for Nicolas to answer. :) >>> >> Sounds good. I work with Seaside-Rest and Magritte3 on a daily base. This time with MongoDB using MongoTalk. So I'm quite confident that the choice of the stack is superb :) I decided to use MongoDB because it did not want to be content agnostic. My client approach however is the opposite using seaside with jquery extension. Using amber with Rest style access is surely the better approach for a site like SmallHub. >> What puzzles me is what RiakDocument is doing in this mix. Is it published somewhere? >> > i think it just a json with data, which riak server can swallow :) Exactly, it's a tiny layer on top of Riak that uses Magritte descriptions to produce JSON, validates it, and makes link walking, etc easier. Cheers, Nico > >> Norbert >> >> >> > > > -- Nicolas Petton http://nicolas-petton.fr |
In reply to this post by Göran Krampe
Hi all!
As Göran said, he recently joined our forces on SmalltalkHub. We're used to working together and he has great Riak knowledge. He's mainly working on the Riak-backed Monticello repository. Currently, timelines, users, projects, settings, user dashboard and profile are ported for Riak. As soon as the Riak Monticello repository will be ready, we'll release and put it online. That means taht the issue tracker and project statistics probably won't be there at first, but as Stef said to me several times already, release release early, release often, it doesn't have to be perfect from the start :) So I'm gonna listen to Stef, and make it publicly available. On 28/02/12 10:13, Göran Krampe wrote: > The latest stack looks very promising though - and the reason I can > describe it is because I am trying to help out a bit with it - though > haven't had much time yet. > > The client is a full Amber app built with Bootstrap 2 from Twitter. It > is very nice looking and responsive. It communicates with the backend > using plain jQuery REST. > > The server side is built with Seaside-REST which then uses a domain > model described with Magritte 3 (Nicolas just switched) which is > persisted using RiakDocument + Phriak for persistency. An interesting > twist here is that Magritte is being used to produce the JSON > RiakDocuments to store. > > End result? A very strong and interesting architecture and the > performance looks outstanding so far. Riak also buys us really strong > robustness since it has redundancy built in. I couldn't have said it better, thanks Göran :) Cheers, Nico -- Nicolas Petton http://nicolas-petton.fr |
In reply to this post by NorbertHartl
I would love to get some presentations for our cool forthcoming conference: if you see what I want to say norbert :)
Nicolas will do two I guess one on riak one of the application he is developing for a german company. Stef On Feb 28, 2012, at 10:38 AM, Norbert Hartl wrote: > > Am 28.02.2012 um 10:13 schrieb Göran Krampe: > >> Hi folks! >> >> Nicolas will of course reply - I think he was planning to write a post the other day but might have forgotten - but I can chip in some info: >> >> SmalltalkHub has gone through some technical evolution which has taken some time. Especially various persistence schemes were tested and most of them ended up problematic, Nicolas tested a LOT of variations I think. >> >> The latest stack looks very promising though - and the reason I can describe it is because I am trying to help out a bit with it - though haven't had much time yet. >> >> The client is a full Amber app built with Bootstrap 2 from Twitter. It is very nice looking and responsive. It communicates with the backend using plain jQuery REST. >> >> The server side is built with Seaside-REST which then uses a domain model described with Magritte 3 (Nicolas just switched) which is persisted using RiakDocument + Phriak for persistency. An interesting twist here is that Magritte is being used to produce the JSON RiakDocuments to store. >> >> End result? A very strong and interesting architecture and the performance looks outstanding so far. Riak also buys us really strong robustness since it has redundancy built in. >> >> All questions regarding availability, time schedule etc I will leave for Nicolas to answer. :) >> > Sounds good. I work with Seaside-Rest and Magritte3 on a daily base. This time with MongoDB using MongoTalk. So I'm quite confident that the choice of the stack is superb :) I decided to use MongoDB because it did not want to be content agnostic. My client approach however is the opposite using seaside with jquery extension. Using amber with Rest style access is surely the better approach for a site like SmallHub. > What puzzles me is what RiakDocument is doing in this mix. Is it published somewhere? > > Norbert > > > |
Am 28.02.2012 um 21:01 schrieb Stéphane Ducasse: > I would love to get some presentations for our cool forthcoming conference: if you see what I want to say norbert :) Yes, I know :) I promised it to you, didn't I? I can do two as well. I could repeat my FOSDEM presentation on REST services with Seaside-Rest in concerto with using Magritte3 for content handling in XML and Json. It is about routing of services, content negation (Accept/Content-Type headers) and meta model assistance. As a second one I could present the mentioned web api tester we are doing. This includes serialization as well with Magritte3 in JSON and BSON, MongoTalk to talk to MongoDB and single page UI with seaside and jquery. If that's not all to similar to what Nicolas is doing. Well, if Esteban is presenting as well there might be a bigger intersection between Esteban, Nicolas and me (web stack wise). :) Norbert > Nicolas will do two I guess > one on riak > one of the application he is developing for a german company. > > Stef > > On Feb 28, 2012, at 10:38 AM, Norbert Hartl wrote: > >> >> Am 28.02.2012 um 10:13 schrieb Göran Krampe: >> >>> Hi folks! >>> >>> Nicolas will of course reply - I think he was planning to write a post the other day but might have forgotten - but I can chip in some info: >>> >>> SmalltalkHub has gone through some technical evolution which has taken some time. Especially various persistence schemes were tested and most of them ended up problematic, Nicolas tested a LOT of variations I think. >>> >>> The latest stack looks very promising though - and the reason I can describe it is because I am trying to help out a bit with it - though haven't had much time yet. >>> >>> The client is a full Amber app built with Bootstrap 2 from Twitter. It is very nice looking and responsive. It communicates with the backend using plain jQuery REST. >>> >>> The server side is built with Seaside-REST which then uses a domain model described with Magritte 3 (Nicolas just switched) which is persisted using RiakDocument + Phriak for persistency. An interesting twist here is that Magritte is being used to produce the JSON RiakDocuments to store. >>> >>> End result? A very strong and interesting architecture and the performance looks outstanding so far. Riak also buys us really strong robustness since it has redundancy built in. >>> >>> All questions regarding availability, time schedule etc I will leave for Nicolas to answer. :) >>> >> Sounds good. I work with Seaside-Rest and Magritte3 on a daily base. This time with MongoDB using MongoTalk. So I'm quite confident that the choice of the stack is superb :) I decided to use MongoDB because it did not want to be content agnostic. My client approach however is the opposite using seaside with jquery extension. Using amber with Rest style access is surely the better approach for a site like SmallHub. >> What puzzles me is what RiakDocument is doing in this mix. Is it published somewhere? >> >> Norbert >> >> >> > > |
Ok Excellent!
what we should do is to make sure that the participants get information information and information about doing more business with pharo :). Stef > Yes, I know :) I promised it to you, didn't I? I can do two as well. I could repeat my FOSDEM presentation on REST services with Seaside-Rest in concerto with using Magritte3 for content handling in XML and Json. It is about routing of services, content negation (Accept/Content-Type headers) and meta model assistance. > As a second one I could present the mentioned web api tester we are doing. This includes serialization as well with Magritte3 in JSON and BSON, MongoTalk to talk to MongoDB and single page UI with seaside and jquery. If that's not all to similar to what Nicolas is doing. Well, if Esteban is presenting as well there might be a bigger intersection between Esteban, Nicolas and me (web stack wise). :) |
In reply to this post by NorbertHartl
Hi Norbert!
On 02/28/2012 10:38 AM, Norbert Hartl wrote: > Sounds good. I work with Seaside-Rest and Magritte3 on a daily base. This time with MongoDB using MongoTalk. So I'm quite confident that the choice of the stack is superb :) I decided to use MongoDB because it did not want to be content agnostic. My client approach however is the opposite using seaside with jquery extension. Using amber with Rest style access is surely the better approach for a site like SmallHub. > What puzzles me is what RiakDocument is doing in this mix. Is it published somewhere? It is in the Phriak repo. It is nothing big. regards, Göran PS. Tried numerous times to accept your linkedIn invitation but it always failed. Eventual consistency strikes! :) |
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In reply to this post by Göran Krampe
I just hadn't heard for a while and was interested :) From a UX and UI point of view, I am very very interested in the Amber/Bootstrap approach as UI was something I found Smalltalk trailing a bit. To promote Smalltalk to get more real-world business use all the work that has gone into this could be used to put together some robustness, scalability best practices I assume? Anyhow, good stuff!! Glad to hear things are moving forward :) |
In reply to this post by Nicolas Petton
Hi Nico:
First question that comes to my mind, why Riak and not Gemstone? Cheers.
2012/2/28 Nicolas Petton <[hidden email]> Hi all! ============================================ Germán S. Arduino <gsa @ arsol.net> Twitter: garduino Arduino Software http://www.arduinosoftware.com PasswordsPro http://www.passwordspro.com |
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