I have no idea why (or even how, now that I think of it) you got downmodded (I put you back up)... I think in this day and age if a platform is going to be closed and non-free, it should have to justify those…
I'd have to second this. The Pylons project doesn't seem to suffer from the NIH syndrome that the django project does, and because of that, they're free to choose best-of-breed tools for every scenario. I think the fact…
While this is similar to Aptana's Jaxer project, Jaxer does server-side DOM stuff just as easily as client-side DOM stuff. I'm having a hard time imagining this framework does that. The only DOM stuff in the example is…
It's probably just not that hot of a solution, believe it or not. The recommendation engine should be able to make much better associations between movies, without even being able to describe what those associations…
The article mentions tweaking the algorithm to take the timing of ratings into account. It gives the example that a person might rate two movies as 3/5, and a third they watch right after as a 4/5, because it was better…
I have no idea why (or even how, now that I think of it) you got downmodded (I put you back up)... I think in this day and age if a platform is going to be closed and non-free, it should have to justify those…
I'd have to second this. The Pylons project doesn't seem to suffer from the NIH syndrome that the django project does, and because of that, they're free to choose best-of-breed tools for every scenario. I think the fact…
While this is similar to Aptana's Jaxer project, Jaxer does server-side DOM stuff just as easily as client-side DOM stuff. I'm having a hard time imagining this framework does that. The only DOM stuff in the example is…
It's probably just not that hot of a solution, believe it or not. The recommendation engine should be able to make much better associations between movies, without even being able to describe what those associations…
The article mentions tweaking the algorithm to take the timing of ratings into account. It gives the example that a person might rate two movies as 3/5, and a third they watch right after as a 4/5, because it was better…