My first thought as well. It is an interesting project!
Right. And I see. Are these managed by something like migrations?
Well, in relational SQL you would just do an ALTER on the column name.
So, one thing holding me back from using MongoDB (and thus Meteor) is a lack of understanding how schema can be managed. Say in MongoDB you are storing documents in a collection such as { property: "" }, and decide you…
I find NancyFX really interesting, but I can't really see a reason to stray away from Web API2 besides Mono support. Any specific reasons you prefer Nancy?
Make School takes 25% of your salary for two years. $45,000 is quite a price tag in my mind.
This is where I get confused. How is it compiling to these elements?
I am pretty confused as to what this actually does. How can it be native?
The service is ran by CrowdSource, who uses Mechanical Turk to divvy out the task of responding to texts at a very small rate. So, it is a lot cheaper.
Ah, what a relief.
I feel bad for Yammer.
Touche.
PHP, C#, VB.NET, Python, JavaScript, Microsoft SQL, MySQL, HTML, CSS. Switching between them doesn't slow me down.
This looks cool, but I'm not a fan of this tagline: "Your current blogging platform is complicated, slow and badly designed. It makes blogging a chore."
So the only way to be committed to a language is to open-source it?
My first thought as well. It is an interesting project!
Right. And I see. Are these managed by something like migrations?
Well, in relational SQL you would just do an ALTER on the column name.
So, one thing holding me back from using MongoDB (and thus Meteor) is a lack of understanding how schema can be managed. Say in MongoDB you are storing documents in a collection such as { property: "" }, and decide you…
I find NancyFX really interesting, but I can't really see a reason to stray away from Web API2 besides Mono support. Any specific reasons you prefer Nancy?
Make School takes 25% of your salary for two years. $45,000 is quite a price tag in my mind.
This is where I get confused. How is it compiling to these elements?
I am pretty confused as to what this actually does. How can it be native?
The service is ran by CrowdSource, who uses Mechanical Turk to divvy out the task of responding to texts at a very small rate. So, it is a lot cheaper.
Ah, what a relief.
I feel bad for Yammer.
Touche.
PHP, C#, VB.NET, Python, JavaScript, Microsoft SQL, MySQL, HTML, CSS. Switching between them doesn't slow me down.
This looks cool, but I'm not a fan of this tagline: "Your current blogging platform is complicated, slow and badly designed. It makes blogging a chore."
So the only way to be committed to a language is to open-source it?