Member since May 02, 2007, follows 0 people, 0 public groups, 22 public bookmarks (23 total).
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Is this book for you? - Practical PHP Programming on 2007-05-31
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PHP is much easier to use than Perl, and often faster both in terms of development time and execution time. However, you have to make one big sacrifice: the major difference between PHP and Perl is that PHP has much less "one-line magic" than Perl
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ONLamp.com -- Rolling with Ruby on Rails on 2007-05-29
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What would you think if I told you that you could develop a web application
at least ten times faster with Rails than you could with a typical
Java framework? You can--without making any sacrifices in the quality
of your application! How is this possible?
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Open Source XML Database Toolkit: Resources and Techniques for Improved Development on 2007-05-29
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show you how to move data stored in relational databases in and out of an XML application.
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kirupa.com - Output mySQL data as XML with PHP on 2007-05-28
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Most people just take their database and
pull the data directly into Flash with the use of a
server-side script. -
but in
the long-run it could be the most time consuming and most
difficult to update or change if needed.
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Using XML with MySQL on 2007-05-28
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The
following list indicates just some of the possibilities open to
you for employing XML processing techniques to make more productive
use of your MySQL server -
an
XML document can incorporate the results of database queries and
then, with the help of a rendering engine such as
AxKit
>, be transformed
into a format that matches the type of client you wish to serve.
You can send HTML, WML, or plain text to web browsers, wireless
devices, or printers. - 1 more annotations...
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Apache AxKit on 2007-05-28
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It provides
on-the-fly conversion from XML to any format, such as HTML -
AxKit can either automatically provide caching facilities,
or you can create your own cache handler, so that XML
transformations (which can be time consuming) only happen when
required.
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2 Preparing to Upgrade on 2007-05-16
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Performance Testing
Performance testing of the new Oracle Database compares the performance of various SQL statements in the new Oracle Database with the statements' performance in the current database. Before upgrading, you should understand the performance profile of the application under the current database. Specifically, you should understand the calls the application makes to the database server.
For example, if you are using Real Application Clusters, and you want to measure the performance gains realized from using cache fusion when you upgrade to the new Oracle Database 10g release, then make sure you record your system's statistics before upgrading. For cache fusion, record the statistics from the
V$SYSSTATandV$INSTANCE_CACHE_TRANSFERviews. Doing so enables you to compare pre-cache fusion and post-cache fusion performance statistics.For best results, run the SQL scripts
utlbstat.sqlandutlestat.sqlto collectV$SYSSTATstatistics for a specific period. Use a collection time frame that most consistently reflects peak production loads with consistent transaction activity levels. To obtain data fromV$LOCK_ACTIVITYandV$LOCK_CLASS_PING, use aSELECT *statement at the beginning and end of the statistics collection period. Repeat this process after cache fusion is running on the new Oracle Database release and evaluate your system's performance as described in Oracle Database Oracle Clusterware and Oracle Real Application Clusters Administration and Deployment Guide.
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Does JavaFX Spell The End Of AJAX? on 2007-05-11
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JavaFX eliminates that need by using the locally installed Java SE files. Only one new library needs to be installed along with the Java SE or ME installation, depending on the device.
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So instead of relying on the browser to sandbox off JavaScript code, the applications use the security features in Java SE to control an application's hard drive access. Because it runs on the client and is not dependent on code sent over the wire, it also means applications written in AJAX, such as Google Apps, can be used offline
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Java FX - O'Reilly ONJava Blog on 2007-05-11
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Interactivity, animation and ease of use that rivals Ajax, Flash and Silverlight
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Ruby on Rails with Oracle FAQ on 2007-05-11
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Ruby on Rails (RoR) lets you develop Web applications very quickly
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you can create a minimal Web application by running less than a half-dozen commands and editing one file (database.yml)
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