Breadcrumbs
Tag: "ruby_on_rails"
-
Ruby Becoming Lacklustre?
- Author
- Date
- Thu 22 Jan 2009 at 20:12
- Type
- Blog Entry
- Comments
- 1 comment
In my 2009 prediction post, I predicted that Ruby on Rails would either "fade into obscurity or gain more attention". Basically, I think that Ruby on Rails has one year left to catch on in the programming community or it will slowly fade away. Paired with Ruby on Rails is the programming language Ruby, upon which Rails runs. Ruby was always a back-seat programming language until Ruby on Rails took the stage, which turned everyone's attention towards the rather small programming language. Now Ruby has a rather respectable place in the progra…
-
Ethan's Predictions for 2009
- Author
- Date
- Sun 28 Dec 2008 at 14:07
- Type
- Blog Entry
- Comments
- 3 comments
As Matt said in his last blog post, both Matt and I are making predictions about what will happen in 2009 with technology and web development. We'll revisit both our posts at the end of next year to see who was right and who was wrong! Make sure to read Matt's post for his predictions too. OpenID Prediction: OpenID will officially die out and lose all hope of being adopted as a widespread standard. Matt predicted that OpenID would become a login method on more mainstream websites, but still lack mainstream use. My prediction is simi…
-
Ruby on Rails
- Author
- Date
- Tue 28 Mar 2006 at 15:38
- Type
- Blog Entry
Ruby on Rails is suppose to be the next "big thing", which may be more than true. Rails is an open source framework, whose goal is to allow applications to be written in significantly less code. Rails is not a programming language. It is a framework written in Ruby. When you use Rails you are really writing Ruby code, which is then handled by Rails. Previously, finding good Rails tutorials was a tad hard. They were very few in number. Six months later and Ruby resources are more than plentiful. You can find tutorials, books, applicati…
