Mark Responds to DHH
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Mark posted a response to David Heinemeier Hansson's response to the twitter people complaining about rails. Mark's response is totally awesome, and kind of sums up how I was feeling about DHH's post.
I'm frankly a little tired of the Rails people talking about how great they are. I don't have anything against their framework being excellent and the sites people build with them being awesome, just quit going on about how great it is, OK? Humility goes a long way...
OK, benefit of the doubt, people say DHH is very upfront about his faults, but eh... When he's not doing that, he's a little annoying. Maybe they're really humble in person, but it gets lost in text blog entries? Maybe I'm just bitchy because I've never built anything that works in RoR? Maybe I'm mentally challenged?! (Inside joke, sorry.)
On a completely different, yet related, point - When I read the original Twitter Interview about how they have a problem with 11,000 requests per second, I was reminded of Introduction to AOL Part 1, circa 1999.
Are you concerned about your Web site's scalability? I'm pretty sure that as long as I don't get more than 28,000 hits I'll be okay. How can I be sure? That's how many hits that America Online is serving with the open-source Web server that I use: AOLserver. Twenty-eight thousand hits? That's not really so many, is it? One often hears about sites that get more requests than 28,000 per day, per week, or per month. With 17 million subscribers, though, America Online is talking about 28,000 hits per second across all of its various Web services and servers.
Thank you for playing, Rails ;-)
Trackback: http://philsown.org/2007/04/mark-responds-to-dhh/trackback
Comments
How to Put Your Face Next to Your Comment
Jul 25, 2008
Ah, yes, 1999. You know, the age of the 600 MHz Pentium III CPU. Doing 28,000 hits/sec.
Today, we have 3 GHz quad-processor boxes available, gigabit ethernet ... and doing less than half that traffic seems to be a remarkable challenge in today's Blub language (RoR, PHP, whatever).
Yet, so few people are interested in AOLserver. Strange ... :-)