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Thursday, January 02, 2003
 

I'm poking my way around the open source channels and lurking for information.  To be honest, I'm a professional Microsoft developer by trade.  I haven't made the switch, yet, to open source tools.  I do run Mandrake Linux at home on one machine to handle mapping multiple domains to a Windows 2000 Professional box.  (IIS on Win2KPro only allows one domain.)

Anyway, I came across Zope.  It claims to be an application server. 

Zope is a leading open source application server, specializing in content management, portals, and custom applications.

That can be a broad term, and I am only posting this for my own benefit (yours too, if you're as green as I am in open source).  I have dabbled in Java, PHP, and Perl, but nothing substantial.  So, forgive me if this sounds ignorant.

Anyway, the Christian Open Developers' Network encompasses a project called Centrallix, which also claims to be an "application server."  So, needless to say, I wondered what the difference was.  (I'll investigate this more myself later, of course.)  Here is Centrallix's own definition of what the system is:

Centrallix is a web-based app server and data management engine featuring data abstraction, structural embedding, "pro"-DHTML generation, a SQL engine for multi-source queries, and object-based development.

OK, there are the definitions.  I'll try to find more later on both.  If you have any insight into either, please comment on this entry (see the attached comment link).  Thanks.


10:38:42 PM    comment []

An open source observation:

Python is an open source language with a stable following.  I'm not really sure where it fits in the whole programming languages scheme (from my point of view of course), but it's worth recording.  One thing that struck me as very odd, and yes, even remarkable was a bridge of sorts between the Java runtime and Python called Jython.  I'm stunned and impressed.  Not that I have time to learn either tools right now.  Maybe that's just it.  I called them both tools, but I think the title "tool" is only appropriate after an individual has acquired both skill and an appreciation for context and applicability for that skill.  So, for me, neither language is a tool yet.  Forgive me, but I believe that, for me, C#, Perl, and PHP would likely be my next languages to leverage.


10:10:06 PM    comment []


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