Perhaps this would be a good time for the community to build something
(in Rails of course) for all the .rb groups that are popping up around
the world.
Infact, I’d be interested in helping/leading such a project… if anyone
is interested in discussing it more.
Interesting of them to make those changes. It'll be interesting to see how it works, though I'm sure with a monthly fee they know they'll be losing a lot of users ...
Anyway, we use Yahoo! Groups, and I like it just fine.
Perhaps this would be a good time for the community to build something
(in Rails of course) for all the .rb groups that are popping up around
the world.
Infact, I'd be interested in helping/leading such a project.. if anyone
is interested in discussing it more.
Yeah, I saw this yesterday and I wasn't too happy. I would also like to help with a project to create something simple for the people who don't want to pay $9/$19 a month. Is anyone else interested?
Robby, send me an email...
···
On Apr 12, 2005, at 11:39 PM, Robby Russell wrote:
Perhaps this would be a good time for the community to build something
(in Rails of course) for all the .rb groups that are popping up around
the world.
Infact, I'd be interested in helping/leading such a project.. if anyone
is interested in discussing it more.
Bah, and just as I was trying to get a Boston.rb meetup started.
An open source alternative would be awesome.
Interestingly enough 43Things just added Upcoming.org support to their
webservices, which makes me think that a *really* cool Meetup
competitor would one that used webservices to integrate 43Things and
Upcoming to make its magic work.
Maybe the core member list is stored on a 43T "thing", or even as a 43T
team, and then individual instances with specific dates and RSVP
statuses can be spun off to Upcoming.
There is a 43Things Ruby library[2], but I think only PHP/Perl
libraries for Upcoming (to date)
I live and work in Portland.
Do you know if there is there a local ruby on rails group?
Aaron,
there is a very strong Ruby group in Portland (pdx.rb -- Cc:d),
they are quite involved in Rails (and loads of other cool Ruby
stuff). They just had a meeting with about 50 attendees
(including some Perl folks) where the main topic was Ruby
on Rails.
--
thanks,
-pate
-------------------------
We are often unable to tell people what they need to know, because
they want to know something else, and would therefore only
misunderstand what we said
- the Raven (George MacDonald, Lilith)
It's not particularly bad that they are charging for their service, but the problem is that they set their price too high -- $19/month. I think that $3 to $5 a month wold be a price range that would keep most members (especially if they offered the first 6 months free while the group gets established). At $19 they are going to lose a lot of groups.
Robby, if you and some group wrote an open source Rails app to do the same thing, I'll bet you could host it on your Planet Argon service at a low enough price to be worth it, while still paying its way.
Curt
Francis Hwang wrote:
···
Interesting of them to make those changes. It'll be interesting to see how it works, though I'm sure with a monthly fee they know they'll be losing a lot of users ...
Anyway, we use Yahoo! Groups, and I like it just fine.
Perhaps this would be a good time for the community to build something
(in Rails of course) for all the .rb groups that are popping up around
the world.
Infact, I'd be interested in helping/leading such a project.. if anyone
is interested in discussing it more.
Bah, and just as I was trying to get a Boston.rb meetup started.
An open source alternative would be awesome.
Interestingly enough 43Things just added Upcoming.org support to their
webservices, which makes me think that a *really* cool Meetup
competitor would one that used webservices to integrate 43Things and
Upcoming to make its magic work.
Maybe the core member list is stored on a 43T "thing", or even as a 43T
team, and then individual instances with specific dates and RSVP
statuses can be spun off to Upcoming.
We could use 43 Things 'teams' to represent the groups, with
projects/comments to track meetings.
There is a 43Things Ruby library[2], but I think only PHP/Perl
libraries for Upcoming (to date)
I've been idle this week on r43 (too many other obligations), but I
should have a 0.3.0 release out next week with a much improved
interface and support for all of the People and Goals methods. If
there's interest in using it, I'd be happy to bump up the Teams
methods for inclusion in 0.3.0 too.
--
thanks,
-pate
-------------------------
We are often unable to tell people what they need to know, because
they want to know something else, and would therefore only
misunderstand what we said
- the Raven (George MacDonald, Lilith)
--
thanks,
-pate
-------------------------
We are often unable to tell people what they need to know, because
they want to know something else, and would therefore only
misunderstand what we said
- the Raven (George MacDonald, Lilith)