Anyone else used this and found it handy? Would you integrate it into a version control system or how do you use it to manage websites?
]]>Also, congratulations on the 100th episode, I’m pretty sure a lot of people around here would agree with me when I say I’m feeling more and more grateful to you for making this awesome show each and every week!!!
]]>@Jason, I nearly choked when you said that you assumed that the Rails community was the same as the Ruby community. Although I really like Rails and use it, I also do quite a bit of standard Ruby as well as using other Ruby-based frameworks like Camping.
I’m going to try DuckDuckGo more regularly now that I added it to my Firefox search engine list.
@Peter, I really like Ruby Weekly and I did not know about JS weekly. I’m subscribing now!
Like everybody else I’d like to try NodeJS. The bummer part is that you need Cygwin if you want to use it on Windows, or use a hosted option.
On the tools topic, I was surprised about the low reliance on debuggers. They can make you so productive. Also another complementary approach is to run automated test suites in parallel of development tasks.
]]>While NodeJS and CouchDB both use JS and are very cool projects they have very little else in common.
]]>Thanks, really-really love the show, keep up the great work! 🙂
]]>Also, Justin: an important thing to take into consideration when trying to forecast growth is your churn. As your user base increases, your churn likely stays the same, so unless if you’re experiencing linear growth in signups/conversions, you’ll plateau at some point.
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