Posts Tagged hosting

Large development@Rails

With my recent Googling, I could crawl through few sites, blogs and data analytic graphs. I was shocked to know the jumping intercourse relation of web development with RoR, Specially on the blog http://www.railsonwave.com/ about the migration of site http://www.yellowpages.com/ from JAVA to Rails with so many positive results. I won’t make you to go through the blog and read each and every line unless you want…

Yes I am up with few highlights :

· Yellowpage has got 23 million visitors a month, this shows the Rails is fit for a large application in terms of performance.

· From 125.000 lines of code in Java, mainly written by external consultants from 2004 to 2005, to at least 20.000 lines of code in only 3 months of development from a team of 4 developers.

Sites those are developed in Rails and could be matter of a crown here, I would love to list few of them: (Yeah all of them has got 10+ million visitors@per month)

· http://www.yellowpages.com/

· http://www.revolutionhealth.com/

· http://www.43things.com/

· http://odeo.com/

· http://twitter.com/

Few more can be highlighted here:

· http://www.spock.com/

· http://penny-arcade.com/

· http://chowhound.com/


Add comment August 6, 2008

Heroku & Morph AppSpaces : Rails Hosting

Heroku and Morph Labs are Ruby on Rails hosting providers, offering a complete environment for running Ruby on Rails applications. Compared to traditional hosters, they don’t just give you a server but offer some interesting tools and interfaces to make your live easier and relieve you from all the hassle of installing, configuring, managing and securing a server. Both are using the Amazon EC2 grid computing technology to run the
applications, so you don’t have to worry about scaling and performance issues either.

James Lindenbaum explains the unique features of Heroku:
Heroku is hands down the easiest deployment platform for Rails apps. No humans in the loop, just drop in your code and you’re up and running. Heroku handles everything, from version control and collaboration to auto-scaling (built on top of Amazon’s EC2). We offer a full suite of tools for developing and managing your app, through either the web
interface or our new external API.

Asked about their target audience, James replied:
Honestly, almost everyone who wants to develop or deploy Rails apps should use Heroku. About a third of our users are beginners (many of whom haven’t written a web app before at all), and they love it because they can get up and running instantly. Another third of our users are more serious Rails developers, who just don’t want to deal with the hassles of setup, configuration, and deployment. We have started to offer features for this group over the last couple of months, and thousands of these users have been happily banging away on our private beta. The last third of our users are really hardcore Rails developers.
We’ve just begun to offer features for this group (the API, external access to Git code repositories), and have many more to be released in the coming months. It’s this hardcore group that has accounted for the largest part of the load on our platform over the last 6 weeks.

Morph eXchange is a portal into Morph Labs’ Software as a Service offerings. The Morph AppSpaces can be found in their DevCenter. We asked Macel Legaspi from Morph Labs about the characteristics of their offering:
Morph AppSpaces are a Platform as a Service for Ruby on Rails applications. The Morph AppSpace provides all of the technology and infrastructure needed to deploy, deliver and manage a web application written in Ruby on Rails. Each Morph AppSpace provides a highly available, fault tolerant environment for a web application. Load balancers, distributed application servers, integrated web delivery stacks, security and managed backups are all part of every Morph AppSpace. A Morph AppSpace subscription is near nirvana for a Ruby on Rails web application developer. The Morph AppSpaces run on top of the Morph Application Platform. The Morph Application Platform brings together a collection of open source technologies and Morph intellectual property to provide the Morph AppSpace environment. The Morph Application Platform uses cloud computing including Amazon EC2 and Amazon S3 to provide computer power and online storage as needed by the Morph AppSpaces.


Add comment April 16, 2008

Ruby On Rails Hosting:Brightbox

ruby_bag.jpgrails_bag.jpg

Traditionally, Ruby On Rails developers have had difficulty taking applications from their development systems to deployment (difficulties not experienced developing with PHP, ASP, or Java). But Brightbox, a U.K.-based startup showing off its wares at Startup Camp in London recently, specializes in Rails hosting.The idea really came from Rails development that Brightbox’s Jeremy Jarvis was doing along with his partners. When they had these deployment struggles, they built their own solution and gained some experience that others started to notice. As they began helping other development shops, Jarvis realized there was a business there and started Brightbox, which creates an optimized, flexibile, and easy-to-use service. He started the business last June and it went live in September 2007. (They have very cool T-shirts, too.)

Now, it’s only available today in the U.K. and Europe, so if you’re based in the United States … consider moving.The dedicated hosting service uses Xen to virtualize machines so that his customers have the ultimate flexibility; they can grow their servers as demands dictate, or ratchet down if need be.

Jarvis said that there are tools like Capistrano out there that help developers deploy applications, but Brightbox essentially created its own Capistrano recipes. Developers can download these to their own system and with a couple simple commands get it running on the server.Jarvis said Brightbox spends a good bit of time optimizing its servers to make them easy to use and stable.

Customers range from smaller Ruby developers up to Web development agencies, with a good deal of customers running Web 2.0 and social networking sites. Customers can choose the configuration from a pricing matrix, starting at 256 MB of RAM with a modest amount of storage, going up to a 4 GB dual-CPU box.


Add comment March 24, 2008


Categories

posts[:recent]

episodes[:recycled]

@@name = PRAYAS

Step down at my blog with your ideas,comments,suggestions on Ruby,RoR,Ajax or Web2.0.You may reach me at
infostall@gmail.com

find_by_tags

Links

visitors[:since_Mar'08]

free web counter

Spam Blocked

Feeds

Meta

RSS Prayas here