Well… my opinion is pretty loose on RoR at this point. I’m not a developer, so I don’t know a huge amount about the technology either.
It enjoys quite a lot of developer enthusiasm, but I’ve yet to see it appear in any sort of truly large enterprise-scale application in any really meaningful way. If RoR developers were hoping that Twitter would make a great case study, I’m afraid that the site’s performance and scalability issues may have given RoR a bit of a black eye.
Lastly, IMO Twitter is not so much a business as it is a feature. I imagine that someone will purchase it soon and would probably rewrite the core application infrastructure in a more enterprise level system. Just my two cents.
Twitter has the RubyonRails framework behind it. Any thoughts on the technology?
Well… my opinion is pretty loose on RoR at this point. I’m not a developer, so I don’t know a huge amount about the technology either.
It enjoys quite a lot of developer enthusiasm, but I’ve yet to see it appear in any sort of truly large enterprise-scale application in any really meaningful way. If RoR developers were hoping that Twitter would make a great case study, I’m afraid that the site’s performance and scalability issues may have given RoR a bit of a black eye.
Lastly, IMO Twitter is not so much a business as it is a feature. I imagine that someone will purchase it soon and would probably rewrite the core application infrastructure in a more enterprise level system. Just my two cents.