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In response to the latest Ruby on Rails security announcement we upgraded all of our clients’ Rails projects in less than 36 hours. On average it took around 30 minutes to upgrade a project from checkout to deployment. On Twitter we mentioned our ‘minimal dependency policy’ in projects as being one of the reasons we could move so quickly. We got some questions about what that means exactly. First
How to add Notification Center support to your website or app Originally introduced last year in iOS 5, Notification Center is one of the more useful new features in OS X Mountain Lion. What’s really nice is that the ability to show notification banners isn’t limited to native applications; both Safari and Chrome allow websites to show alerts in Notification Center as well. This is a quick and str
Because of the memory available on an iPad or iPhone, Mobile Safari has much stricter resource limits than most desktop browsers. One of these limits is the total amount of image data that can be loaded on a single HTML page. When Mobile Safari has loaded between 8 to 10 MB of image data it will simply stop displaying any more images. It might even crash. This limit doesn’t affect most websites si
When we started using Switchtower Capistrano to deploy our projects, we had some trouble with Lighttpd herding the fcgi processes. Because the standard Capistrano tasks expect the processes to be managed externally anyway, we decided to stop using Lighttpd for this. Most of the existing tools for managing fcgi processes are designed to do complex stuff like load balancing across different servers.
As of revision #5223 ActiveSupport::Multibyte is part of Rails. Now everyone can enjoy multibyte safeness in their applications. Needless to say we are really happy. You’re reading an archived weblog post that was originally published on our website.
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