
Hi, I've been writing a little binding from Ruby to Haskell called Hubris (http://github.com/mwotton/Hubris ) which I think has some potential both for making Haskell web apps easier to write, and also for bringing the more adventurous Ruby programmers into the Haskell community. Code-wise it's coming along nicely, and once 6.12 is out it'll run without modifications at least on Linux (remains to be seen how long it'll take to get the Mac patches into shape). My real problem is marketing: I need a killer app that shows it's easy either to 1. wrap a kickarse Haskell library in a convenient Ruby web app shell 2. speed up a poorly performing Ruby web app I've been badgering the Ruby guys in Sydney that I know on the second point, but either none of them have performance problems, or none of them want to admit it. The first is entirely possible - if you only attack the subset of problems where your runtime is dominated by the database and network latency, language performance is moot. Conversely, if that's your worldview, the other problems that could be attacked won't ever come to mind (to monstrously abuse the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis). So, I'm asking you guys. What are some really nice Haskell libraries or apps that could benefit from being shown off in one of the plethora of slick, mature web frameworks that exist in Ruby? Manuel Chakravarty suggested something with vector operations in order to take advantage of his 'accelerate' library (once it gets a GPU backend, of course), and more generally, something taking advantage of Haskell's support for multicore would be cool. (The standard edition of Ruby is still unicore, I believe.) Parenthetically yours, Mark