
Hello, The following blog post by Joyent is worth reading: http://joyent.com/blog/diy-vs-as-a-service-with-memcachier "We don't really believe in Node.js (Go & Haskell are our choices), so that is a small concern to us, but everyone has their failings." --Kazu

2013/1/17 Kazu Yamamoto
The following blog post by Joyent is worth reading:
http://joyent.com/blog/diy-vs-as-a-service-with-memcachier
"We don't really believe in Node.js (Go & Haskell are our choices), so that is a small concern to us, but everyone has their failings."
The post is on the Joyent blog; but was written by someone from MemCachier, a new partner with Joyent. MemCachier seems to have partnered with a few other cloud platforms -- Heroku, for example. It's nice to see a Bay Area "cloud" company speak up for Haskell. -- Jason Dusek pgp // solidsnack // C1EBC57DC55144F35460C8DF1FD4C6C1FED18A2B

2013/1/17 Jason Dusek
2013/1/17 Kazu Yamamoto
: The following blog post by Joyent is worth reading:
http://joyent.com/blog/diy-vs-as-a-service-with-memcachier
"We don't really believe in Node.js (Go & Haskell are our choices), so that is a small concern to us, but everyone has their failings."
The post is on the Joyent blog; but was written by someone from MemCachier, a new partner with Joyent. MemCachier seems to have partnered with a few other cloud platforms -- Heroku, for example. It's nice to see a Bay Area "cloud" company speak up for Haskell.
The person is David Terei, he's quite famous in the Haskell community for having written the LLVM backend for GHC. Cheers, Thu
participants (3)
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Jason Dusek
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Kazu Yamamoto
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Vo Minh Thu