And we wanted the look, feel, and features to be exactly what we wanted, not what others thought we wanted.
Buffistas Building a Better Board
Do you have problems, concerns or recommendations about the technical side of the Phoenix? Air them here. Compliments also welcome.
The actual reason is that we wanted our own board, because it seemed at the time that all the free services were either folding or going pay, and we wanted to control our own destiny. We much didn't like any of the free packages that were available at the time, and ita and Gud and a few of the others just started thinking out loud.
Or what Jon said.
Wasn't part of the reason the desire to replicate the, um, "No topics within threads" functionality of TableTalk? And that no free board software could easily do this?
Okay. That's pretty cool. I just wonder if some of those packages have fewer CPU problems, so can run in high volume on a cheaper webhosting choice than dedicated server. But I guess that's all under the bridge now, and I should just stop worrying, especially since we seem to be heading in a more efficient direction.
I do actually think Phoenix is really cool. Frankly, I think that once it's completely done then the writers (ita, Gud, whoever else) should consider packaging it up and licensing it to others. For fun and profit. It's a neat style, I'd consider buying a license.
I have never participated in any high-volume online discussion board that didn't have its share of server issues.
I have never participated in any high-volume online discussion board that didn't have its share of server issues.
I bet I could write an online discussion board in ASP for IIS, using ODBC to connect to an Access (or text file) back-end that would have lots and lots of server issues.
I mean, there's a shitload of ways to do it wrong.
I mean, there's a shitload of ways to do it wrong.
Even the discussion boards built around top of the line commercial packages, like TableTalk, PeoplesForum, and WorldCrossing (which all use the same package), all had problems at one time or another. WX took months to work out their worst issues.
I have no doubt of that. Mostly was just curious. I'm a big fan of letting other people do my work for me, but I'm glad there are those out there that like attacking things for themselves.
Is WXing fixed, now? Also, is Roll Your Own archived? It must be. I'll find it.
WX has been pretty stable for months.