As a Vim newbie, I'd like my Vim plugins & configuration
to stay in sync between machines at home, office, my servers & a laptop.
I found that a (free)
Dropbox
account works like a charm.
In an attempt to familiarize myself with the unfamiliar, I decided to build
a fun side-project in Ruby and Vim.
Effectively learning a new language, framework, and editor.
Coming from Nano, Quanta,
Eclipse PDT,
TextMate,
Netbeans; I found (Mac/g)Vim is big a step, and
first two weeks you should not expect to be productive.
When I started this techblog in 2007 and got my first 500 real visitors, I was in
the clouds. If you told me then I'd hit the 5,000,000 visitor milestone 3 years later,
I would have probably slapped some sense into you.
Not in my wildest dreams did I imagine my little side-project would take off like this.
If you want to set up Ruby on Rails on Ubuntu Lucid from scratch, there are
quite
some
articles online to choose from. I found most of them involve compiling,
only highlight 1 aspect, or are a bit outdated.
On top of that, getting it right can be hard as there are a number of
issues related to
Ruby and Debian/Ubuntu.
This is an attempt to put all the sweet info in 1 place.
At Transloadit we use
HAProxy "The Reliable, High Performance TCP/HTTP Load Balancer" so that we can offer different services on 1 port.
For instance, depending on the hostname, a requests to port 80 can be routed to either nodejs (in case of api.transloadit.com), or nginx (in case of www.transloadit.com).
HAProxy has been good to us and setting it up was a breeze. But getting HAProxy to log on Ubuntu Lucid was harder than I thought.
All of the tutorials I found either didn't cover logging, or had deprecated information on it.
Google suddenly stopped being my friend.