So, this is my site. Yep.<p>I forgot to turn debug off. Yep. And i'm using sqlite3 to accept email addresses. Yep.<p>I can assure you the quality of the ACTUAL project is far better :-)<p>I have a working prototype and am working my ass off to get something scalable up and running asap. keep checking back for details!
How seriously can you take a service if developers forgets to disable the DEBUG flag :)<p><a href="http://djangy.com/admin" rel="nofollow">http://djangy.com/admin</a>
Never write form confirmations ("Thanks for your email") in red color. Looks like a warning. If a form is processed correctly, it should be black or green.<p>I hope that usability of djangy service will be better. Can't wait to try it :)<p>Btw, isn't Heroku itself planning anything for Django?
How do they plan to compete against Google App Engine?<p><a href="http://www.allbuttonspressed.com/projects/djangoappengine" rel="nofollow">http://www.allbuttonspressed.com/projects/djangoappengine</a>
I would <i>love</i> to hear more about this. I'm currently in the middle of a Django app, and this would be a godsend. I like doing sysadmin stuff, but there's no way I will have time in the next year.<p>If you guys can pull this off, I will be a very happy customer.
Would be nice if there were something like this (like Heroku) for Java. I know that there are several "cloud" solutions for Java, but I haven't found something as simple to manage/extend/deploy like Heroku so far :(.
I've been working on my Heroku for Django (or Python more generally) for a month or two now. It's good to see somebody else thinks this is a good idea.
I wonder why Dave Paola (apparently admin at djangy according to DEBUG view at <a href="http://djangy.com/postreceive" rel="nofollow">http://djangy.com/postreceive</a> ) used room606 instead of his regular account endlessvoid94 for submitting this.