From greg.rundlett at gmail.com Mon Jul 7 22:50:15 2008 From: greg.rundlett at gmail.com (Greg Rundlett) Date: Mon, 7 Jul 2008 22:50:15 -0400 Subject: [Bostonphptalk] HOWTO: Soap imports in SugarCRM - request feedback Message-ID: <5e2aaca40807071950g28446f46l705c70bc6b5e4e4f@mail.gmail.com> I wrote a 'HOWTO' tutorial that I was thinking of submitting to technical websites and/or trade publications for publishing. I would appreciate any feedback. http://freephile.com/wiki/index.php/Importing_contacts Thanks Greg p.s. I use the GNU Free Documentation License, so feel free to re-use the content under those terms. -- http://freephile.openid.org From KajKandler at conficio.com Tue Jul 8 11:25:32 2008 From: KajKandler at conficio.com (Kaj Kandler) Date: Tue, 08 Jul 2008 11:25:32 -0400 Subject: [Bostonphptalk] HOWTO: Soap imports in SugarCRM - request, feedback In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <487386EC.4050107@conficio.com> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Greg, good work, fascinating read and certainly very useful. Thank you for sharing your experience and the fruits of your work. Unfortunately I find it a rather hard read. Because the main flow is hard to detect. There are so many alternatives, sidelines (necessary tips and trick to get things even working). Currently not having a need for this particular solution, these sideline give a fascinating inside on SugarCRM and make it a read that is interesting beyond the technical aspects. May be some chapter numbering, and keywords Alternativ A, Alternative B, etc.), what steps are educational and which are essential to achieve the goal. Just my take on reading it. Kaj | Message: 1 | Date: Mon, 7 Jul 2008 22:50:15 -0400 | From: "Greg Rundlett" | Subject: [Bostonphptalk] HOWTO: Soap imports in SugarCRM - request | feedback | To: "Boston PHP Talk" , "NYPHP Talk" | | Message-ID: | <5e2aaca40807071950g28446f46l705c70bc6b5e4e4f at mail.gmail.com> | Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 | | I wrote a 'HOWTO' tutorial that I was thinking of submitting to | technical websites and/or trade publications for publishing. I would | appreciate any feedback. | | http://freephile.com/wiki/index.php/Importing_contacts | | Thanks | | Greg | | p.s. I use the GNU Free Documentation License, so feel free to re-use | the content under those terms. - -- Kaj Kandler Conficio - http://www.conficio.com/ Phone: +1 (781) 632 5773 *** Technical support for non technical users of OpenOffice.org *** *** http://plan-b-for-openoffice.org/ *** -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.6 (MingW32) iD8DBQFIc4bsRDUvrJRNjTARAlKtAJ9rWVXedKx9ArA6Bz1lAsqLQrSnOwCcCu/u 84mqzQ+30MMSRdT/H4yu1Gk= =ud5m -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- From ken at secdat.com Wed Jul 9 15:54:20 2008 From: ken at secdat.com (Kenneth Downs) Date: Wed, 09 Jul 2008 15:54:20 -0400 Subject: [Bostonphptalk] Jquery and "too much recursion" Message-ID: <4875176C.9000601@secdat.com> It seems I have found a way to leave Firefox up and running but useless. In this state just think "Microsoft Windows", the lights are on but nobody's home. You have to kill Firefox and restart it. This appears to be happening when user activity spawns a number of Ajax requests whose handlers then involve Jquery commands that assign things to collections, such as fetching a row from the database and populating the inputs. At some point this overloads Firefox 3 and it is unable to recover. Not even page refreshes will get it out of the problem. It starts saying in Firebug "jQuery not defined" and "too much recursion". I don't know enough yet to have it fixed, but I thought I'd raise the issue and see if anybody else has run into this. -- Kenneth Downs Secure Data Software, Inc. www.secdat.com www.andromeda-project.org 631-689-7200 Fax: 631-689-0527 cell: 631-379-0010 From greg.rundlett at gmail.com Wed Jul 9 22:39:01 2008 From: greg.rundlett at gmail.com (Greg Rundlett) Date: Wed, 9 Jul 2008 22:39:01 -0400 Subject: [Bostonphptalk] HOWTO: Soap imports in SugarCRM - request, feedback In-Reply-To: <487386EC.4050107@conficio.com> References: <487386EC.4050107@conficio.com> Message-ID: <5e2aaca40807091939q10329466k7f3d644b24a27141@mail.gmail.com> On Tue, Jul 8, 2008 at 11:25 AM, Kaj Kandler wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Greg, > good work, fascinating read and certainly very useful. Thank you for > sharing your experience and the fruits of your work. > > Unfortunately I find it a rather hard read. Because the main flow is > hard to detect. There are so many alternatives, sidelines (necessary > tips and trick to get things even working). Currently not having a need > for this particular solution, these sideline give a fascinating inside > on SugarCRM and make it a read that is interesting beyond the technical > aspects. > > May be some chapter numbering, and keywords Alternativ A, Alternative B, > etc.), what steps are educational and which are essential to achieve the > goal. > > Just my take on reading it. > > Kaj > > Thanks Kaj, I appreciate your tips and will try to incorporate some improvements based on your feedback. From aarong at thinkcomputer.com Thu Jul 10 20:23:48 2008 From: aarong at thinkcomputer.com (Aaron Greenspan) Date: Thu, 10 Jul 2008 17:23:48 -0700 Subject: [Bostonphptalk] PHP-Related Book Message-ID: <4876A814.6010103@thinkcomputer.com> Hello, I realize this is blatant self-promotion, but hopefully it won't ruin anyone's day... In case anyone is interested, I've recently published a book that's pretty directly related to PHP, as well as issues of programming, intellectual property, and computer security and privacy. It's called "Authoritas: One Student's Harvard Admissions and the Founding of the Facebook Era," and it talks about the complex and mostly unknown story of Facebook's birth. As you may know, Facebook is based on PHP and MySQL, as was houseSYSTEM's Universal Face Book, the site that preceded it at Harvard. The book has a site here: http://www.aarongreenspan.com/authoritas.html and if you're interested in reading the first few pages, you can on the Interbook site for it here: http://www.thinkpress.com/authoritas/index.html The Interbook site also features the actual documents used to write the book (which are linked page-by-page) such as e-mails and IMs with Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook, Inc.'s present CEO, Apache logs, letters to and from the Harvard administration, etc. Both sites are written in PHP (of course!) on the Lampshade framework. If you want, you can buy the book through any of the places listed on the Order page. Feel free to let me know if you have any questions or comments. Aaron Aaron Greenspan President & CEO Think Computer Corporation http://www.thinkcomputer.com From aarong at thinkcomputer.com Thu Jul 10 20:21:09 2008 From: aarong at thinkcomputer.com (Aaron Greenspan) Date: Thu, 10 Jul 2008 17:21:09 -0700 Subject: [Bostonphptalk] PHP-Related Book Message-ID: <4876A775.1020205@thinkcomputer.com> Hello, I realize this is blatant self-promotion, but hopefully it won't ruin anyone's day... In case anyone is interested, I've recently published a book that's pretty directly related to PHP, as well as issues of programming, intellectual property, and computer security and privacy. It's called "Authoritas: One Student's Harvard Admissions and the Founding of the Facebook Era," and it talks about the complex and mostly unknown story of Facebook's birth. As you may know, Facebook is based on PHP and MySQL, as was houseSYSTEM's Universal Face Book, the site that preceded it at Harvard. The book has a site here: http://www.aarongreenspan.com/authoritas.html and if you're interested in reading the first few pages, you can on the Interbook site for it here: http://www.thinkpress.com/authoritas/index.html The Interbook site also features the actual documents used to write the book (which are linked page-by-page) such as e-mails and IMs with Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook, Inc.'s present CEO, Apache logs, letters to and from the Harvard administration, etc. Both sites are written in PHP (of course!) on the Lampshade framework. If you want, you can buy the book through any of the places listed on the Order page. Feel free to let me know if you have any questions or comments. Aaron Aaron Greenspan President & CEO Think Computer Corporation http://www.thinkcomputer.com