December 2005
PHP on TRAX :: Rapid Development Made Easy
by onizuka & 14 others (via)If you are web developer and are fed up with the spaghetti code you have come
to the right place. Php On Trax(formerly Php On Rails) is a web-application
and persistance framework that is based on Ruby on Rails and
includes everything needed to create database-backed web-applications according to the
Model-View-Control pattern of separation.
PHP on TRAX :: Rapid Development Made Easy
by fredbird & 14 othersIf you are web developer and are fed up with the spaghetti code you have come
to the right place. Php On Trax(formerly Php On Rails) is a web-application
and persistance framework that is based on Ruby on Rails and
includes everything needed to create database-backed web-applications according to the
Model-View-Control pattern of separation.
November 2005
Flight Patterns | Air traffic as seen by the FAA.
by sbrothier & 2 othersThe following flight pattern visualizations are the result of experiments leading to the project Celestial Mechanics by Scott Hessels and Gabriel Dunne. FAA data was parsed and plotted using the Processing programming environment. The frames were composited with Adobe After Effects and/or Maya and the final piece was highlighted at SIGGRAPH 2005 in the NVIDIA Immersive Dome Experience.
September 2005
July 2005
Catalog of Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture
by fredbird & 1 otherThese pages are a brief overview of each of the patterns in P of EAA. They aren't intended to stand alone, but merely as a quick aide-memoire for those familiar with them, and a handy link if you want to refer to one online. In the future I may add some post-publication comments into the material here, but we'll see how that works out.
The Model-View-Controller (MVC) Design Pattern for PHP
by fredbird & 2 othersMVC implementation in PHP
May 2005
UI Patterns and Techniques: Introduction
by fredbird & 5 othersEach of these patterns (which are more general) and techniques (more specific) are intended to help you solve design problems. They're common problems, and there's no point in reinventing the wheel every time you need, say, a sortable table -- plenty of folks have already done it, and learned how to do it well. Some of that knowledge is written up here, in an easily-digestible format.
1
(7 marks)