My buddy Ed is a great programmer, & in the last many months he's really gotten deep into Ruby on Rails. Periodically he emails the CWE-LUG list about Ruby, & his info is always good. Here's some of those emails for your edification & enlightenment.
Here's a presentation that Ed did for the Unix Users Group here in St. Louis:
<begin Ed>
Hello. I know its been 1.5 weeks since my tutorial on Ruby at the general SLUUG mtg, but finally the slides are up.
http://www.cwelug.org/~edh/RubyForNubys.sxi
An OOo Impress document. Feel free to convert it to HTML or PDF if you want.
It is released under a Attribute/Non-commercial/Share-Alike Creative Commons licence. That means you can edit it and redistriute it as long as attribution is maintained and it is released under an identical license.
<end Ed>
Then Ed had this to say about developing Ruby on Rails for Mac OS X users (even though I'm pretty sure Ed uses Linux).
<begin Ed>
http://hivelogic.com/articles/2005/12/01/ruby_rails_lighttpd_mysql_tiger
This is a step-by-step tutorial on getting a full-on Rails stack up and running on your Mac. BTW, Macs are very good at doing Rails development.
<end Ed>
Finally, here's Ed on getting Ruby on Rails working on my fave distro, K/Ubuntu.
<begin Ed>
Hi, just got a new HD from the EPC sale and installed Breezy onto it. Bit tricky setting up support for Rails programming. The basic issue is getting compiler tools/libraries. I wrote up my travails in my blog: http://greenprogrammer.blogspot.com.
Other than that, Ubuntu really rocks. My laptop seems over 100% faster. Not sure if the HD is the culprit or Ubuntu is just tuned better. And when I plugged my old HD into a USB drive enclosure, Ubuntu popped up various file browsers for each partition. That is seriously cool, man.
Just FYI.
<end Ed>
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