Gerhard Häring wrote:
>
> * Justin Clift <justin@postgresql.org> [2002-10-02 10:34 +1000]:
> > Over the last few weeks we've put together a new "Advocacy and
> > Marketing" website for PostgreSQL:
> >
> > http://advocacy.postgresql.org
>
> Cool :-)
:-)
> A few remarks:
Thanks Gerhard. :)
> * [http://advocacy.postgresql.org/advantages/]
> """
> ...
> A point list for some technical features that PostgreSQL offers:
> ...
> * Replication (available commercially) allowing the duplication of
> the database on multiple machines
> """
>
> IIRC there is now a replication solution in contrib/ I've never used
> it though. So you can perhaps cut the "available commercially" There
> might be other commercial offerings I know nothing about.
Good point. Althought the /contrib/rserv version doesn't work for
PostgreSQL 7.2.x (have tried), there is still Usogres and stuff. Will
update that. :)
> * "PostgreSQL : The worlds most advanced Open Source database"
> This probably isn't entirely true any more, considering the
> availability of SAP DB. I personally still stick with PostgreSQL,
> however, as I like it and it seems to have much momentum.
Hmmm... suggested new tag line? :)
> * Allows you to win Bullshit-Bingo in 10 seconds. But that's by design
> ;-)
Heh Heh Heh
> * I don't like serif-fonts like "Times New Roman" on web pages. What
> about using a font declaration like (from my homepage):
There aren't any typeface changing elements in the page (unless
something got past me). And we don't use CSS anywhere. Seems to be
really cross-browser this way. :)
> body { font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
> background-color: #FFFFEE}
>
> throughout the site?
Um... not yet. Haven't learnt CSS yet, don't have the spare time too,
and for the moment "this works". Hope that doesn't sound like a bad
attitude, it's just there's so much stuff going on at the moment.
:-)
Regards and best wishes,
Justin Clift
> -- Gerhard
--
"My grandfather once told me that there are two kinds of people: those
who work and those who take the credit. He told me to try to be in the
first group; there was less competition there."
- Indira Gandhi