An epistle from James Robertson, CINCOM's Smalltalk evangelist, informs me that Web Velocity is now available.
James is the author of a great many quality Smalltalk podcasts available on iTunes, so learning Web Velocity should be a pleasure.
Forget Rails. Web Velocity is built on Seaside from Ruby-guy Avi Bryant ( and returns to Ruby as the "Borges" web framework) and allows editing your live server-side code in the web page in your browser. The live page.
The only thing that comes close to this in my experience is the "live code" {example}macro in the Curl Documentation Viewer in the Curl IDE.
Congrats to Alan Knight and his team at CINCOM and to the Squeak folks who helped carry Seaside forward!
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Though Smalltalk is not that popular these days, there is a new renaissance in Smalltalk development, thanks to Squeak.I went through many sites of the Smalltalk and agree with all the supporters of Smalltalk. The more I learn about Smalltalk and Squeak the more I’m impressed. In the process of my learning I have collected some good sites (more than 200) related to Smalltalk and Squeak (lessons, tutorials and programming). If you are interested take a look at the below link.
200 sites to know about smalltalk programming http://bit.ly/g3iow
Though Smalltalk is not that popular these days, there is a new renaissance in Smalltalk development, thanks to Squeak.I went through many sites of the Smalltalk and agree with all the supporters of Smalltalk. The more I learn about Smalltalk and Squeak the more I’m impressed. In the process of my learning I have collected some good sites (more than 200) related to Smalltalk and Squeak (lessons, tutorials and programming). If you are interested take a look at the below link.
200 sites to know about smalltalk programming http://bit.ly/g3iow
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