GREE Platform is a large social platform on which worldwide users can play games with each other.
It's developed by PHP, but Ruby is also used, especially in DevOpts.
I'll talk about how we are using Ruby.
This document discusses JRuby and cloud computing platforms. It provides pricing details for a pay-as-you-go cloud computing service starting at $8,800 per month for 1 CPU and 1GB RAM with 30GB storage. It also outlines the included services such as firewall, global IP address, OS templates for RedHat, CentOS, and Windows 2008 Server, backup and more. Finally, it discusses how JRuby can be used to build applications on cloud platforms with technologies like Rails, Sinatra, Rack, message queues, and job processing frameworks.
This document discusses the development of JRuby. It notes that JRuby is developed collaboratively by developers from around the world. Contributors can submit code via pull requests on GitHub or report bugs on Jira. Development involves tasks like cloning the JRuby code repository, making changes, and submitting pull requests for review.
This document announces the first ever JRubyKaigi conference happening on August 28, 2010 as a sub-event of RubyKaigi 2010. It will include keynotes from Charles O. Nutter and other speakers such as Nick Sieger, Takeru Sasaki, Koichi Fujikawa, Yoko Harada, and Hiroshi Nakamura who are JRuby core developers and Japanese JRuby developers. Lightning talks are also being accepted.
This document summarizes a presentation on JRuby given by Koichiro Ohba. It discusses JRuby's current state, upcoming features, and demos. Key points include:
- JRuby 1.1.5 was recently released with improved performance and compatibility.
- JRuby 1.1.6RC1 is available and fixes many bugs while adding support for the Ruby 1.9 parser.
- The GlassFish gem allows running Ruby on Rails and other web frameworks on the GlassFish application server.
- A demo shows Redmine running on GlassFish using the GlassFish gem.