Showing posts with label db2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label db2. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Galpin on Rails on IBM

A couple of pieces that I wrote on Rails appeared on IBM at the end of last year. I didn't even realize it until today when somebody emailed me about one of the articles.

The first article is part one of a four part series on using Rails, XForms, and DB2's PUREXML tables together. I also wrote part two, but another writer wrote parts three and four. Only part one is up so far.

The second article is the third tutorial I wrote on using Eclipse as a web development platform. Part one was about using Eclipse for Java web development, and part two was on using it for PHP development. The last tutorial is on using Eclispe (via RadRails) for Rails development. Note, the link for part two shows the intro page to part one. If you login, it correctly gives you part two. Clearly some kind of technical glitch for IBM!

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Mo' Ram

I've been working some lately with DB2. The worst thing about DB2, at least for a Mac-totin' developer, is that DB2 is not (yet) available for OSX. So what to do? I already had Vista installed on my MacBook via Boot Camp. So I installed DB2 on there and ... developed under Windows. Ugh. Running DB2 and Eclipse at the same time often resulted in not only a slow computer, but Eclipse stack overflows and out of memory errors. Funny how I never had such problems on OSX.

Once that project was done, I decided to upgrade the memory on my MacBook. The max it handles is 2GB (I had the 1 GB that was stock) so I went with that. So where to get the 2GB? Well there is always Apple @$300. Ouch. A better choice is Newegg, of course. For a change though, I found an equally good deal at Fry's, just up the road from my office. 2x1GB sticks of Patriot RAM for $65.

Now it was time to install the RAM. I am always quick to tell people that I am a software guy, not a hardware guy. However, Apple makes it really easy to install RAM on the MacBook. It took me like ten, maybe fifteen minutes total to upgrade the RAM. It could not have gone smoother.

The extra memory has inspired me to give Parallels a try. So far the results are mixed. Every time it launches, I get a message form Parallels saying it is installing Parallels Tools. Then Windows crashes (blue screen.) It reboots and seems ok, but it's still aggravating that it does this every time...