Check out Jerry's new videos

Peter Alcibiades palcibiades-first at yahoo.co.uk
Sat May 8 05:30:31 EDT 2010


OK, just to be clear, is this how it is?

--  If you have subscribed to the on-rev hosting service, you can then write
and host pages on it, using any text editor, which will allow any web
browser to run your web apps, but only (at least at the moment) from the
on-rev server run by Rev itself.

-- if you have the desktop rev-web client, you can debug the pages you have
written for the rev-web hosting service, online.  However, you don't have to
have this to run and manage the pages.

-- If you have revBrowser, you can display any web pages in Rev stacks.

-- if you have the browser plugin, you can run revlets, ie stacks you've
compiled for the web, in the browser with that plugin, and these can be
hosted anyplace you can get anyone to host them, including locally.

Is that how it goes?  So if you're running and writing for Linux, you can
write pages for the rev-web server, and they will run in any browser on any
OS including Linux, but the only way to do that is by subscribing to the
hosting service.

The rest of it, you cannot do any of it.  Well, not quite right, you can
develop and compile for the web, but then you can't use what you have made
from the system you developed it on.

Peter


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