Originally posted by HeliCraig
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test please delete
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Where are we going? And what’s with this hand basket? -
Originally posted by HeliCraig View PostI had a lovely nap this afternoon after ClientCo. Looks like I have a lovely home made pie and mash for dinner too.
Today just gets better!Where are we going? And what’s with this hand basket?Comment
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Originally posted by voodooflux View PostI planned to have a nap too, but ended up doing some last minute Christmas shopping for my mum. I may retire early this eveningComment
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Population
1739 Revenues
401100 € Unemployment 1 %
Transport 100 %
Crime rate 1 %
Pollution 0 %
rank=300Comment
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So I was ready to leave at 2:55 - then some c**t gave me a problem. Had to stay until 3:30!!!!!!!
I will get my revenge.....Comment
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Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostSo I was ready to leave at 2:55 - then some c**t gave me a problem. Had to stay until 3:30!!!!!!!
I will get my revenge.....
Luckily they had it fixed by 4:45; so we made the pub at around 5:30.Comment
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Originally posted by HeliCraig View PostI too will happily have a look at it.
I thought about a doing a FB app a while ago, but that was as far as it got. Is it done with Ruby on Rails, or am I confusing technologies again?
Basically, Facebook makes a call to your server asking for content, and passing some basic information about the user, assuming they're logged in. You can then use this to query their REST API to obtain other information associated with that user, and obviously you have whatever data associated with that user that you manage yourself.
Then, if your app is configured to be embedded in the Facebook page, you return FBML, which is a subset of HTML together with a bunch of FB-specific utility tags, such as <fb:name uid="1234" />, and FB then converts that into the final HTML sent to the client.
Alternatively, you can have FB embed your content in an iframe. In that case you serve plain old HTML, but you have the responsibility of getting all the relevant data from their REST API to embed in the page - you can't use the FBML stuff.
I think there's some way of combining the two by serving FBML with an iframe in it, but I haven't got that far yet.Comment
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Originally posted by HeliCraig View PostSame happened at ClientCo yesterday.... all ready to go to the pub and then some monkey broke a network switch sending our systems all over the place.
Luckily they had it fixed by 4:45; so we made the pub at around 5:30.Comment
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