News
- News
- Last Updated: November 23, 2007
- Adam Wiggins
One of the many benefits of Rails is database independence. Migrations are particularly nice in this regard; and the easy-to-read / Rubyified display of your schema (via rake db:schema:dump) in schema.rb is icing on the cake.
But what about data? For import and export of the actual data, we’re stuck with mysqldump (or pg_dump, if you’re so inclined). Further, these dump formats are not terribly readable, contain lots of information you may or may not …
- News
- Last Updated: November 20, 2007
- James Lindenbaum
What about gems, plugins, and different Rails versions?
We are definitely going to support gems and plugins. We are almost finished with a slick gem and plugin installer you can use for each app. In the meantime, you can install plugins by importing or uploading the files directly into vendor/plugins.
Currently, we only support the latest stable version of Rails. You can use a different version by uploading a frozen vendor/rails, but this may not …
- News
- Last Updated: November 17, 2007
- James Lindenbaum
How long before I get in?
We are sending out tons of invites every day. We’d prefer not to have a waiting list, but doing it this way allows us to let people in only as we’re sure our infrastructure can handle the load. The number of people we let in each day keeps increasing, as our existing users give us feedback (thanks guys!) which helps us improve our product for the next batch of …
- News
- Last Updated: April 24, 2024
- James Lindenbaum
A couple of weeks ago we quietly started accepting signups for our private beta. We knew people would be excited about Heroku; I mean, we’re pretty excited about it. Word seems to have gotten out, as over the last several days well over 1,000 people have signed up.
We are inviting users off the waiting list all day, every day, as fast as we can. So we’re also receiving a constant stream now of feedback …
- News
- Last Updated: October 31, 2007
- Adam Wiggins
Unless you’re a big company with lots of marketing dollars, rarely does a product launch start with a bang. It’s a gradual process – first you show a few close friends and family members, then some coworkers from your previous job, then some friends of friends. The word starts to spread as you and your partners furiously hack away, trying to make the product stable enough to stand up to a pummeling from the general …
Subscribe to the full-text RSS feed for News.