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I have registered a new domain name with GODaddy.com
and i would like to host my domain for free. Assume the app is a basic HTML page.
I have referred http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVv_8SuhaDw for configuring GAE
now How can i configure my domain name to map to the app deployed in GAE
Any info will be helpful. Thanks
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Update 1
I followed the steps as given in How to use Google app engine with my own naked domain (not subdomain)?
but when i try to add the domain name it is asking to sign up for "Apps for Business", which i don't think free of service
Is there any way to add domain name to GAE with free of cost
Update 2
After some search it seems google have stopped offering standard (free) edition of Google apps on 6th december 2012.
https://support.google.com/a/answer/2855120?hl=en
Is there any way to host a free domain through google service ?
Ok, to sum the short answers up:
Google closed the door for "free" domain linking to Google App Angine domains slowly.
To link a domain to Google App Engine apps always a connected Google Apps account is necessary.
Google Apps free of cost was canceled last year with a few months time where it was possible to sign in for limited Google Apps version with just one sub-account (so only one mail account for your domain e.g.) and some more limitations.
But as far as I can see from comments and my research over the summer, the links mentioned in the posts about the limited version are no longer available.
So you have to use one of the alternatives like CapeDwarf (if you want to stick to the APIs) which is told to run happily on OpenShift. And being there you could also think about directly using the Paas Services of OpenShift or CloudBees for application where the "free of cost" feature is essential. I didn't find that too hard for my personal stuff
You can register to "Apps for Business", it's free and gives you 50 email addresses and another number of nice things, free small apps hosting is one of them.
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I am working on a mac os x computer. I was asked by a Java automatic update.
I have answered to remind me later this update.
And Safari opened this url: prefmgr-cookie.truste-svc.net
Do you think it is a malware or do you have ever see that when updating Java for mac os x ?
Thanks
prefmgr-cookie.truste-svc.net is a service from TrustArc (formerly TRUSTe, hence the domain name) which provides services for websites so that they can manage privacy management processes. Basically, they host the cookie compliance stuff, for example. Various research shows that they suck at their job, so a TRUSTe logo on a site is mostly a sign said company is throwing money at the problem and not actually willing to adhere to standards and laws, but that's beyond the technical nature of Stack Overflow.
It is not malware.
Note that 'java automatic update' isn't a thing. java is shipped by some party, and there are many offerings: AdoptOpenJDK ships them. So does oracle (but they don't want to, and you should probably not have oracle's offering). So does azul, amazon, even microsoft.
The updater, if there is such a thing, is installed and controlled by the party that shipped it to you, but you did not specify which java you installed, so going much further than this answer is difficult without knowing what you have.
You also don't need java installed unless either [A] you are a developer or [B] you are trying to run software built by some entity that is woefully out of date. Java apps should be shipped self-contained (not requiring you to separately install 'java') and this isn't hard to do either.
Googling this URL points to the company TrustArc (https://trustarc.com/), which provides an integration for websites, where the website visitors can manage their cookie preferences (e.g. only allow cookies which are necessary and disable additional tracking cookies on a specific website). So the URL itself is from a major company in that area, and can IMO be trusted.
For the reason, why this would be opened when delaying the Java update i can only speculate, possibly because the fact, that you delayed the update is stored locally in a cookie and thus the updates has to forward you to that page so that you can manage the settings.
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i want to create a android application, where it will fetch stories (probably html or text) files from internet. i want to know where can host these files(no problem with paid service).
Users should be able to search the stories, rate , and options like mostread and NEW..etc
is there any predefined web services are available for this kind of purpose?
If NO, then what are the technologies i should be familier with to achieve this in a normal web server.
Thanks in advance
I suggest you start with shared web hosting.
Starting at ~ $5/month, shared hosting offers usually have the following advantages:
No need to set up yourself the linux system, Apache and MySQL server
cPanel administration
Support of your preferred server-side language: PHP, Python (less common than PHP) etc.
Migrating to another host is pretty simple
The choice of the programming language + framework depends on your taste and experience.
Two very popular options are PHP/Code Igniter and Python/Django.
Of course, if the traffic becomes significant or if you already expect a very fast growth, you may also consider a scalable solution (which shared or even dedicated hosting is not). Amazon, Google and Microsoft provide this kind of service in the cloud.
From my personal experience with Amazon S3, setting up a web service in the could is far more time-consuming than with a traditional web host. I would not recommend it unless your traffic forecast is over dozens or hundreds of hits/second.
If you want to create your own service - checkout Google App Engine (GAE).
Enabled Java deployment (no need to programming in PHP, Pythone etc.)
Scalable (almost every one mobile app has potential to gain 1M users)
free quotas (free start)
Good integration with Google services and tools (GWT i.e.)
Disadvantages:
There is no option to (easy) migrate your solution to other service.
No ready to install apps (forums, etc).
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**I just got my wrist slapped for not having a question that goes quite along with the spirit of stackoverflow. On the suggestion of an SO mod, I've posted this question again over at programmers stack exchange. Here it is: **
Same Question Reposted over at Programmers.StackExchange
I'm trying to garner insight from as many sources as I can, and I wanted to hear from the big brains at Stackoverflow.
Disillusionment in the Portal Space
I'm seeing a disturbing number of large, enterprise clients who have become disillusioned with their enterprise Portal experience, especially those in the WebSphere Portal Server (WPS) space. Millions have been invested, yet the promise of personalized content with aggregation and integrated collaborative tools has never come to fruition. The move to WPS 7.x is a big rip and replace move, and clients are wondering if they should move somewhere else completely.
Portal Software: A horrible option that is better than all the alternatives
There are loads of Portal haters out there, and sometimes a portal solution is indeed overkill, but when you're talking about large, multi-national corporations, how would one recommend they architect a global solution without a portal server? Portals aren't always as fun to work with as Tomcat or JBoss AS, but when it comes to integrating multiple applications, managing content, updating individual applications that are deployed as individual war files, managing security down to the portlet level, proving a certain amount of personalization to users, and help with the overwhelming task of managing the thousands of pages large scale enterprises have as part of their internal and external websites, is there a better technology out there?
Garnering community insight and feedback
I've been trying to garner as much insight as possible. I wrote a little article on TSS about the issue:
Which other alternatives to portal exists on market?
Every enterprise needs an employee portal. Or do they?
I'm also resurrecting a thread at the CodeRanch to see if I can get any insight from that handsome crew.
Updated Thread Asking for an Alternative to a Portal Software Stragety. Circa 2012
Insight required: A viable alternative to enterprise Portal software? Circa 2009
I'm also looking for some insight from the twitterati (#potemcam).
It's not so much a cross-posting as much as it is an attempt to really gather some keen insight from the community. If I can get some solid responses and experiences, I'd like to aggregate them into an advice article over at TSS. So, any insight or experiences would be more than helpful.
Insights and Experiences Welcomed
Looking forward to hearing your insights. By the way, I'll be cross-linking to this thread from the other sights as well so people with the same questions will be able to bounce back and forth and see what the community is saying on this topic.
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i don't much about cloud hosting.
Now i am building the website in java using spring , mysql.
Can i host that website on cloud with google or any other provider.
i want to know how much it costs , currently for VPS its about $80 per month
or i have to get the VPS.
I am in Australia
You can. Both on Google App Engine and on Amazon EC2. GAE will impose some limitations, while on EC2 you can deploy as if on VPS.
Basically you are not limited geographically if you want to use cloud service.
From my perspective you should pay your attention on several cloud computing platforms which meet your requirements:
Rackspace
Cloud Foundry
Jelastic
Besides, the costs depend on the application resources. In Jelastic VDS is also scaled vertically. So there is no fixed imposed price for this.
Despite the question was asked years ago, I think it might still be useful for others.
I recommend trying Jelastic Cloud, as they provide unique vertical auto scaling (in addition to horizontal as well), for Java, PHP, Go, Ruby, Python, Node.js projects hosting and for Docker or Kubernetes containerized apps.
Jelastic platform is pretty easy to use, provides wide variety of prepackaged applications ready for install in 1 click, is famous for its revolutionary Pay-per-Use approach that lets you pay only for resources in use (without huge overpaying like twice bigger VMs packages in AWS), auto scalability that enables your apps grow easily without a need to migrate/expect downtimes and much more great features.
Jelastic has Cloud partners across the globe, and in Australia Cloudlets.com.au could be mentioned with Tier III data center, providing a first class cloud hosting services and good technical support.
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After I downloaded the Google Mail and Google Maps application into my mobile phone I got an idea about a service that I want to implement.
My problem is that I never did any programming for the mobile platform and I need someone to point me out some resources for the Hello World on a mobile and then something a bit more complicated.
Let's make it a bit broad, as in J2ME in general for the moment. I'll dig into Android once I get the non Android/*Berry/etc out of the way.
Clicking here would be a pretty good place to start, it's where the best J2ME programmers have started before you...
Install NetBeans with J2ME - you can test your mobile applications on a variety of target device emulators. Easy development model - you can develop GUIs rapidly with the Visual Mobile Designer.
I would really recommend looking at Blackberry as a target platform to play with, for the following reasons:
Lots of documentation
Access to cheap devices for testing
No walled garden (approval system or closed marketplace), you can distribute your app via over the air downloads (user just has to point their browser to the appropriate JAD file and download/install begins)
Large user base (at least within the US)
Quality forum support for blackberry developers
Supports J2ME. You can either develop Blackberry specific apps of J2ME specific apps, both run on blackberry devices.
Blackberry specific apps have a more elegent UI library (lots of J2ME witdgets you need to roll your own or use a library like LWUIT) and you won't be able to run Blackberry specific apps to other devices (though the underlying logic will be the same)
Both Blackberry and J2ME specific apps can still access and use underlying non-ui classes of each framework.
The only cons:
Not as sexy as Android or iPhone development
Initial setup can be clumsy
Tough to monetize because no formal blackberry store to manage transactions and installs
You can get more info about Blackberry development here:
http://na.blackberry.com/eng/developers/started/
Starting from Sun's JavaME (former J2ME) website you can find a lot of documentation and examples (even if i must admin, they are a little old).
If you want something more complex yet more advanced, you can have a look at GEAR Java Mobile Framework. It's a lightweight JavaME framework and it's hosted on sourceforge.
There is also a blog containing some usefull tutorial on how to start a new application from scratch.