Note on this list the stubborn persistence of Yahoo’s Geocities at No. 6, the rise of Yahoo’s Flickr at No. 7, Six Apart at No. 10, and the presences of Chinese sites like Baidu Space and 56.com. The real surprise, though, is document-sharing site Scribd at No. 16, with nearly 24 million worldwide uniques. 1. Blogger (222 million) 2. Facebook (200 million) 3. MySpace (126 million) 4. Wordpress (114 million) 5. Windows Live Spaces (87 million) 6. Yahoo Geocities (69 million) 7. Flickr (64 million) 8. hi5 (58 million) 9. Orkut (46 million) 10. Six Apart (46 million) 11. Baidu Space (40 million) 12. Friendster (31 million) 13. 56.com (29 million) 14. Webs.com (24 million) 15. Bebo (24 million) 16. Scribd (23 million)
Haml takes your gross, ugly templates and replaces them with veritable Haiku. Haml is the next step in generating views in your Rails application. Haml is a refreshing take that is meant to free us from the shitty templating languages we have gotten used to. Haml is based on one primary principal. Markup should be beautiful. Haml is a real solution to a real problem. Stop using the slow, repetitive, and annoying templates that you don’t even know how much you hate yet
Most applications consist of a big number of model- or so called domain-objects. Building different views, editors, and reports; querying, validating and storing those objects is very repetitive and error-prone, if an object changes its shape frequently. Magritte is a fully dynamic meta-description framework that helps to solve those problems, while keeping the full power to the programmer in all aspects. Moreover since Magritte is described in itself, you can let your users modify the meta-world and add their own fields and forms without writing a single line of code.