Episode #100: Mustache edition. And hey, it’s episode 100!

The Rails Envy podcast is brought to you this week by NewRelic. NewRelic provides RPM which is a plugin for rails that allows you to monitor and quickly diagnose problems with your Rails application in real time. Check them out at NewRelic.com.
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Show Notes
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JRuby 1.4 Final Released
JRuby 1.4 has been released. New in this version is a native launcher for JRuby on Windows.
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Software Craftsmanship Katas
Chris Parsons and Corey Haines release the katacasts blog and video cast. Software Craftsmanship Katas is a place dedicated to promote screencasts of coding katas to a wide audience of people interested in seeing other craftsmen perform a given kata.
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RubyMine 2.0 Release Candidate
JetBrains has released RubyMine 2.0 release candidate
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GitHub Gem Version 0.4.0 Released
Dr Nic has taken over this gem! This release moves over to GemCutter and adds issue page integration.
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Rack GemAssets
This is a Rack Middleware which will find and send static files provided by loaded gems.
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HPricot 0.8.2 Released
Nick Seiger releases HPricot 0.8.2 with bug fixes and a JRuby bug fix.
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Mustaches for Charity
The pivotal labs gang are growing mustaches for charity!
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Heroku Asset Packager
This is asset packager for Heroku, which only supports a read only file system.
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Easy Goal Tracking with Rails and Google Analytics
Andre over on the Scout blog shows a neat technique for tracking goals with Google Analytics and Rails.
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Debug-level Logging for a Single Rails Production Request
Andy Jeffries goes over a technique for debugging a single request on a production app.
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Solving the memory leak in "god load"
Eric Lindvall goes over how he finally solved the memory leak in god.
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Hey, guys!
Thanks for mentioning the katacasts series. Along with Chris and me, the main contributor is Enrique Comba. They both work at Eden Development. We also are planning on having periodic guest programmers doing casts.
Thanks again.
Isn’t this really 98 episodes though? Weren’t two episodes missing (85 and 88)?
@Carl Right you are! This means we get to celebrate AGAIN!
Hey, I’m one of the three “Windows Ruby on Rails Developers”.. which is one of the reasons I also use Rubymine. Is it worth $100.. hard to say. It’s definitely worth $80 though! ;d
Second of the three Windows developers checking in. I’m still getting to know RubyMine, but I’m liking it so far. Especially the debugger. Performance was pretty awful through the 2.0 betas and RCs but the final release is running much faster.
And come on guys, I know paying for stuff is unusual in the open source world but surely $100 isn’t that much money for anyone who’s actually programming for a living.
I develop Rails apps on Windows at work and I use Netbeans. I tried RubyMine 1.x and I still like Netbeans much better.
Another Rails Windows developer here using Rubymine since 1.x and I absolutely love it, though I’m thinking about buying a Macbook