Book Image

Cloning Internet Applications with Ruby

By : Chang Sau Sheong
Book Image

Cloning Internet Applications with Ruby

By: Chang Sau Sheong

Overview of this book

Most users on the Internet have a few favorite Internet web applications that they use often and cannot do without. These popular applications often provide essential services that we need even while we don’t fully understand its features or how they work. Ruby empowers you to develop your own clones of such applications without much ordeal. Learning how these sites work and describing how they can be implemented enables you to move to the next step of customizing them and enabling your own version of these services.This book shows the reader how to clone some of the Internet's most popular applications in Ruby by first identifying their main features, and then showing example Ruby code to replicate this functionality.While we understand that it connects us to our friends and people we want to meet up with, what is the common feature of a social network that makes it a social network? And how do these features work? This book is the answer to all these questions. It will provide a step-by-step explanation on how the application is designed and coded, and then how it is deployed to the Heroku cloud platform. This book’s main purpose is to break up popular Internet services such as TinyURL, Twitter, Flickr, and Facebook to understand what makes it tick. Then using Ruby, the book describes how a minimal set of features for these sites can be modeled, built, and deployed on the Internet.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

All about photo-sharing services


Photo sharing is one of the most popular services on the Internet and also one of its most useful services. Basically, photo sharing is about the uploading of digital photos by a user, to be shared with others either publicly or privately. The first photo-sharing applications appeared during the time when the World Wide Web itself was in its infancy, during the mid 1990s, but it was only after the dot-com bust that many of the current crop of photo-sharing applications started. One of the earliest photo-sharing applications is Webshots , which originated from a desktop screensaver software in 1995 and eventually migrated to the World Wide Web. Other popular photo-sharing services include Flickr , Photobucket , ImageShack , SmugMug, Snapfish , and Picasa , Google's photo-sharing service. In the past few years astonishingly (yet perhaps not) an entrant to the photo-sharing market is Facebook. As of writing, Facebook users upload an average of 3 billion photos...