Notable stories that should be added that I'm aware of: - Amazon's UnSpun - Ara Howard at the NOAA uses Ruby a lot I don't think we need to dilute the page the way Python has done; there are a lot of companies and people in there I've never heard of, so their story means very little to me unless it's a tale of harrowing programming adventure (which most of them aren't). I think the page we have now is significant, but maybe needs to look less like a list and more like a narrative outlining some of the success stories. When I pop open both the Python and Ruby success stories pages, all I see are links. I've looked at the Ruby one before, but glossed over it because there was nothing compelling about it. Maybe the content should stay but be presented in a more interesting way? --Jeremy On 1/5/07, dblack / wobblini.net <dblack / wobblini.net> wrote: > Hi -- > > On Sat, 6 Jan 2007, Rahul wrote: > > > > > The list of ruby success stories page in ruby-lang.org is really lame. > > > > compared to python success stories link this looks very weak. > > > > i think this should be removed till the list looks a bit more impressive > > It's supposed to be informative, not impressive. Perhaps people can > report their success stories and the page can be updated. > > > David > > -- > Q. What is THE Ruby book for Rails developers? > A. RUBY FOR RAILS by David A. Black (http://www.manning.com/black) > (See what readers are saying! http://www.rubypal.com/r4rrevs.pdf) > Q. Where can I get Ruby/Rails on-site training, consulting, coaching? > A. Ruby Power and Light, LLC (http://www.rubypal.com) > > -- My free Ruby e-book: http://www.humblelittlerubybook.com/book/ My blogs: http://www.mrneighborly.com/ http://www.rubyinpractice.com/