Quote:
Originally Posted by borked
This has been an enlightening thread...
prior to this thread, I knew
1. that TheDoc knows NATS as well as the coders that programmed it, without (I assume) knowing the source.
2. TMM_John will defend his product on the boards (rightly so) to the last second, even though a 2 hour breather before replying would be a good lesson learned.
What I learned:
1. Doc has been building up much pressure lately in his little cooker that has finally decided the potatoes are cooked
2. Doc and Kristen be making sweet love
3. John has been taking anger management courses
To be discovered.
1. What transpired between Doc and John to turn up the heat on the potatoes?
2. Do I have to worry for a potential Mini-Doc coming through the pipes to steal my clients?
-edit
oh, and stuff about using your own data in a database you own not being allowed to be used elsewhere - can't quite understand that one, so tag that onto "to be discovered"
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It was a interesting thread for sure.... and your comments made me smile.
1. I do greatly understand nats and can make it do whatever. But I do not know the code as well as the coders do.
1. I thought I was calm until I was called a Pirate. I can get pretty excited in person too, just the way I am - so it's a bit hard to for me to see it come through sometimes.
2. And two kids later.
1. The tipping point was him saying the setup Kristin explained wasn't allowed. Which basically means many clients and many others I've just did minor work for, are in violation of a rule they've never heard of.
2. If you code, they're all yours. If you have any cool code/software that helps affiliate programs, I would be interested in selling it for you.
Data: I took it as, if you pull/query nats data to a remote source and setup a sub domain/domain for stats or any reason (ie: not a duplicate of software, just data), it isn't allowed. My view point is, it's my data and unless I'm screwing with nats itself - I can pull it out and do whatever is needed with it. The data is owned by the program owner, explicitly. If for example a lic was pulled, tmm can not legally get that data but the program owner can. Thus they can do whatever they wish with that data as long as it doesn't change/modify/screw with nats directly.
Hope that helps.