It’s used in a lot of places that don’t make a lot of noise about it (some might surprise you), and there are still plenty of big established names like Shopify, Soundcloud and Basecamp running on Rails. Oh and GitHub, although I’m not sure we should shout about that anymore… But. While the Stack Overflow survey isn’t necessarily an accurate barometer of developer opinion, the positions of Ruby and Rails do show it’s fallen from grace in recent times. Anecdotally, I find a lot of documentation or guides that haven’t been updated for several years and the same goes for a lot of gems, plugins and other projects. Banners like this are becoming more and more common:
What follows is a proof of concept — not a finished standard, not a production-ready library, not even necessarily a concrete proposal for something new, but a starting point for discussion that demonstrates the problems with Web streams aren't inherent to streaming itself; they're consequences of specific design choices that could be made differently. Whether this exact API is the right answer is less important than whether it sparks a productive conversation about what we actually need from a streaming primitive.。新收录的资料是该领域的重要参考
Photographer: Yuki Iwamura/Bloomberg,更多细节参见新收录的资料
service show up on a Certificate Transparency log,