Hi!
First of all, thanks for the input!
> What's the matter with re-using the code and charging the same rate for
> it? You're a business, and you're supposed to make money. I currently
> charge by the hour, but I'm trying whereever possible to move away from
> hourly rates into fixed price ser
Now, I'm kind of put against the wall here. I
want to get to it, i.e. get to the work. But after some bad experiences *grunt*, I'm
not willing to get literally squished by blood sucking vampires (*clearing my throat*)
later on.
Kind regards,
Video Populares et Optimates
Hi!
I'm sifting through the possibilities with PHP and naturally one of the first things I
searched for was the possibility for OO development. Now, I found chapter LXXII in the
PHP manual (file generated Sun Oct 05 02:13:52 2003), but it has quite an ugly warning
clause in the top: "Warning Th
>
> If you mean to protect your source from your users, that is the case
> already. Unless someone can compromise your server, they never get access
> to the source, only its output.
>
True! But what for the network technicians, system administrators and web
developers (to be very paranoid) that a
Yes, I've had that thought also. I believe that the question you suggest
will probably the foundation of the main course I'll take. For what
possibilities are there really to hide anything in plain text that anyway
will reside on third-party servers. (rhetorical question)
You can never know what
your code? I'd really appreciate if someone could give me the bare and
gritty specifics on how it is possible to protect server side scripts such as PHP..
Thanks in advance,
Video Populares et Optimates
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