Ruby on Rails in India: It’s getting hotter
Believe me! The scene is much hotter than what I had anticipated a few months back.
Good to see so many companies and developers jumping ( or wanting to jump) onto Rails/Ruby from other frameworks and languages.
This means increased competition for us. But it could also be consolidation time for the small agile Rails teams in this area to join hands to increase their offering.
Talking about demand; yesterday, I received a job offer from a “Big Indian Outsourcing company”.
The lady who called me read this blog, but probably didn’t read “technopreneur” written on the top.
So when I told her that I was running a company myself, there was dead silence for a couple of seconds.
Then she asked me, if I could give references of any Rails programmers.
I told her that If I came across good people, I’ll hire them and I’ll pass on the others to her.
Fair enough. Right!
Rails training in Colombo, Sri Lanka

I travelled to Colombo last week to train a team of web programmers on Ruby on Rails.
God! I had never imagined, I would be training people on rails in Colombo.
The web programming team at Providence Networks and Solutions was great. They were very good at php and Java, and it seemed like they enjoyed the Rails training a lot.
Thanks to Ajay at ITVidya for connecting me and Providence.
A couple of observations about Colombo, unrelated to the training
1. Inspite of the communal/political probem, Sri Lanka is doing well. The airport is the first impression of any city, Colombo airport was sparkling clean and the immigration staff was very friendly too. The duty free shops were much better than ours, carried much more stock than our new “flamingos” and the staff was friendlier too.
2. The streets were neat and there were no animals or Rickshaws. I thought I would find them in all developing countries. Or do we have too much of them in Indian cities.
3. They have a well implemented parking policy in Colombo. It is not like the haphazard way of sadi-dilli. It’s probably a good suggestion to ask our politicians to stop visiting London, Singapore and Tokyo and rather look around nearby to learn how to implement urban policies.
And for the business minded, there are a good number of developers available at much lesser cost there, and they all speak English too. So you know you have an option available for your next offshore team.
It was a good trip and I look forward to visiting Colombo again. :)
RailsConf Europe 2006

Marcel and DHH were very surprized to know that I had flown in from India for the RailsConf.
I enjoyed most of the sessions that I attended. With four tracks going on in parallel definitely I missed out on some very good ones.
- DHH’s session on ActiveResource was great. He demoed what he had talked about at Chicago RailsConf. I have also moved one of my projects to the edge to start playing with simply_restful.
- Marcel’s session on making RJS DRYer was also good. simply_helpful is a good way of doing this. It applies the same philosophy to the View side of things, that simply_restful applies to the controller. Using the simply_helpful plugin, the application can use a lot of meaningful default, hence making the views and helpers a lot more dry-er.
- Jamis just released a new version of capistrano and he demoed the cool new features. The slickest of them was the cap shell. It is a great tool to monitor multiple serves in a cluster from a single console, with the ability to run commands against only particular machines in the cluster identified by roles that the machines play in the cluster.
- Jim Weirich’s plenary session was great. He demonstrated a lot of common mistakes that programmers make, because of Ruby’s open classes. A lot of his talk featured around being good to other’s code.
- Dave Thomas and Kathy Siera were outstanding, entertaining and passionate as usual!
ready for RailsConfEurope2006, PizzaonRails
I am Travelling to London this wednesday, to attend the first RailsConf Europe 2006
I will be attending the pre-conference social PizzaOnRails on Wednesday evening. Then the RailsConf on Thursday, Friday.
I will be visiting the Shinnyo-en temple in Surrey on Saturday morning and be back in Central London by the afternoon.
Am flying back to Delhi on Sunday morning.
Anybody interested in meeting up to discuss ruby, rails, buddhism, India whatever… drop me
a mail.
Pdf-writer with login engine problem
If you are using pdf-writer with login engine, you can encounter a nasty problem with transactions in login engine like me(gosh… this was crazy). This is because login engine uses transaction-simple module (which is a part of transaction-simple by Austin Ziegler but not the whole gem) included in rails 1.1 in active record.
While including pdf-writer it require the whole transaction-simple library.So in such a case the simple.rb file is required twice in the application.Which creates a problem in registration in login engine as it uses tranactions.
This ticket is discussed in here and a patch is also available…
http://dev.rubyonrails.org/ticket/4732
http://dev.rubyonrails.org/ticket/4932
Bad news is it can not be fixed before rails version 2 according to DHH ’s response[:(]
