A Ruby Message Queue service OnlineMQ
OnlineMQ - Internet Message Queue A free Ruby cloud “Message Queue” service. OnlineMQ is 100% web services oriented which means your integration can be done quickly (Soap - wsdl, Rest & Pox).
Made a library? Written a blog post? Found a useful tutorial? Share it with the Ruby community here or just enjoy what everyone else has found!
OnlineMQ - Internet Message Queue A free Ruby cloud “Message Queue” service. OnlineMQ is 100% web services oriented which means your integration can be done quickly (Soap - wsdl, Rest & Pox).
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Didn’t want this post filling the front page so copying and pasting all the rest here.. :)
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Use our Ruby, java and PHP sample code to make it even easier for you to start working with OnlineMQ.
If you are looking for:
• Business to Business (B2B) integration • Fallback Message queue for traditional MQ system • Front End MQ, your face to the world. • Cross platform integration for your enterprise • Secure integration over the web (SSL) • Real-time Business Intelligence • Complex Event Processing
OnlineMQ provides these benefits and much more… OnlineMQ using Joyent cloud computing (unix cloud) and storage to assure customer satisfaction, performance and reliability.
don’t get it. if one can connect to this, isn’t one smart enough to deploy any of the many open source MQ solutions there and not have to rely on a 3rd party?
If one were to want to deploy one’s own infrastructure to support them as well, sure. If, on the other hand, one were to let someone else take care of the deployment and scaling issues, this works just fine. Whether it is ultimately ``worth it’’ (i.e., would cost less for you to run your on in the event of, say, an outage) depends.
Seems very interesting, i am checking it up. We are using a similar MQ service of amazon, which works just fine. But with no admin GUI which i think is very handy to have.
We use it mainly for IBM MQ fallback with a minimal cost.
Amazon SQS has been popular so far, so any competition to that is a good thing. I don’t see the point of third party queuing services myself, but I’m glad they’re available.
I like the concept and the fact that it is free !!
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