> ... as the year progresses, hope to compare favorably
> to Backbone's impressive list.
I'm very much looking forward to seeing them. The more different takes on JS-heavy apps the better.
I'm about to crash, but would you mind expanding on what you've written here -- "rewritten from the ground up", and so on -- in relation to earlier posts like this one:
... which describe what I've always understood to be the heart of Ember as an iteration on the core SproutCore internals. Does that blog post no longer describe what ended up happening to Project Amber?
I've been working with Backbone intensively since V0.1, and though I've very scarcely looked at ember, I've been following the heated discussions on both sides. Personally, I think it's damaging to both your publicizing efforts.
Perhaps what would be more beneficial is a more complex hello world app than the todo list. One that expresses the flexibility of Backbone's minimalism, along with the larger out-of-the-box functionality of Ember. I'm personally in the Backbone camp, but it would be easier to let the user decide what is best for him/her.
On the contrary, I've found the discourse between Jeremy and Yehuda vigorous, respectful, and edifying. In my opinion, these are the best kinds of technical discussions; they are like a rock tumbler that wears away at our solutions until we're left with shiny best practices--and can move on to the next big problem to solve.
> I've been following the heated discussions on both sides. Personally, I think it's damaging to both your publicizing efforts.
Actually, it probably helps both publicizing efforts. As the Internet-wide debate becomes "Backbone vs Ember," it puts the focus on those two techs and leaves other competitors out of the conversation.
I'm about to crash, but would you mind expanding on what you've written here -- "rewritten from the ground up", and so on -- in relation to earlier posts like this one:
http://blog.sproutcore.com/sproutcore-amber-a-report-by-yehu...
... which describe what I've always understood to be the heart of Ember as an iteration on the core SproutCore internals. Does that blog post no longer describe what ended up happening to Project Amber?