Right, this is a very nice project, but obviously not ready for a 1.0 release.
I am frustrated by the lack of technical documentation. For this kind of decentralized projects, full transparency is required.
It took some time before I understood the foundation blocks of the Ring network, using [0] and [1], and yet I'm quite unhappy:
* Many items are very lightly documented, or even "to be disclosed" ;
* The main website does not provide any insight about Ring's internals ;
* Especially, the name registration service is quite obscure and currently not decentralized according to the doc [0].
Nice work! There is still room for improvements, but this website will certainly provide a lot of value to developers.
As an additional feature, considering the target audience, I would suggest to add some API with filter option, using CalDav format for example [0]. Everyone would be able to fetch latest data from conferencelist in their local calendars ;)
Well, I pretty love javascript, is it an imperative language? ;)
Please don't be so sharp, I really don't understand why this link is in HN, and I'm just exposing my point of view, after practising OCaml a lot. So what, I'm a student so my opinion is worthless?
I'm studying this language right now at a french school, with INRIA researcher.
And, well... I'm not really satisfied with it. OCaml produces a small amount of code, but is really slow and hard to understand. Sometimes, it looks like obfuscated code!
Documentation and libraries are not polished, and I would recommend Haskell instead of OCaml. Good for research and some algorithms, bad for applications.
And... God... "This page was last updated on 17 June 2006."