Chris's Wiki :: blog/web/TrackbackProblem Commentshttps://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/web/TrackbackProblem?atomcommentsDWiki2013-02-04T16:11:44ZRecent comments in Chris's Wiki :: blog/web/TrackbackProblem.By Chris Siebenmann on /blog/web/TrackbackProblemtag:CSpace:blog/web/TrackbackProblem:36b90d763d1f3601fb9b5d76231b356d9e6cf5aeChris Siebenmann<div class="wikitext"><p>Jeremy makes a good point that hadn't occurred to me, so my wild
speculation is clearly wrong. At best I can wave my hands and say that
people didn't want to be doing a database update on (potentially) every
request, so they wanted something that had to be explicitly invoked.</p>
</div>2013-02-04T16:11:44ZFrom 99.184.254.149 on /blog/web/TrackbackProblemtag:CSpace:blog/web/TrackbackProblem:e189d7a37f67525033152988dd2420468729b37eFrom 99.184.254.149<div class="wikitext"><p>I get around the limitations of 'cheap web hosting' by using cheap VPS hosting (hostigation.com has very-low-cost OpenVZ instances). I know that's not a solution for everyone, but I like it.</p>
<p>-Brad (augmentedfourth.com)</p>
</div>2013-02-03T02:39:29ZFrom 70.53.72.144 on /blog/web/TrackbackProblemtag:CSpace:blog/web/TrackbackProblem:a8e402bc0f3bb69196e2e33802c655a1f4e3efe6From 70.53.72.144<div class="wikitext"><p>Why do you need logs to track Referrers? Can't you just read the header in your php application?</p>
<p>- Jeremy</p>
</div>2013-02-02T19:16:00Z