Latest Screencasts
Episode #11 - Advanced HTTP Caching
Scaling Rails Series - 2009-02-26 - free
Once you have a firm grasp of the 3 header tags we talked about in the previous episode (max-age, etags, and last_modified) you can start to take advantage of reverse proxy caches. In this episode we let you know exactly what a proxy cache is, and how you might use it to effectively scale a dynamic website to millions of users.
Watch this screencastEpisode #10 - Client-side Caching
Scaling Rails Series - 2009-02-25 - free
Once you’ve done all the server side caching you can possibly do, you might want to take a look back at the client side of things to do some advanced client-side caching. In this episode we’ll show how to effectively use the max-age, etag, and last_modified helpers to scale your application.
Watch this screencastEpisode #8 - Memcached
Scaling Rails Series - 2009-02-19 - free
Most of the big Web 2.0 websites rely on memcached (pronounced "Memcache-Dee") to scale, even the ones not using Rails. In this screencast you’ll learn how easy it is to use memcached in your Rails application, and how to do low level query caching for websites where you have highly customized layouts.
Watch this screencastEpisode #7 - Fragment Caching
Scaling Rails Series - 2009-02-09 - free
If there’s no way to cache the entire content of a page, then odds are you can probably cache smaller pieces of it. This is where fragment caching comes in, allowing you to cache common parts of a webpage which are resource intensive and may be used accross mulitple pages.
Watch this screencastEpisode #5 - Advanced Page Caching
Scaling Rails Series - 2009-02-05 - free
Page caching is pretty simple to do, but what happens when you need pagination or dynamic data on your pages? Can you still use page caching? In this screencast we’ll start out showing how to solve these problems and finish up with my first rant of the series "Login status is overrated."
Watch this screencastEpisode #2 - Page Caching
Scaling Rails Series - 2009-01-22 - free
Ruby on Rails comes with several caching mechanisms out of the box, starting with Page Caching. In this episode we show how to implement Page Caching in a simple blog application.
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