I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open source
node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites using
the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of
e-commerce project but Nada!
Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any
e-commerce project that I could participate?
If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it would
have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a novice
node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is needed.
On Friday, 11 May 2012 00:25:51 UTC+5:30, guzelgoz wrote:
> Hi all,
> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open > source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites > using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of > e-commerce project but Nada!
> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any > e-commerce project that I could participate?
> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it > would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a > novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is > needed.
> Looking forward to your feedbacks! > Thanks, > Hakan
I'd be really interested in a cooperation as an opportunity to dive into node.js. Unfortunately I currently only have a basic understanding of node.js. If you are OK with a partner who wants to take the "learning by doing" approach I'd be glad to work on this one.
Cheers, Adem
Am Donnerstag, 10. Mai 2012 20:55:51 UTC+2 schrieb guzelgoz:
> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open > source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites > using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of > e-commerce project but Nada!
> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any > e-commerce project that I could participate?
> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it > would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a > novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is > needed.
> Looking forward to your feedbacks! > Thanks, > Hakan
Am Donnerstag, 10. Mai 2012 20:55:51 UTC+2 schrieb guzelgoz:
> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open > source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites > using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of > e-commerce project but Nada!
> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any > e-commerce project that I could participate?
> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it > would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a > novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is > needed.
> Looking forward to your feedbacks! > Thanks, > Hakan
> I'd be really interested in a cooperation as an opportunity to dive into > node.js. Unfortunately I currently only have a basic understanding of > node.js. If you are OK with a partner who wants to take the "learning by > doing" approach I'd be glad to work on this one.
> Cheers, > Adem
> Am Donnerstag, 10. Mai 2012 20:55:51 UTC+2 schrieb guzelgoz:
>> Hi all,
>> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open >> source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites >> using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of >> e-commerce project but Nada!
>> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any >> e-commerce project that I could participate?
>> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it >> would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a >> novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is >> needed.
>> Looking forward to your feedbacks! >> Thanks, >> Hakan
> Am Donnerstag, 10. Mai 2012 20:55:51 UTC+2 schrieb guzelgoz:
>> Hi all,
>> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open >> source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites >> using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of >> e-commerce project but Nada!
>> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any >> e-commerce project that I could participate?
>> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it >> would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a >> novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is >> needed.
>> Looking forward to your feedbacks! >> Thanks, >> Hakan
I am ok with "learning by doing" approach.
I think it would be a good start to build a simple website with products, a
simple cart that sells these products. I would as much as possible keep
things basic and simple so that it can grow up with time. I would suggest
to go ahead with Mongo as DB.
On Tue, May 15, 2012 at 8:56 PM, jmartins <jcmart...@gmail.com> wrote:
> +1
> Em domingo, 13 de maio de 2012 16h00min46s UTC-3, Adem Aydin escreveu:
>> Selam Hakan,
>> I'd be really interested in a cooperation as an opportunity to dive into
>> node.js. Unfortunately I currently only have a basic understanding of
>> node.js. If you are OK with a partner who wants to take the "learning by
>> doing" approach I'd be glad to work on this one.
>> Cheers,
>> Adem
>> Am Donnerstag, 10. Mai 2012 20:55:51 UTC+2 schrieb guzelgoz:
>>> Hi all,
>>> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open
>>> source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites
>>> using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of
>>> e-commerce project but Nada!
>>> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any
>>> e-commerce project that I could participate?
>>> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it
>>> would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a
>>> novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is
>>> needed.
>>> Looking forward to your feedbacks!
>>> Thanks,
>>> Hakan
>> Am Donnerstag, 10. Mai 2012 20:55:51 UTC+2 schrieb guzelgoz:
>>> Hi all,
>>> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open
>>> source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites
>>> using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of
>>> e-commerce project but Nada!
>>> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any
>>> e-commerce project that I could participate?
>>> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it
>>> would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a
>>> novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is
>>> needed.
>>> Looking forward to your feedbacks!
>>> Thanks,
>>> Hakan
if its orders/payment data you might want to go with couchdb. If mongodb crashed theres a fair chance of data loss because it operates in RAM and periodically stores to disk. In this case that loss can be directly mapped to financial loss. There are ways to set mongo up that gaurd against this, but thats beyond the scope of the module
Hi! I'm interested, and just as Adem said "learning by doing" would like to be part of this project. I am developing a web application focused on measuring the experience of User in any possible scenario Thank!
Em quarta-feira, 16 de maio de 2012 22h54min58s UTC-3, Dave Clements escreveu:
> if its orders/payment data you might want to go with couchdb. If mongodb > crashed theres a fair chance of data loss because it operates in RAM and > periodically stores to disk. In this case that loss can be directly mapped > to financial loss. There are ways to set mongo up that gaurd against this, > but thats beyond the scope of the module
> if its orders/payment data you might want to go with couchdb. If mongodb
> crashed theres a fair chance of data loss because it operates in RAM and
> periodically stores to disk. In this case that loss can be directly mapped
> to financial loss. There are ways to set mongo up that gaurd against this,
> but thats beyond the scope of the module
marcon...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi!
> I'm interested, and just as Adem said "learning by doing" would like to be
> part of this project.
> I am developing a web application focused on measuring the experience of
> User in any possible scenario
> Thank!
> Em quarta-feira, 16 de maio de 2012 22h54min58s UTC-3, Dave Clements
> escreveu:
>> if its orders/payment data you might want to go with couchdb. If mongodb
>> crashed theres a fair chance of data loss because it operates in RAM and
>> periodically stores to disk. In this case that loss can be directly mapped
>> to financial loss. There are ways to set mongo up that gaurd against this,
>> but thats beyond the scope of the module
> On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 8:02 PM, Marcos Vinicius de Camargo Marcon <
> marcon...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Hi!
>> I'm interested, and just as Adem said "learning by doing" would like to >> be part of this project. >> I am developing a web application focused on measuring the experience of >> User in any possible scenario >> Thank!
>> Em quarta-feira, 16 de maio de 2012 22h54min58s UTC-3, Dave Clements >> escreveu:
>>> if its orders/payment data you might want to go with couchdb. If mongodb >>> crashed theres a fair chance of data loss because it operates in RAM and >>> periodically stores to disk. In this case that loss can be directly mapped >>> to financial loss. There are ways to set mongo up that gaurd against this, >>> but thats beyond the scope of the module
On Sat, May 19, 2012 at 12:07 AM, jmartins <jcmart...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Why not use a graphos database like Neo4J ?
> It's awesome to crossales, upsales, promotions, etc...
> tks
> João
> Em quinta-feira, 17 de maio de 2012 01h17min57s UTC-3, MarkM escreveu:
>> Any plans to support bitcoin payments?
>> On Wed, May 16, 2012 at 8:02 PM, Marcos Vinicius de Camargo Marcon <
>> marcon...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> Hi!
>>> I'm interested, and just as Adem said "learning by doing" would like to
>>> be part of this project.
>>> I am developing a web application focused on measuring the experience of
>>> User in any possible scenario
>>> Thank!
>>> Em quarta-feira, 16 de maio de 2012 22h54min58s UTC-3, Dave Clements
>>> escreveu:
>>>> if its orders/payment data you might want to go with couchdb. If
>>>> mongodb crashed theres a fair chance of data loss because it operates in
>>>> RAM and periodically stores to disk. In this case that loss can be
>>>> directly mapped to financial loss. There are ways to set mongo up that
>>>> gaurd against this, but thats beyond the scope of the module
Neo4j - it's interesting, but .... not very usable, it's still unknown, very java-oriented (REST API is orders of magnitude slower than native Java API, docs are big, complicated and too "javish"), it has very small user base with very specific use cases.
> Neo4j - it's interesting, but .... not very usable, it's still unknown, > very java-oriented (REST API is orders of magnitude slower than native Java > API, docs are big, complicated and too "javish"), it has very small user > base with very specific use cases.
Have a look on my framework [https://github.com/shogun147/Katana] It could be good alternative to Express, especially for building such project or any cms like solution.
> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open > source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites > using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of > e-commerce project but Nada!
> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any > e-commerce project that I could participate?
> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it > would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a > novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is > needed.
> Looking forward to your feedbacks! > Thanks, > Hakan
You need an ACID compliant DB back end for e-commerce. As far as I am aware
MongoDB is not to be used for e-commerce. Use the right tool for the right
job :)
On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 3:33 PM, Moritz Beller <beller.mor...@googlemail.com
> wrote:
> katana looks great; im familiar w/ express, but nvm. Im also interested..
> anyone wants to grab the scepter and lead us the way? :))))
> Am Donnerstag, 10. Mai 2012 20:55:51 UTC+2 schrieb guzelgoz:
>> Hi all,
>> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open
>> source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites
>> using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of
>> e-commerce project but Nada!
>> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any
>> e-commerce project that I could participate?
>> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it
>> would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a
>> novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is
>> needed.
>> Looking forward to your feedbacks!
>> Thanks,
>> Hakan
> You need an ACID compliant DB back end for e-commerce. As far as I am > aware MongoDB is not to be used for e-commerce. Use the right tool for the > right job :)
> On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 3:33 PM, Moritz Beller <beller...@googlemail.com<javascript:> > > wrote:
>> katana looks great; im familiar w/ express, but nvm. Im also >> interested.. anyone wants to grab the scepter and lead us the way? :))))
>> Am Donnerstag, 10. Mai 2012 20:55:51 UTC+2 schrieb guzelgoz:
>>> Hi all,
>>> I've been searching and searching but couldn't find any project/open >>> source node e-commerce platform. As I am running some e-commerce websites >>> using the PhP prestashop solution, I was really hoping to find some sort of >>> e-commerce project but Nada!
>>> Ideally, I would like to use Expressjs and MongoDB. Do you know any >>> e-commerce project that I could participate?
>>> If not, I would like to invite anybody to start a project. I think it >>> would have great interest and at least I would participate to it - as a >>> novice node programmer ;) but a serious user that may help on what is >>> needed.
>>> Looking forward to your feedbacks! >>> Thanks, >>> Hakan
E-commerce is a very odd beast. Your choice, but tbh I'd be moving towards
MySQL/Postgre/etc etc. Boringly solid DBs with years of proven experience
and the tool set in place to let you just get on with delivering a decent
front-end experience.
On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 4:12 PM, Moritz Beller <beller.mor...@googlemail.com
since i've seen it brought up twice, iirc mongo has an option to save
direct to disk to allow for power failure and such. however, since there
are hadoop, mongo, couch, redis, and dozens of lucene based solutions,
maybe a payment system should be more db agnostic unless you want to
alienate people?
i'd think you'd want to a pluggable tool chain type solution. so you say
you need some basic schema information, an express type middleware
processing solution (process tax, process s/h, inventory logic, warehouse
scheduling, reciept, update user profile) and a (err, cb) for each step.
if you mandate i use couch, mysql, pg, ora, or anything else, i won't use
it. i won't bother learning it because even if you like the same db as me,
maybe next week i'll talk with someone that says "i've got x db" - if you
didn't program for x db (or i don't like x db), i'm going to refuse $$....
i don't think so.
On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 3:16 PM, Adam Reynolds <awjreyno...@gmail.com>wrote:
> E-commerce is a very odd beast. Your choice, but tbh I'd be moving towards
> MySQL/Postgre/etc etc. Boringly solid DBs with years of proven experience
> and the tool set in place to let you just get on with delivering a decent
> front-end experience.
> On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 4:12 PM, Moritz Beller <
> beller.mor...@googlemail.com> wrote:
We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com), an Indian e-commerce startup, have built a tailor-made node.js e-commerce platform/frontend/crm, logistics backend.
It's been 6 months we ditched magento platform for the home-grown node.js setup, needless to say we're delighted with the performance. It's an expressjs application supplemented by numerous node modules, mysql, redis, last but not least, a lot of node.js goodies! We are thrilled with the fact that we were able to go into production in quick span of time with a young team.
He-he, I believe, if Your e-commerce solution will have such load - You may easily hire as many developers and do as many databases, simultaneously as You wish :)
On Wednesday, September 26, 2012 9:46:30 PM UTC+4, Nicotene wrote:
> Dear all,
> We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com), an Indian e-commerce startup, > have built a tailor-made node.js e-commerce platform/frontend/crm, > logistics backend.
> It's been 6 months we ditched magento platform for the home-grown > node.js setup, needless to say we're delighted with the performance. > It's an expressjs application supplemented by numerous node modules, > mysql, redis, last but not least, a lot of node.js goodies! We are > thrilled with the fact that we were able to go into production in quick > span of time with a young team.
I feel no shame at admitting we are no good at creating eye-catching designs, hence no fancy stuff, just a simple design and straight to the point. We had to do away with magento system because it wasn't good at handling a lot of load. We also had to come up with a in-house solution and were pretty impressed with exciting prospect Node.js offered.
The current single server app is capable of handling twice the traffic with much ease what multiple servers we had magento running on were not able to. Site speed improved, user engagement improved a lot, better conversion rates, backend consoles became faster, the list goes on. Yes, we could line up more servers, tune the servers to handle more load, we chose to spend time/effort in Node.js rather.
> > that scale to millions of operations per second
> He-he, I believe, if Your e-commerce solution will have such load - > You may easily hire as many developers and do as many databases, > simultaneously as You wish :)
> > We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com <http://www.urbantouch.com/>), > an Indian e-commerce startup, ....
> Nice site, clean, simple and compact design, like it, by the way why > did You drop magento, what features do You wanted/missed?
> On Wednesday, September 26, 2012 9:46:30 PM UTC+4, Nicotene wrote:
> Dear all,
> We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com <http://www.urbantouch.com>),
> an Indian e-commerce startup,
> have built a tailor-made node.js e-commerce platform/frontend/crm,
> logistics backend.
> It's been 6 months we ditched magento platform for the home-grown
> node.js setup, needless to say we're delighted with the performance.
> It's an expressjs application supplemented by numerous node modules,
> mysql, redis, last but not least, a lot of node.js goodies! We are
> thrilled with the fact that we were able to go into production in
> quick
> span of time with a young team.
On Wed, Sep 26, 2012 at 2:19 PM, Vinayak Mishra <vnykm...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I feel no shame at admitting we are no good at creating eye-catching
> designs, hence no fancy stuff, just a simple design and straight to the
> point. We had to do away with magento system because it wasn't good at
> handling a lot of load. We also had to come up with a in-house solution and
> were pretty impressed with exciting prospect Node.js offered.
> The current single server app is capable of handling twice the traffic
> with much ease what multiple servers we had magento running on were not
> able to. Site speed improved, user engagement improved a lot, better
> conversion rates, backend consoles became faster, the list goes on. Yes, we
> could line up more servers, tune the servers to handle more load, we chose
> to spend time/effort in Node.js rather.
> -- Vinayak
> On 09/27/2012 02:37 AM, Alexey Petrushin wrote:
> > that scale to millions of operations per second
> He-he, I believe, if Your e-commerce solution will have such load - You
> may easily hire as many developers and do as many databases, simultaneously
> as You wish :)
> > We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com), an Indian e-commerce startup,
> ....
> Nice site, clean, simple and compact design, like it, by the way why did
> You drop magento, what features do You wanted/missed?
> On Wednesday, September 26, 2012 9:46:30 PM UTC+4, Nicotene wrote:
>> Dear all,
>> We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com), an Indian e-commerce startup,
>> have built a tailor-made node.js e-commerce platform/frontend/crm,
>> logistics backend.
>> It's been 6 months we ditched magento platform for the home-grown
>> node.js setup, needless to say we're delighted with the performance.
>> It's an expressjs application supplemented by numerous node modules,
>> mysql, redis, last but not least, a lot of node.js goodies! We are
>> thrilled with the fact that we were able to go into production in quick
>> span of time with a young team.
> I feel no shame at admitting we are no good at creating eye-catching > designs, hence no fancy stuff, just a simple design and straight to the > point. We had to do away with magento system because it wasn't good at > handling a lot of load. We also had to come up with a in-house solution and > were pretty impressed with exciting prospect Node.js offered.
> The current single server app is capable of handling twice the traffic > with much ease what multiple servers we had magento running on were not > able to. Site speed improved, user engagement improved a lot, better > conversion rates, backend consoles became faster, the list goes on. Yes, we > could line up more servers, tune the servers to handle more load, we chose > to spend time/effort in Node.js rather.
> -- Vinayak
> On 09/27/2012 02:37 AM, Alexey Petrushin wrote:
> > that scale to millions of operations per second > He-he, I believe, if Your e-commerce solution will have such load - You > may easily hire as many developers and do as many databases, simultaneously > as You wish :)
> > We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com), an Indian e-commerce startup, > .... > Nice site, clean, simple and compact design, like it, by the way why did > You drop magento, what features do You wanted/missed?
> On Wednesday, September 26, 2012 9:46:30 PM UTC+4, Nicotene wrote:
>> Dear all,
>> We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com), an Indian e-commerce startup, >> have built a tailor-made node.js e-commerce platform/frontend/crm, >> logistics backend.
>> It's been 6 months we ditched magento platform for the home-grown >> node.js setup, needless to say we're delighted with the performance. >> It's an expressjs application supplemented by numerous node modules, >> mysql, redis, last but not least, a lot of node.js goodies! We are >> thrilled with the fact that we were able to go into production in quick >> span of time with a young team.
Thanks for showing interest, greelgorke. The nodestore code is proprietory, and not available on as open source yet. We have created few independent npm modules that could be useful to other projects, we would like to publish some of these modules on npm some day. But at the moment, we are being a little selfish, sorry about that.
> @Nicotene: can some take a look the code. open sourced or licenzed?
> Am Mittwoch, 26. September 2012 23:19:53 UTC+2 schrieb Nicotene:
> I feel no shame at admitting we are no good at creating
> eye-catching designs, hence no fancy stuff, just a simple design
> and straight to the point. We had to do away with magento system
> because it wasn't good at handling a lot of load. We also had to
> come up with a in-house solution and were pretty impressed with
> exciting prospect Node.js offered.
> The current single server app is capable of handling twice the
> traffic with much ease what multiple servers we had magento
> running on were not able to. Site speed improved, user engagement
> improved a lot, better conversion rates, backend consoles became
> faster, the list goes on. Yes, we could line up more servers, tune
> the servers to handle more load, we chose to spend time/effort in
> Node.js rather.
> -- Vinayak
> On 09/27/2012 02:37 AM, Alexey Petrushin wrote:
>> > that scale to millions of operations per second
>> He-he, I believe, if Your e-commerce solution will have such load
>> - You may easily hire as many developers and do as many
>> databases, simultaneously as You wish :)
>> > We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com >> <http://www.urbantouch.com/>), an Indian e-commerce startup, ....
>> Nice site, clean, simple and compact design, like it, by the way
>> why did You drop magento, what features do You wanted/missed?
>> On Wednesday, September 26, 2012 9:46:30 PM UTC+4, Nicotene wrote:
>> Dear all,
>> We at Urbantouch (www.urbantouch.com >> <http://www.urbantouch.com>), an Indian e-commerce startup,
>> have built a tailor-made node.js e-commerce
>> platform/frontend/crm,
>> logistics backend.
>> It's been 6 months we ditched magento platform for the
>> home-grown
>> node.js setup, needless to say we're delighted with the
>> performance.
>> It's an expressjs application supplemented by numerous node
>> modules,
>> mysql, redis, last but not least, a lot of node.js goodies!
>> We are
>> thrilled with the fact that we were able to go into
>> production in quick
>> span of time with a young team.