Bill Kelly
2005-Dec-08 18:11 UTC
How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
Hi, I was wondering if any experienced Rails developers would care to offer a ballpark-conservative estimate of how long they expect it would take them to implement a simple online ordering system? This is something I''ll probably be doing soon, and although I''m new to Rails, I''m an experienced Ruby programmer and have rolled my own simple websites with CGI before. But I''ve never done online credit card transactions. (I see there''s a library on rubyforge that works with Linkpoint, which I''ll be looking into: http://rubyforge.org/projects/transact/ ) I don''t think I''ll need a shopping cart, as the company currently has essentially one product, albeit with the need to handle both new purchases and special pricing for upgrades from old versions. But anyway - the first version of the site will need to be functional, of course, but can be very simple. Essentially I''ll need to take orders, maintain customer/invoice records, and email a nightly record of the day''s transactions to the head office. Because I''m new to Rails, and haven''t done online credit card processing before, that gives me a bit of uncertainty in my own estimate. I''d think two to three weeks is probably a safe estimate for me to get the first useful version of the site online, allowing for those unknowns. But I''d be interested in a reality check of sorts from experienced Rails developers. How long would you estimate a project like this, assuming you had to code from scratch but could make use of any publicly available libraries? And are there any "gotchas" that I should be aware of that are schedule risks with this kind of project that might cause me to miss my estimate? Thanks much for your feedback! Regards, Bill
Joe Van Dyk
2005-Dec-08 18:21 UTC
Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
On 12/8/05, Bill Kelly <billk-X1BUltpdjJs@public.gmane.org> wrote:> Hi, > > I was wondering if any experienced Rails developers would care > to offer a ballpark-conservative estimate of how long they expect > it would take them to implement a simple online ordering system? > > This is something I''ll probably be doing soon, and although I''m > new to Rails, I''m an experienced Ruby programmer and have rolled > my own simple websites with CGI before. But I''ve never done > online credit card transactions. > > (I see there''s a library on rubyforge that works with Linkpoint, > which I''ll be looking into: > http://rubyforge.org/projects/transact/ ) > > I don''t think I''ll need a shopping cart, as the company currently > has essentially one product, albeit with the need to handle both > new purchases and special pricing for upgrades from old versions. > > But anyway - the first version of the site will need to be > functional, of course, but can be very simple. Essentially I''ll > need to take orders, maintain customer/invoice records, and > email a nightly record of the day''s transactions to the head > office. > > Because I''m new to Rails, and haven''t done online credit card > processing before, that gives me a bit of uncertainty in my own > estimate. I''d think two to three weeks is probably a safe > estimate for me to get the first useful version of the site > online, allowing for those unknowns. > > But I''d be interested in a reality check of sorts from experienced > Rails developers. How long would you estimate a project like this, > assuming you had to code from scratch but could make use of any > publicly available libraries? > > And are there any "gotchas" that I should be aware of that are > schedule risks with this kind of project that might cause me to > miss my estimate? > > Thanks much for your feedback!A person with a few Rails projects under his belt, decent Ruby programming skills, and experience in that problem domain could probably do the bulk of that in a day or so. If you had to learn from scratch, dunno, maybe two weeks? A month or two if you knew nothing about Ruby or databases or e-commerce?
Jason Edgecombe
2005-Dec-08 18:24 UTC
Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
Bill Kelly wrote:> This is something I''ll probably be doing soon, and although I''m > new to Rails, I''m an experienced Ruby programmer and have rolled > my own simple websites with CGI before. But I''ve never done online > credit card transactions.hi Bill, Danger! Will Robinson, danger! Please read this link first: http://usa.visa.com/business/accepting_visa/ops_risk_management/cisp.html Although, I haven''t handled credit cards, I do know that Visa and other credit card companies have handed down some very strict guidelines for security. If possible, try to use a 3rd party for credit cards, like PayPal. Not following the guidelines is painful. Your merchant priviledges are revoked on the third offense, which means you can''t process credit cards. Sorry for no ruby/rails advice, but I thought this was very important. Jason
Jason
2005-Dec-08 18:41 UTC
Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
Hi Bill- I''m not an experienced Rails developer, but... ...you didn''t mention "*Agile Web Development with Rails" *in your email. Pick up a copy if you don''t have it already. It walks you through creating an online store, minus the credit card processing. The amazon link is: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/097669400X/qid=1134067125/sr=8-1/ref=pd_bbs_1/002-7674914-6630464?n=507846&s=books&v=glance But I''ve recently gone back and purchased the PDF version of the book from the authors, I find that easier to refer to while I''m tinkering with Rails http://www.pragmaticprogrammer.com/titles/rails/index.html _______________________________________________ Rails mailing list Rails-1W37MKcQCpIf0INCOvqR/iCwEArCW2h5@public.gmane.org http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails
Dee Zsombor
2005-Dec-08 20:12 UTC
Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
Joe Van Dyk wrote:> A person with a few Rails projects under his belt, decent Ruby > programming skills, and experience in that problem domain could > probably do the bulk of that in a day or so. > > If you had to learn from scratch, dunno, maybe two weeks? A month or > two if you knew nothing about Ruby or databases or e-commerce?I think that either this estimate is dangerously optimistic, or my expectations of "functional" are way too high. Ruby, or Rails for that matter give an incredible productivity boost, but this is only limited to programming itself. It is very dangerous to think that armed with this shiny weapon called Rails all projects will last 10 times less ... it is much realistic to say that now we can do a *lot* more with limited *programming* time. Don''t set unrealistic expectations, or you''ll be bound for failure. In my experience time is consumed on understanding the requirements, discovering the actual needs of the user, and trying to live with the constraints that are inherent from the project itself. OK that you can prototype faster with Rails, but this will not give a 10x boost on the *entire* *project* duration. Zsombor -- Company - http://primalgrasp.com Thoughts - http://deezsombor.blogspot.com
Ezra Zygmuntowicz
2005-Dec-08 20:17 UTC
Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
On Dec 8, 2005, at 10:11 AM, Bill Kelly wrote:> Hi, > > I was wondering if any experienced Rails developers would care > to offer a ballpark-conservative estimate of how long they expect > it would take them to implement a simple online ordering system? > > This is something I''ll probably be doing soon, and although I''m > new to Rails, I''m an experienced Ruby programmer and have rolled > my own simple websites with CGI before. But I''ve never done online > credit card transactions. > > (I see there''s a library on rubyforge that works with Linkpoint, > which I''ll be looking into: > http://rubyforge.org/projects/transact/ ) > > I don''t think I''ll need a shopping cart, as the company currently > has essentially one product, albeit with the need to handle both > new purchases and special pricing for upgrades from old versions. > > But anyway - the first version of the site will need to be > functional, of course, but can be very simple. Essentially I''ll > need to take orders, maintain customer/invoice records, and email a > nightly record of the day''s transactions to the head office. > Because I''m new to Rails, and haven''t done online credit card > processing before, that gives me a bit of uncertainty in my own > estimate. I''d think two to three weeks is probably a safe > estimate for me to get the first useful version of the site online, > allowing for those unknowns. > > But I''d be interested in a reality check of sorts from experienced > Rails developers. How long would you estimate a project like this, > assuming you had to code from scratch but could make use of any > publicly available libraries? > > And are there any "gotchas" that I should be aware of that are > schedule risks with this kind of project that might cause me to > miss my estimate? > > Thanks much for your feedback! > > Regards, > > BillBill- It sounds like you need a simple system to process these transactions. If you want to do it quickly I have a method that has worked for me. I built the shop part of this web site in about 12 hours of rails time: http://vintnerssecret.com. They way it works is I use Verisign Payflow Link. Which is a hosted service that works like this: You collect some information on your site but no sensitive info that needs ssl. I collect the name, email and shipping address as well as the product name, quantity, price with shipping and tax where applicable and an order number. I save this information in an admin only db in my rails app organized by order id Then post this info to your hosted site at verisign where they take care of the ssl stuff and you don''t have to pay for a certificate. You can customize this page to fit with your site design to some extent. While on the hosted site the customer enters their credit card info and gets a denied or approved message. Then they are sent back to your site and the details about approval can be posted back to your site as well. You and your customer receive a customized email from verisign as to the disposition of the order. I have made a simple admin area where the client can post new products and well as look at pending order information. When you receive the confirmation or denial of the cc transaction form verisign you match it up by order id with the to be shipped section in the admin area and check off the items that you will be shipping so they can be saved into a past transactions db table and the denied orders can be saved to an old denied orders table for retrieval later. This is an easy way to get an online ordering system up quickly without the need to worry about all the security details on your own site. The cost is somewhere around $250 a year for up to 800 transactions a month with a small fee for each transaction over this limit. It has worked great for me so far and I have used it in a few sites where the client is plenty happy with the results. If you need higher transaction limits you can alwayts upgrade to payflow pro which is a more typical ecommerce solution where you hot your own secure forms. This is IMHO the quickest way to get a simple online payment processor online quickly and securely. Contact me off list of you want any more details about this setup and I am happy to answer your questions. Cheers- -Ezra Zygmuntowicz Yakima Herald-Republic WebMaster http://yakimaherald.com 509-577-7732 ezra-gdxLOakOTQ9oetBuM9ipNAC/G2K4zDHf@public.gmane.org
Matthew Palmer
2005-Dec-08 20:43 UTC
Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
On Thu, Dec 08, 2005 at 10:41:59AM -0800, Jason wrote:> But I''ve recently gone back and purchased the PDF version of the book from > the authors, I find that easier to refer to while I''m tinkering with RailsCan you give some indication of what "personal information" they put into the PDF "for your protection"? I was going to get the PDFs of AWDWR and the Pickaxe, but when I saw that in their FAQ, I ran away screaming. - Matt
Bill Guindon
2005-Dec-08 23:14 UTC
Re: Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
On 12/8/05, Matthew Palmer <mpalmer-DBKuw+mdLfRAfugRpC6u6w@public.gmane.org> wrote:> On Thu, Dec 08, 2005 at 10:41:59AM -0800, Jason wrote: > > But I''ve recently gone back and purchased the PDF version of the book from > > the authors, I find that easier to refer to while I''m tinkering with Rails > > Can you give some indication of what "personal information" they put into > the PDF "for your protection"? I was going to get the PDFs of AWDWR and the > Pickaxe, but when I saw that in their FAQ, I ran away screaming.At the bottom of each page, it would say... "Prepared exclusively for Matthew Palmer" They''re generous enough to give the pdf''s out completely unlocked, I think that''s added to give you another reason not to distribute it (if you needed another reason). Think of it as ''guiltware'' ;)> - Matt-- Bill Guindon (aka aGorilla)
Bruce Balmer
2005-Dec-09 03:28 UTC
Re: Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
I have AWDwR PDF and all I see is my name. On 8-Dec-05, at 1:43 PM, Matthew Palmer wrote:> On Thu, Dec 08, 2005 at 10:41:59AM -0800, Jason wrote: >> But I''ve recently gone back and purchased the PDF version of the >> book from >> the authors, I find that easier to refer to while I''m tinkering >> with Rails > > Can you give some indication of what "personal information" they > put into > the PDF "for your protection"? I was going to get the PDFs of > AWDWR and the > Pickaxe, but when I saw that in their FAQ, I ran away screaming. > > - Matt > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails-1W37MKcQCpIf0INCOvqR/iCwEArCW2h5@public.gmane.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails
Ron M
2005-Dec-09 19:10 UTC
Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
Jason Edgecombe wrote:> Bill Kelly wrote: >> my own simple websites with CGI before. But I''ve never done online >> credit card transactions. > > Danger! Will Robinson, danger! Please read this link first: > http://usa.visa.com/business/accepting_visa/ops_risk_management/cisp.html > Although, I haven''t handled credit cards, I do know that Visa and other > credit card companies have handed down some very strict guidelines for > security. If possible, try to use a 3rd party for credit cards, like > PayPal. Not following the guidelines is painful. Your merchant > priviledges are revoked on the third offense, which means you can''t > process credit cards.On the flip side, I''ve found the Visa people extremely helpful in helping a company through the process - both when we first set up the payment system, and when we were having problems with excessive chargebacks from international orders. But yes, for small sites (say, under $10K per day) I agree that going with a third party like a Digital River is easier. But once your volume is high enough it''s not that painful to work directly with banks and credit card processing companies directly; and if nothing else, makes your negotiations for price with 3rd party payment companies easier.
Ray Baxter
2005-Dec-11 04:07 UTC
Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
Ron M wrote:> On the flip side, I''ve found the Visa people extremely helpful > in helping a company through the process - both when we first > set up the payment system, and when we were having problems > with excessive chargebacks from international orders.> But yes, for small sites (say, under $10K per day) I agree > that going with a third party like a Digital River is easier. > IBut once your volume is high enough it''s not that painful > to work directly with banks and credit card processing > companies directly; and if nothing else, makes your > negotiations for price with 3rd party payment companies easier.I don''t know anything about this from the business side, but as a consumer, I have had a couple of rotten experiences with Digital River, and I won''t be buying your product if your only payment method is through Digital River. I don''t know whether it is on the merchant side, or Digital River''s side, but I have often bought a product through DR, been informed that my unlocking code is in the mail and then suffered for days and weeks before I received the code, or worse, received the code, and then had it take weeks before the code is recognized on the merchant site. Also, DR seem to handle e-mail marketing for a number of merchants and they seem to have a problem fulfilling unsubscribe requests. Most of the Windows anti-virus companies depend on Digital River. Just another reason I am glad I have been able to move off of Windows. -- Ray
Ray Baxter
2005-Dec-11 04:07 UTC
Re: How long would it take an experienced Rails developer to ...
Ron M wrote:> On the flip side, I''ve found the Visa people extremely helpful > in helping a company through the process - both when we first > set up the payment system, and when we were having problems > with excessive chargebacks from international orders.> But yes, for small sites (say, under $10K per day) I agree > that going with a third party like a Digital River is easier. > IBut once your volume is high enough it''s not that painful > to work directly with banks and credit card processing > companies directly; and if nothing else, makes your > negotiations for price with 3rd party payment companies easier.I don''t know anything about this from the business side, but as a consumer, I have had a couple of rotten experiences with Digital River, and I won''t be buying your product if your only payment method is through Digital River. I don''t know whether it is on the merchant side, or Digital River''s side, but I have often bought a product through DR, been informed that my unlocking code is in the mail and then suffered for days and weeks before I received the code, or worse, received the code, and then had it take weeks before the code is recognized on the merchant site. Also, DR seem to handle e-mail marketing for a number of merchants and they seem to have a problem fulfilling unsubscribe requests. Most of the Windows anti-virus companies depend on Digital River. Just another reason I am glad I have been able to move off of Windows. -- Ray