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by TrevorBurnham 5313 days ago
Page design feedback: You should make the "Free Trial" link more prominent (make it a button with a bright background). Bump up the line-height on all the text; it looks too crowded.

Features list needs to give more specifics about RAM, disk space, bandwidth, etc., not just a list of pre-installed software (especially things like Express and Backbone that are trivial for me to bundle with my app when I upload it).

The bullet point about "We don't make you go through a proxy" is useful. You could also brag that WebSockets work—last I checked, this is a big drawback on Heroku.

Is there a reason you refer to Node as "n*d." on the front page, and "nod." on the features page?

1 comments

Joyent wants a signed license agreement to say "N_de.JS" anywhere unless they decide your use of the trademark is "nominative" which is subject to their interpretation. They are giving out free licenses now but assuming revenue for the N_de.JS market increases to be more significant, one has to assume that there will be more and more pressure to extract a greater share of the revenues by using these license agreements to either stifle competition or to pull in fees. Especially since one of their main businesses seems to be directly competing with many of those services. So I'm not in a rush to sign a license with them and therefore just avoid using the term for now. It does look silly though so I may have to rethink that and consider this free (for now?) license thing.

Also thanks a lot for checking it out and the feedback. I made the CoffeeScript logo link to your book page.

IANAL, but you can use node.js as long as you make it clear you are not associated with the project and joyent holds the trademark.
Their trademark policy is pretty controlling for open source software http://nodejs.org/trademark-policy.pdf I guess we need a name for the unrestricted version, like Iceweasel in Debian.