I'm starting a new Facebook canvas application so I can pick the technology I'm going to use. I've always been a fan of the .NET platform so I'm strongly considering it for this app. I think the work done in: facebooksdk.codeplex.com
looks very promising. But my question is the following:
It's my understanding that when using an app framework like this (or PHP for that matter) with Facebook, whenever we have a call into the API to do some action (say post to the stream), the flow would be the following:
-User initiates request which is direceted to ASP.NET server
-ASP.NET server makes Facebook API call
so a total of three machines are involved.
Why wouldn't one use the Javascript SDK instead?
http://developers.facebook.com/docs/reference/javascript/FB.api
"Server-side calls are available via the JavaScript SDK that allow you to build rich applications that can make API calls against the Facebook servers directly from the user's browser. This can improve performance in many scenarios, as compared to making all calls from your server. It can also help reduce, or eliminate the need to proxy the requests thru your own servers, freeing them to do other things."
So as I see it, I'd be taking my ASP.NET server out of the equation, reducing the number of machines involved from three to two. My server is under less load and the user (likely) gets fatter performance.
Am I correct that using the Facebook C# SDK, we have this three machine scenario instead of the two machine scenario of the JS API?
Now I do understand that a web server framework like ASP.NET offers great benefits like great development tools, infrastructure for postbacks, etc, but do I have an incomplete picture here? Would it make sense to use the C# framework but still rely on the javascript sdk for most of the FB api calls? When should one use each?
Best,
-Ben