Application Frameworks

Each server-side architect face this delima, which application framework to choose, EJB3.x or Spring ?

 

although both frameworks rock at development and production time, it's very hard to choose the right one.

I had several talks with tikal's architects about it,and although I get the impressive pro/cons bullets the final selection relate to taste!

 

while reading "JBoss and SpringSource" article, a new factor add to the table, a war between commercial entities? time will tell...

lior.kanfi 25/01/2010 - 23:57

Hi,

 

I invite you to disscuss that topic , please provide you input and comments.

 

My questions:

 

1.

Why java is relatively outsider in matters of small-businesses and e-commerce?

Except historical reasons, what reasons would you list?

 

2.

What conditions should we have(endorse) to bring java more closely to e-commerce?

I mean both: technological and business ideas and conditions.

 

3.

Where are the STRONG sides of java in e-commerce in comparison to PHP, .Net, etc?

 

4.

What good java e-commerce applications, solutions would you recommend?

 

5.

What bad examples of java and e-commerce, that you experienced? Please, elaborate.

 

6. Say whatever you think matters.

 

 

Thanks a lot!!!

 

 

peterk 24/09/2009 - 14:32

Hello,

 

I would like to share my bad and good experience in application's design and planning.

 

1)

Remember, if you work with WEB/EJB container's objects, never make assumptions.

This stuff always tends to behave against your common sense.

As example:

peterk 10/09/2009 - 16:25

How to compare JAVA Web Frameworks  by  Bruno Vernay

pretend to be the most full research about java frameworks whenever. Contains links to another articles about Java frameworks. 

 

yuri 16/08/2009 - 12:44

In this blogpost, Rod Johnson, SpringSource's chief, who has been using the blogging as a mass-media means from its early days, talks about the differences between the business approaches of SpringSource and RedHat, which seem to have taken JBoss's assertive approach regarding Spring and the future of enterprise development. Very interesting, although quite biased!

 

see: http://blog.springsource.com/2009/06/03/red-hat-reacts-to-springsources-...

zvika 10/06/2009 - 23:15

(YAWF – Yet Another Web Framework)

 

Cappuccino is a framework for writing desktop like applications on the web. The focus of the framework is to forget about page and links and create a model that acts like the desktop GUI model.

 

For that they ported Mac's Cocoa framework into the web, including creating a new language named objective-j

 

ittayd 15/09/2009 - 07:05

 

TorqueBox is a new kind of Ruby application platform that integrates popular technologies such as Ruby-on-Rails, while extending the footprint of Ruby applications to include support for Job Scheduling, Task Queues, SOAP Handling, and Telecom.

http://torquebox.org/

itai 25/06/2009 - 08:51

A study which focus on these three Application Frameworks from different perspectives like What companies are looking for, What is the future trend? etc.

http://completeopensource.blogspot.com/2009/04/open-spurce-application-f...

lior.kanfi 22/06/2009 - 14:06

 

          ProxyStrike New release

A new version of the Active Proxy is released, the most important changes are, the plugin options, that allow to extend ProxyStrike functionality. Right now the only new plugin is Server Side Includes. A new feature is the automatic crawler, something that many of you asked for. If you are looking a tool to analyze web application, ProxyStrike could be one the best options.

 

arik 14/06/2009 - 18:31

I have these requirments for a standalone Scheduler:

 

 

  1. Able to run pojo's from java and .net

  2. Able to run SQL's

  3. Support dependencies between jobs, retries…

 

What would be your suggested implementation ?

  1. Use Quartz as a standalone app?

  2. Use Spring Batch ?

  3. Others?

 

lior.kanfi 11/06/2009 - 23:56
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