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1. Re: Another (Good!) Application Idea
objectwiz Dec 17, 2001 4:14 AM (in response to objectwiz)Ooops... hit send too soon... :">
It would allow us to have lots of little components we could get people to build in complete isolation without dependencies and we could continue as far as we wanted to go... i.e. add a bugzilla style tracking system (note: not just for bugs... could be UPS style parcel/order tracker) etc.
It has all the requirements for security, database, EJB, Struts etc we could want and it will also provide JBoss with an "out of the box" set of really useful applications that can also act as best practise. The grant application idea is useful, but if you bundle it with JBoss, how many people will get use out of it who are going to download it?
Comments?
Peter -
2. Re: Another (Good!) Application Idea
kryptontri Jan 25, 2002 6:53 PM (in response to objectwiz)i am not sure if this is the right place to post, but what about these ideas below. I am developing some of them on my own ( still on the drawing board but its a start )
1. A replication system. This could be used to move assets (images, videos etc) between farms. In addition these assets would need to be monitored - ie their lifetime etc. I have build this system previously but without an application server. Using jboss how ? EJB's to persist asset info, use the scheduler, use session ejbs for client queries etc etc. This can become even more interesting when providing xml repositories and object repositories when combined with JavaSpaces.
2. Building on Javaspaces we can provide Jboss with the ability for object versioning ( c# apparently has object versioning - i may be wrong ) - This is very useful. But there is much to do with classloading and the unbinding and rebinding (so to speak) of classes.
Ok so i am no heavy compared to all you wizzards, but i hope maybe people can provide some reasons to persue or not to.
Anyway, hope this encourages some thoughts.
K -
3. Re: Another (Good!) Application Idea
matthewbk Jan 27, 2002 9:59 PM (in response to objectwiz)http://www.gnuenterprise.org
Though this project is not an J2EE project, it has already modeled the workflow items you mentioned in software. ie. (form the GNUE page) HR, accounting, customer relationship management, project management, supply chain management and e-commerce. I suppose you could use the requirements they have gathered there trhough time, in an EJB framework.