That's what I understood as well, but what I don't get is how this compares to other hype technologies like Corba, J2EE, .Net, dotgnu, ...
Should it be considered similar or related, or is it something different, or even complementary ? My first thought was that it is a over-ambitious project, but maybe I misunderstand the point. Franck At 11:04 04.04.2002 +0200, Daniel Bonniot wrote: >Hi, > >I haven't used Jtrix, but after your message I visited their web-site. >I found the "An introduction for everyone" enlightening, as it includes a >detailed example of the kind of problem they try to solve. >If I understood right: the idea is to offer developpers of network based >applications (typically servers) a set of APIs to services that other >people offer. The services include hosting (of server code), logging, >money transfers, ... >So I guess you could write code that says: "I would like an instance of >this java class to be run on a server in south america, what are the >options for waht price?". > >It seems that the code is in demo stage, but it does not seem that any >service is currently in action. Maybe you can use Jtrix currently to make >your own services interract, but that's a lot less fun... > >This sounds quite thought provoking to me, but I wonder what could make >the services really take off (chicken an egg ol' problem). > >Daniel > > -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]