Struts Ti [was RE: Tech-Stack Choices]

2005-09-01 Thread Abdullah Jibaly
months. Thanks! Abdullah -Original Message- From: James Mitchell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, September 01, 2005 2:51 PM To: Struts Users Mailing List Subject: Re: Tech-Stack Choices You are likely to hear many differing opinions on this list. You should evaluate your cri

Re: Tech-Stack Choices

2005-09-01 Thread James Mitchell
I hit send too soon Just to be clear, Spring and Hibernate are really irrelevant in the context of this discussion, unless you mean Spring MVC. I can't speak for Spring MVC, so I'll let others discuss the merits. My professional opinion (if it means anything) is to go with Spring/ Hi

Re: Struts Ti [was RE: Tech-Stack Choices]

2005-09-01 Thread James Mitchell
PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, September 01, 2005 2:51 PM To: Struts Users Mailing List Subject: Re: Tech-Stack Choices You are likely to hear many differing opinions on this list. You should evaluate your criteria. Are you wanting something slick? Fast development? Easier maintenance? Scalable? Flex

re: Tech-Stack Choices

2005-09-01 Thread Leon Rosenberg
As james said it in his first reply, you should become clear what you need and what you want. How critical and how important is it for the company? If it is important or even critical for the core business of the company (or say if it doesn't work, it costs 100.000 per hour) I would engage you to

Re: Tech-Stack Choices

2005-09-01 Thread James Mitchell
You are likely to hear many differing opinions on this list. You should evaluate your criteria. Are you wanting something slick? Fast development? Easier maintenance? Scalable? Flexible? If you are wanting something fast. Take a look at Ruby on Rails, or stay tuned to this channel for