My theory is that Spring is that high because certain 
respondents marked it just because they have used it in their web applications. 
And JSF's heights story going to be very similar to the story of Entity Java 
Beans. JSF performance sucks big time, look at the example:
 http://tobago.atanion.net/tobago-example-demo/faces/overview/tabControl.jsp
 click on server side tabbing and try those tabs, try switching pages...
  I really think Tapestry will rise in the next few months and years out of 
peoples frustration with JSF.
 

Peter Svensson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Is it actually 6%  That's a good 
amount of people!  I thought it was far
less.
Darn, I'll have to go search for a more extreme bleeding-edge framework. The
next day this'll all be mainstream, mark my word.

Cheers,
PS

On 3/10/06, Gabriel H. Lozano M.  wrote:
>
> Hi all!!
>
> I saw the results of the poll in JBoss February newsletter 'What web
> application framework(s) do you use for your applications deployed on
> JBoss?', and for me it would be interesting to hear from you about the
> results. The results are these:
>
> Apache Struts - 59%
> JavaServer Faces- 34%
> Spring - 26%
> Other - 13%
> Tapestry - 6%
> WebWork - 5%
> Wicket - 1%
>
> Very few people developing with Tapestry or is ok? Are Struts, JSF and
> Spring ( I guess just the web framework ) better web app frameworks,
> easier,
> more powerfull or why are these results? What do you think will happen in
> the future?
>
> Gabriel Lozano M.
>
>
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Konstantin Ignatyev




PS: If this is a typical day on planet earth, humans will add fifteen million 
tons of carbon to the atmosphere, destroy 115 square miles of tropical 
rainforest, create seventy-two miles of desert, eliminate between forty to one 
hundred species, erode seventy-one million tons of topsoil, add 2,700 tons of 
CFCs to the stratosphere, and increase their population by 263,000

Bowers, C.A.  The Culture of Denial:  Why the Environmental Movement Needs a 
Strategy for Reforming Universities and Public Schools.  New York:  State 
University of New York Press, 1997: (4) (5) (p.206)

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