Those are probably the same people that focus on other getting-job related items, like padding resumes with buzzwords and such. ;)
Most "good" development shops I've worked in didn't give a rats ass about the technologies used so much as the perceived talent of the individual being interviewed. That's not the case everywhere though I know...Finding a developer who knows technology "A" is fairly easy, but finding a developer who can quickly learn technlogies "B" "C" and "D" without very much effort is worth their weight in gold. Tell them they are behind the times and that everyone knows Tapestry is about to take over ;) On 3/22/06, Cosmin Bucur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > a big problem with tapestry is that not many employers are using it . > > Many times I hear people arguing that it's not the right thing to > learn because there's no jobs for it . > > On 3/22/06, Dan Adams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I think it's interesting that struts got more votes than JSF. Knowing > > the amount of code it takes to do anything in JSF I might tend to agree. > > But still, struts? > > > > On Wed, 2006-03-22 at 10:50 -0800, Konstantin Ignatyev wrote: > > > Just want to share: > > > last night here at Seattle Java User group we had a round table > discussion where people were presenting WEB UI frameworks they use and tried > to highlight things they love about them. There were many: Millstone, > Barracuda, echo2, JSF, Struts, Tapestry, Tiles/Sitemesh, DWR, RubyOnRails > > > Every presenter had about 6-8 minutes for a "sales pitch" and at the > end people answered the question: > > > If you were a king and decide what framework to use for next > project, which framework will you use? (People voted once only for just one > framework) > > > > > > Tapestry – 15; > > > Struts – 5; > > > JSF – 3; > > > The rest got zero or 1 votes; > > > I could attribute Tapestry's warm reception to my presenter skills > :) > > > but in reality it is the Howard's hard work and Tapestry community > make the framework so appealing to developers. > > > I ask everybody to speak about Tapestry more frequently on occasions > and this way we all will benefit from wider Tapestry adoption. > > > > > > > > > Konstantin Ignatyev > > > > -- > > Dan Adams > > Software Engineer > > Interactive Factory > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- Jesse Kuhnert Tacos/Tapestry, team member/developer Open source based consulting work centered around dojo/tapestry/tacos/hivemind. http://opennotion.com