You see, in fact I want to continue to use Hivemind and I have some good 
reasons to do so, but beside that reasons the overall status of the project 
strongly tells me to change ...

A last couple of questions to give me at least a little hope:
 
The Boad report says there is no active developer left in the project. Who is 
left for a rescue effort (for example someone who has an interest in recruiting 
new developers)? Or is there really no one left in the project at all (of 
course you (James) are left, but I'm not sure about your position and interests)

It looks like the new version 2 was/is not far from completion.
What must get done to do so? 
Is anyone left in the project who knows what was planned beyond Hivemind 2?

Another point of view:
To be honest I do not know much about Spring. Hivemind was my first experience 
with IOC (because I almost always look first at Apache.org when I need some 
open source solution) and Hivemind gave me all I needed, so I stayed with it. 
But - is there any point in sticking to Hivemind?
Where is the difference to Spring in terms of conceptual differences? Or is 
there no difference and someone could just take Spring for gaining the exact 
same result?

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von James Carman
Gesendet: Dienstag, 13. Mai 2008 15:05
An: [email protected]
Betreff: Re: HiveMind for Applications

On Tue, May 13, 2008 at 7:57 AM,  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  James - do you think that there is any chance that there will be any work on 
> Hivemind in the future? Or is it really at its end?

I really don't know at this point.  Spring is very pervasive and even
Howard stopped using HiveMind on Tapestry (our biggest source of
customers by far) in version 5.  I actually use Spring myself now.

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