On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 10:32 PM, Jonathan Gallimore <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks Jacek. I've put a blog entry up: > https://blogs.apache.org/openejb/entry/openejb_eclipse_plugin_alpha_release
That's indeed a very useful screencast and I'm going to combine it with the work around OSGi if you don't mind for the upcoming Eclipse DemoCamp sessions in Poland (Warszawa and Wroclaw). I'm going to show what it is to work with EJBs with the OpenEJB Eclipse plugin (the Eclipse part plus OpenEJB/EJB3) and then show how to move on running exactly the same EJB as a bundle and look it up from another one (with Eclipse Equinox). It's gonna be a killer session! :) Thanks Jonathan. Two things I'd like to get corrected at some point: 1. The version of OpenEJB provided by the plugin is 3.0.0. That's what it shows up in the project libraries. I'm pretty sure people will ask about it and why it's not 3.1.2 or 3.1.1 at the very least. 2. The ejb-jar.xml file was discussed and I'd change the wording to say it's not necessary at all and explain why it is in the project. It boosts the search for EJBs in the classpath and otherwise would require changes to the way OpenEJB searches it (with include/exclude env properties). Could you also describe the recording process? What tools did you use? I'm going to record some presentations myself and don't know what tooling I'll have to use for it. I've been told that audacity is to correct a sound, but what about the really useful white circle you used in your screencast to draw attention? Did you just record it all at once without any adjustments to the sound and video. It ended up really awesome and you kept your voice on a proper level which made watching the screencast very pleasant. I'd love doing alike with my first screencast. Share as much tips and tricks as possible. Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Notatnik Projektanta Java EE - http://www.JacekLaskowski.pl
