Not my choice!  It was the Freshairess's Choice ;)

I really like the Stackoverflow podcast too, neat window into how far behind .NET developers are on frameworks and methodologies :)

Craig.

On 22-Dec-09, at 11:08 PM, Martin Makundi wrote:

Don't force people to register.. look at e.g., stackoverflow.com

**
Martin

2009/12/23 Craig Tataryn <[email protected]>:
Finished a project at the beginning of the year that was Wicket based. The designers really loved it, they didn't have much experience with designing for Java-based frameworks (they hacked ASP/ASP.NET mostly). I drew up a
quick tutorial covering the basics of Wicket, how to preserve the
look-and-feel of the site in Dreamweaver while we coded all the dynamic
parts and they were off to the races.

http://www.thefreshairechoice.com/community/

It's a pity though, the site didn't really go anywhere. It was supposed to allow people to collaborate with choosing colour palettes for their home renovation projects. One of those ideas that sounds great to business folks, but in the real world you have to draw people to the site somehow and
give them incentive to hit that "register" button.

Craig.

--
Craig Tataryn
site: http://www.basementcoders.com/
podcast:http://feeds.feedburner.com/TheBasementCoders
irc: ThaDon on freenode #basementcoders, ##wicket, #papernapkin
twitter: craiger



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