[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> 
> Personally, I'm not concerned with
> "standing up in the marketplace"...I know my software works. I know my
> software rocks. I don't have to prove it to anyone else. 

Well, I guess is does come down to motivation. You don't strike me as a
person with an ego problem. but aren't you interested in letting the
rest of the world know how useful your 'itch-scratcher' is?

 
> > Would this be useful?
> Ask yourself that question. You obviously have an issue with the current
> set of documentation that we provide.

Well, from other reactions over the past few hours, no-one seems to want
it.
I'd be interested to know how many ECS users are around and what level
their skills are at.

Part of my motivation here is to argue the case for a 'complete,
cross-platform, modern, open...' approach to web development. There are
so many disparate (and some proprietary) web development platforms. Java
servlets on Unix seems to me to be the only viable approach in this day
and age.

Imagine being able to offer a solution to a newbie developer and say
"Forget ASP or PHP, learn a language that will open all kinds of doors
for you. Don't tie yourself to Microsoft , or anything for that matter."

So you end up with millions of users, not just
hundreds/thousands(guessing here).


> The silly thing that I would like to point out is that ECS is no harder to
> learn than htmlKona....
> It isn't that hard.

Probably not, but I went down the htmlKona road, so it's time for me to
go back and have a look at ECS.

Simon


-- 
Simon Allaway - University of Chicago
[EMAIL PROTECTED] -  2-7768
--
"I'm against animal testing. They just get all nervous 
and get the answers wrong."


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