If you were serious about using jBoss you could have bought the subscription to the documentation (which is pretty good BTW). Also there is a quick start template available, and the Enterprise JavaBeans book by Richard Monson-Haefal combined with the jBoss 3.0 workbook should be adequate to get even the most inexperienced of newbie's on the fast track to productivity.
-- Gary Udstrand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Scot Mcphee" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "JDJList" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 1:09 AM Subject: [jdjlist] Re: JBOSS vs the rest > > all....ITS FREE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...the documentaion can be a bit exhausting i > > agree..but that is hardly a trade-off.. > > It is interesting that you don't think it's a trade off. It's a massive > trade off. People might bitch about Websphere or Weblogic's $10,000+ price > tag, but that's only a few weeks of my time, to the company. With JBoss I > thought I was on a fast track to weeks of unproductive head-scratching. > > regs > scot. > > > ____________________________________________________ > To change your JDJList options, please visit: > http://www.sys-con.com/java/list.cfm > > Be respectful! Clean up your posts before replying > ____________________________________________________ > ____________________________________________________ To change your JDJList options, please visit: http://www.sys-con.com/java/list.cfm Be respectful! Clean up your posts before replying ____________________________________________________
