OpenBD-OTR.Local is available now on the project page. It communicazes with 87 Oracle DB's so remote work just fine. It's a standard OpenBD that is used so anything is possible. I agree with Nitai that the H2 is most likely the best choich for an embeded solution.
/Mats/ On Monday, December 19, 2011, Jason King <[email protected]> wrote: > How does it work with remote databases? > > This might be a great way to offload server load for a public website, but it would still need to be able to connect to a remote database. > Thoughts? > -Jason > On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 11:01 AM, Nitai @ Razuna <[email protected]> wrote: > > Alan, > > We have bundled the H2 database for some time now with OpenBD. You can > run it as a embedded database and also as a server. It is very > reliable and work perfectly. More information about it can be found > here at http://www.h2database.com > > Kind Regards, > Nitai > > On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 5:47 PM, Alan Holden <[email protected]> wrote: >> This is very intriguing! >> How would you recommend incorporating a (pseudo?) database into an OpenBD >> Local package? >> Al >> >> On 12/19/2011 2:01 AM, Alan Williamson (aw2.0 cloud experts) wrote: >>> >>> Good morning, >>> >>> We're excited to make available an exciting new way to package up your >>> OpenBD apps. We are calling it >>> >>> OpenBD Local >>> >>> You can read more about it here and download it: >>> >>> http://openbd.org/local/ >>> >>> This is a new way for you to package up your OpenBD Web App and have it >>> run locally on a users desktop, complete with a system-tray icon for >>> launching it. It ships with everything your users need, including an >>> embedded JRE and Jetty. You just supply your OpenBD web app. >>> >>> Our dear friend Mats has been testing for us and gone much further and >>> developed a complete installation script for Windows using the Nullsoft >>> Scriptable package. You can read more about how to do this at the OpenBD >>> Manual prepared by Mats >>> >>> http://openbd.org/manual/?/local_nsis >>> >>> So what does this mean? >>> >>> In a nutshell, it allows you to package up webapps that maybe are filling >>> a specific niche or requirement. Because you can restrict you webapp to >>> just the local desktop machine you can do things for the user that wouldn't >>> normally be possible from a remote server. For example, imagine building a >>> system to index all specific files on a users desktop and offer up a rich >>> webapp to manage this (MP3 player comes to mind). Another use is >>> specific utilities that you may want to give certain users to run. >>> >>> Or even better, a very quick way for people to try our yourself beautiful >>> software without all the hassle of installing Java, Jetty and OpenBD. Just >>> download and run. >>> >>> We believe in getting OpenBD into the hands of as many people as possible >>> and negating all the headaches normally associated with such a deployment. >>> >>> Let us know what you think, >>> >>> alan >>> >> >> -- >> online documentation: http://openbd.org/manual/ >> google+ hints/tips: https://plus.google.com/115990347459711259462 >> http://groups.google.com/group/openbd?hl=en > > > > -- > See for yourself how easy it is to manage files today. Join the revolution! > > Razuna - Hosted Digital Asset Management Solution > http://www.razuna.com/ > > Razuna - Open Source Digital Asset Management > http://www.razuna.org/ > > Twitter - http://twitter.com/razunahq > Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/razunahq > Support Platform - http://getsatisfaction.com/razuna > > -- > online documentation: http://openbd.org/manual/ > google+ hints/tips: https://plus.google.com/115990347459711259462 > http://groups.google.com/group/openbd?hl=en > -- online documentation: http://openbd.org/manual/ google+ hints/tips: https://plus.google.com/115990347459711259462 http://groups.google.com/group/openbd?hl=en
