Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!

2001-04-17 Thread Johan Fredriksson

As I mentioned before in a previous posting, the Orion team will continue
their work on the Orion product, partners will do the support.

Support will in the future be the "milking cow" ( don't know if that one
translates well into english, where you get the money...), and there you
have the business modell.

At least that's how I interpreted Karl Avedals speech.

Johan
- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Orion-Interest" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, April 13, 2001 12:53 AM
Subject: Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!


 I really hope that Orion is released into the open-source community if
they're going to tank as a business.

 I never thought of that.  I guess the real question may be: "What is
Orion's/Ironflare's business model?"  Taking a wild guess, not based on any
first hand knowledge/contact/experience, the 'problem' may be that orion's
developer's want to continue programming and not become consultants, support
technicians, etc...  Which would be great to have quality developers on the
project full time, but this seems contrary to a lot of the service models
that are out there now.  A lot of companies now repackage open source and
get paid on service/consulting.  Perhaps they need a quality partner or need
to be bought out (maybe macromedia should have bought them out instead of
buying allaire)...who knows...I'm not an expert in this field as I'm sure my
views have proved.  So I may be way off base.  I'm just an avid java
developer with a small, nimble company that likes to develop and utilize
small, quick, and well-written software.  (did you also ever notice that
orion seems to be at most h!
 !
 !
 alf the size of other major app servers?)

 By the way, if some help is needed to host (or provide an alternative to)
orionsupport, please let me know.  I know the boss here; I'm sure we could
work something out.

 I think a lot of people would help out in this department (including
myself), especially if it was open source.  I already have a kind of how-to
in the works for SSL using chained certificates from Entrust.net.

 David





Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!

2001-04-17 Thread Stan Ng

"cash cow" actually, but close enough. :)  thanks for the update!


- Original Message - 
From: "Johan Fredriksson" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Orion-Interest" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2001 12:47 AM
Subject: Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!


 As I mentioned before in a previous posting, the Orion team will continue
 their work on the Orion product, partners will do the support.
 
 Support will in the future be the "milking cow" ( don't know if that one
 translates well into english, where you get the money...), and there you
 have the business modell.
 
 At least that's how I interpreted Karl Avedals speech.
 
 Johan






RE: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!

2001-04-17 Thread Kemp Randy-W18971

The problem Orion will face is that the open source and low cost competition
will be heating up, and as the quality improves, so will the competition.
Who should they watch out for?

1.Resin (www.caucho.com).  When they finally get an EJB server out, it will
be set to integrate with Resin and have a competitive price (around $2000).

2. Jboss (www.jboss.org) and Enhydra Enterprise (www.enhydra.org), which are
actively enhancing and developing their application servers.

3. Jonas (www.evidian.com/jonas) and openejb (http://openejb.exolab.org/),
where the latter is making partnerships with Apache, etc.

Notice I did not mention Unify, which also has a low cost entry, but they
still need to get their financial act together.

So why do I bring these items to light?  So that Orion is aware of the
competition, and like the rabbit, doesn't take a nap, but keeps moving
forward, as the turtles get better prepared. 

-Original Message-
From: Johan Fredriksson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2001 2:47 AM
To: Orion-Interest
Subject: Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!


As I mentioned before in a previous posting, the Orion team will continue
their work on the Orion product, partners will do the support.

Support will in the future be the "milking cow" ( don't know if that one
translates well into english, where you get the money...), and there you
have the business modell.

At least that's how I interpreted Karl Avedals speech.

Johan
- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "Orion-Interest" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, April 13, 2001 12:53 AM
Subject: Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!


 I really hope that Orion is released into the open-source community if
they're going to tank as a business.

 I never thought of that.  I guess the real question may be: "What is
Orion's/Ironflare's business model?"  Taking a wild guess, not based on any
first hand knowledge/contact/experience, the 'problem' may be that orion's
developer's want to continue programming and not become consultants, support
technicians, etc...  Which would be great to have quality developers on the
project full time, but this seems contrary to a lot of the service models
that are out there now.  A lot of companies now repackage open source and
get paid on service/consulting.  Perhaps they need a quality partner or need
to be bought out (maybe macromedia should have bought them out instead of
buying allaire)...who knows...I'm not an expert in this field as I'm sure my
views have proved.  So I may be way off base.  I'm just an avid java
developer with a small, nimble company that likes to develop and utilize
small, quick, and well-written software.  (did you also ever notice that
orion seems to be at most h!
 !
 !
 alf the size of other major app servers?)

 By the way, if some help is needed to host (or provide an alternative to)
orionsupport, please let me know.  I know the boss here; I'm sure we could
work something out.

 I think a lot of people would help out in this department (including
myself), especially if it was open source.  I already have a kind of how-to
in the works for SSL using chained certificates from Entrust.net.

 David





RE: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!

2001-04-17 Thread Hani Suleiman

How are these any more 'competitive' than all the other commercial
application server vendors out there?

While it's hugely unfashionable to say so, there's nothing 'magical' or
'special' about open source. We could sit here all day and name
'competitors' to Orion. Some will fail, and hell, some might beat it one
day. I don't think the Orion team live in a bubble and are merrily
oblivious to the fact that they do have competitors, and must stay ahead
of the game and differentiate themselves.

Some of the products you mention are at least as old as (if not
older) than Orion. I for one won't be holding my breath for this 'catching
up' you're promising will happen.

Hani

 On Tue, 17 Apr 2001, Kemp Randy-W18971 wrote:

 The problem Orion will face is that the open source and low cost competition
 will be heating up, and as the quality improves, so will the competition.
 Who should they watch out for?
 
 1.Resin (www.caucho.com).  When they finally get an EJB server out, it will
 be set to integrate with Resin and have a competitive price (around $2000).
 
 2. Jboss (www.jboss.org) and Enhydra Enterprise (www.enhydra.org), which are
 actively enhancing and developing their application servers.
 
 3. Jonas (www.evidian.com/jonas) and openejb (http://openejb.exolab.org/),
 where the latter is making partnerships with Apache, etc.
 
 Notice I did not mention Unify, which also has a low cost entry, but they
 still need to get their financial act together.
 
 So why do I bring these items to light?  So that Orion is aware of the
 competition, and like the rabbit, doesn't take a nap, but keeps moving
 forward, as the turtles get better prepared. 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Johan Fredriksson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
 Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2001 2:47 AM
 To: Orion-Interest
 Subject: Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!
 
 
 As I mentioned before in a previous posting, the Orion team will continue
 their work on the Orion product, partners will do the support.
 
 Support will in the future be the "milking cow" ( don't know if that one
 translates well into english, where you get the money...), and there you
 have the business modell.
 
 At least that's how I interpreted Karl Avedals speech.
 
 Johan
 - Original Message -
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: "Orion-Interest" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Friday, April 13, 2001 12:53 AM
 Subject: Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!
 
 
  I really hope that Orion is released into the open-source community if
 they're going to tank as a business.
 
  I never thought of that.  I guess the real question may be: "What is
 Orion's/Ironflare's business model?"  Taking a wild guess, not based on any
 first hand knowledge/contact/experience, the 'problem' may be that orion's
 developer's want to continue programming and not become consultants, support
 technicians, etc...  Which would be great to have quality developers on the
 project full time, but this seems contrary to a lot of the service models
 that are out there now.  A lot of companies now repackage open source and
 get paid on service/consulting.  Perhaps they need a quality partner or need
 to be bought out (maybe macromedia should have bought them out instead of
 buying allaire)...who knows...I'm not an expert in this field as I'm sure my
 views have proved.  So I may be way off base.  I'm just an avid java
 developer with a small, nimble company that likes to develop and utilize
 small, quick, and well-written software.  (did you also ever notice that
 orion seems to be at most h!
  !
  !
  alf the size of other major app servers?)
 
  By the way, if some help is needed to host (or provide an alternative to)
 orionsupport, please let me know.  I know the boss here; I'm sure we could
 work something out.
 
  I think a lot of people would help out in this department (including
 myself), especially if it was open source.  I already have a kind of how-to
 in the works for SSL using chained certificates from Entrust.net.
 
  David
 
 
 





Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!

2001-04-12 Thread skyman

I really hope that Orion is released into the open-source community if they're going 
to tank as a business.

I never thought of that.  I guess the real question may be: "What is 
Orion's/Ironflare's business model?"  Taking a wild guess, not based on any first hand 
knowledge/contact/experience, the 'problem' may be that orion's developer's want to 
continue programming and not become consultants, support technicians, etc...  Which 
would be great to have quality developers on the project full time, but this seems 
contrary to a lot of the service models that are out there now.  A lot of companies 
now repackage open source and get paid on service/consulting.  Perhaps they need a 
quality partner or need to be bought out (maybe macromedia should have bought them out 
instead of buying allaire)...who knows...I'm not an expert in this field as I'm sure 
my views have proved.  So I may be way off base.  I'm just an avid java developer with 
a small, nimble company that likes to develop and utilize small, quick, and 
well-written software.  (did you also ever notice that orion seems to be at most h!
!
!
alf the size of other major app servers?)

By the way, if some help is needed to host (or provide an alternative to) 
orionsupport, please let me know.  I know the boss here; I'm sure we could work 
something out.

I think a lot of people would help out in this department (including myself), 
especially if it was open source.  I already have a kind of how-to in the works for 
SSL using chained certificates from Entrust.net.

David




Re: Re: ORION RISE FROM THE DEAD!

2001-04-12 Thread Hani Suleiman

David, nothing personal, I'm just hanging my reply off yours as it's the
latest one in this thread...

BUT some of us are very bored of this thread popping up every few
weeks. Sure, Orion hasn't released a new version in a couple of months now
(I think), and I'm as desperately eager for 1.4.8 as anyone here. Why does
this always translate to 'Orion is tanking'?

It WOULD be lovely if the Orion team were more active in their posts here,
if nothing else, people would get that warm fuzzy feeling that is
obviously so important.

So in an ideal situation, we'd all get the best of both worlds. A kick ass
product, and warm fuzzies all round (well, and a much better support
infrastructure!). But as has been said before, I'm in the group that of
those 3 things, would choose the first.

Hani

On Thu, 12 Apr 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I really hope that Orion is released into the open-source community if they're 
going to tank as a business.
 
 I never thought of that.  I guess the real question may be: "What is 
Orion's/Ironflare's business model?"  Taking a wild guess, not based on any first 
hand knowledge/contact/experience, the 'problem' may be that orion's developer's want 
to continue programming and not become consultants, support technicians, etc...  
Which would be great to have quality developers on the project full time, but this 
seems contrary to a lot of the service models that are out there now.  A lot of 
companies now repackage open source and get paid on service/consulting.  Perhaps they 
need a quality partner or need to be bought out (maybe macromedia should have bought 
them out instead of buying allaire)...who knows...I'm not an expert in this field as 
I'm sure my views have proved.  So I may be way off base.  I'm just an avid java 
developer with a small, nimble company that likes to develop and utilize small, 
quick, and well-written software.  (did you also ever notice that orion seems to be 
at most!
 h!
 !
 !
 alf the size of other major app servers?)
 
 By the way, if some help is needed to host (or provide an alternative to) 
orionsupport, please let me know.  I know the boss here; I'm sure we could work 
something out.
 
 I think a lot of people would help out in this department (including myself), 
especially if it was open source.  I already have a kind of how-to in the works for 
SSL using chained certificates from Entrust.net.
 
 David