Part-Time Remote Java Wicket Job Opportunity
Hi! We are looking for someone well versed in Java Wicket to implement a sliced html template as live Wicket pages, according to our coding conventions and requirements. There might be multiple similar such tasks along the way (longer term). We will be paying you via invoice, so you need to be incorporated. If you are available, please contact me directly. Tell us about your past experience with implementing sliced html in Wicket. We would also like to see some work (what your code looks like) that you have done using Wicket. Yours sincerely, Martin Terra martin.te...@koodaripalvelut.com
Wicket Job Opportunity
Hey all, We’re hiring a full-time Apache Wicket/Apache Cayenne developer. Check it out here: https://workforcenow.adp.com/mascsr/default/mdf/recruitment/recruitment.html?cid=894daef4-3a35-4b13-96b7-a3003f6a8cb3=19000101_01=MP=en_US=431036 Ideally the candidate would be willing to relocate to Phoenix, AZ, but we’re open to other options. Thanks! Lon
Wicket Job Opportunity
Hi, My company is looking to fill a 100% telecommuting (must reside within two time zones of US/Central time GMT-0600) senior software engineer position. We use Wicket/Weld/Hibernate stack. If you are interested you can read more about the position here: https://www.42lines.net/careers/software-eng/ Cheers, -Igor - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Wicket job opening in Estonia
Hi! We have a wicket job opening in Estonia, required fluency in Estonian and Finnish. Feel free to email me or apply via http://www.youritprofile.com/job_ad/id/701 ** Martin
Re: Wicket job opportunities
I guess you have checked http://careers.stackoverflow.com/jobs/tag/wicket and also http://www.linkedin.com/vsearch/j?keywords=wicketopenAdvancedForm=truelocationType=YsortBy=R Ondra On 29.10.2013 19:13, Leonid Bogdanov wrote: Hello! Sorry for bringing this topic, but I'm wondering are there any Software Developer positions that require Wicket knowledge and a remote work is an option? It would be double awesome if such position involves Scala/Clojure/Hadoop. I'll provide my CV on a request. Thank you! - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Wicket job opportunities
Hello! Sorry for bringing this topic, but I'm wondering are there any Software Developer positions that require Wicket knowledge and a remote work is an option? It would be double awesome if such position involves Scala/Clojure/Hadoop. I'll provide my CV on a request. Thank you!
Wicket job offer in Dubai
We have a job opening for a good wicket developer. Emirates REIT ( http://www.reit.ae ) needs to recuite a good developer that is both good at programming and at suggesting ways to model and improve our businesses and processes via the IT system. The job will be based in Dubai, at the Dubai Financial Centre, and includes expanding our intranet which is quite extensive and key to the business, and working on a few other smaller projects. The key skills are : Wicket, Hibernate, Javascript, Maven and linux administration. If interested, please contact me at : sylvain at companydomain. Thank you. Sylvain Vieujot.
RE: Wicket job market
Wicket is probably the best most of us have ever enjoyed before. but let's be realistic, there's the nice paradox of non competitive presentation of this presentation framework yet, to be sold to not enough tech skilled people, who are decision makers. they just want to see nice cinema. then, why not adding that to Wicket site, and be more marketineers too? +1 With very little effort and some CSS I would have thought the Wicket website could be spruced up with big payoffs. I mentioned this a couple of years back and someone sent some links of a project to provide a 'new look' wicket site that looked 10x spunkier than the current site. I don't know what happened to that project but I think it would be well worth the effort to complete that. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
If someone feels good enough in web design - HTML+CSS, video making, everything that will make the site more attractive for both technical and non-technical people: the new site (unfinished) is at https://github.com/dashorst/wicket-site the current site is at: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/wicket/common/site/trunk On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 9:31 AM, Chris Colman chr...@stepaheadsoftware.comwrote: Wicket is probably the best most of us have ever enjoyed before. but let's be realistic, there's the nice paradox of non competitive presentation of this presentation framework yet, to be sold to not enough tech skilled people, who are decision makers. they just want to see nice cinema. then, why not adding that to Wicket site, and be more marketineers too? +1 With very little effort and some CSS I would have thought the Wicket website could be spruced up with big payoffs. I mentioned this a couple of years back and someone sent some links of a project to provide a 'new look' wicket site that looked 10x spunkier than the current site. I don't know what happened to that project but I think it would be well worth the effort to complete that. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- Martin Grigorov jWeekend Training, Consulting, Development http://jWeekend.com http://jweekend.com/
Re: Wicket job market
The one thing i would say:if you want to have a nice presentation of vaadin,it comes out of the box,because thats a vaadin feature:nice presentation. No other framework has it such easy:) Vaadin efficiently speaks the language of emotions. So lets start a competition... Nice ;) but, i would add: caution! 1) Wicket decision makers may understand the same picture first. Their support is needed. 2) SoC. As Wicket very well does and promotes - that's the main reason it was created to - a Separation of Concerns should be accepted. Java side is for the engineers, Html side is for the designers (in the ideal case, we know). aligned with this same directive, it should be accepted that the expertise of marketineer skilled people is required to concentrate and contribute on Wicket marketing strategy. we are most engineers, implementors, so help from people that correctly dominates marketing should be recruited and accepted. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
Hi, On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 9:31 AM, Chris Colman chr...@stepaheadsoftware.comwrote: Wicket is probably the best most of us have ever enjoyed before. but let's be realistic, there's the nice paradox of non competitive presentation of this presentation framework yet, to be sold to not enough tech skilled people, who are decision makers. they just want to see nice cinema. then, why not adding that to Wicket site, and be more marketineers too? +1 With very little effort and some CSS I would have thought the Wicket website could be spruced up with big payoffs. I mentioned this a couple of years back and someone sent some links of a project to provide a 'new look' wicket site that looked 10x spunkier than the current site. I don't know what happened to that project but I think it would be well worth the effort to complete that. As always problem boils down to: who bells the cat? There are not many active developers... as far as I can see... and they are doing an excellent/dedicated work fixing issues . I would extend the above task to include a nice looking components showcase... -- Regards - Ernesto Reinaldo Barreiro Antilia Soft http://antiliasoft.com/ http://antiliasoft.com/antilia
Re: Wicket job market
If someone feels good enough in web design - HTML+CSS, video making, everything that will make the site more attractive for both technical and non-technical people: the new site (unfinished) is at https://github.com/dashorst/wicket-site the current site is at: https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/wicket/common/site/trunk i think this is missing what answered before. it is not only a question of HTML + CSS. it's also a marketing strategy that should be worked too, and this is not our area. would you accept that? - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
RE: Wicket job market
your loosing the focus pretended to be justify before: marketing, not tech. and many people first see, later think :) I think the problem is that most good software engineers see 'beauty' in the elegant component based, object oriented architecture of Wicket - we can all go oooh and h just thinking about how truly beautiful Wicket has been 'engineered'. We see beauty beyond the external presentation. People out in the real world however, or developers who don't get the oooh/aaah value from elegant design and architecture, are usually 'beauty is only skin deep' people - and given then don't care about elegant engineering 'under the hood' their evaluation of the 'goodness' of something is based totally on the appearance of the 'skin'. I think we have to grasp the concept that there are two different types of people and they're on opposite ends of the spectrum - the less 'engineering' someone is the more they crave 'funky look and feel'. Because of the above, and maybe I'm going out on a limb here, IMHO Wicket's much wider adoption is totally reliant on improving the Wicket website's 'looks' to newcomers on their first visit. Regards, Chris - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
Thanks Philippe for raising this issue Maybe it's time to take a step back to better analyse the situation and where we want to go. Because we don't want to be the only ones using the best framework. What need to be done ? If we promote Wicket right now, we will end up with a big failure. In marketing, you don't sell the product, but the product's perception people have. So what could be the plan ? I would say, in that order : -up to date documentation -user friendly documentation -more exemples for beginners and, once it's done, I repeat, once it's done, -marketing slides for decision makers -more buzz in any java/web forum to promote wicket François Le 5 févr. 2013 à 09:52, Chris Colman chr...@stepaheadsoftware.com a écrit : your loosing the focus pretended to be justify before: marketing, not tech. and many people first see, later think :) I think the problem is that most good software engineers see 'beauty' in the elegant component based, object oriented architecture of Wicket - we can all go oooh and h just thinking about how truly beautiful Wicket has been 'engineered'. We see beauty beyond the external presentation. People out in the real world however, or developers who don't get the oooh/aaah value from elegant design and architecture, are usually 'beauty is only skin deep' people - and given then don't care about elegant engineering 'under the hood' their evaluation of the 'goodness' of something is based totally on the appearance of the 'skin'. I think we have to grasp the concept that there are two different types of people and they're on opposite ends of the spectrum - the less 'engineering' someone is the more they crave 'funky look and feel'. Because of the above, and maybe I'm going out on a limb here, IMHO Wicket's much wider adoption is totally reliant on improving the Wicket website's 'looks' to newcomers on their first visit. Regards, Chris - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 10:01 AM, Francois Meillet francois.meil...@gmail.com wrote: Thanks Philippe for raising this issue Maybe it's time to take a step back to better analyse the situation and where we want to go. Because we don't want to be the only ones using the best framework. What need to be done ? If we promote Wicket right now, we will end up with a big failure. In marketing, you don't sell the product, but the product's perception people have. So what could be the plan ? I would say, in that order : -up to date documentation -user friendly documentation -more exemples for beginners branch: https://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/wicket/repo?p=wicket.git;a=shortlog;h=refs/heads/reference-guide current state: http://martin-g.github.com/wicket-reference-guide/ I'll probably be able to document a topic or at most two per week. Then based on the types of questions in the mailing lists I'll update the docs and add more topics. and, once it's done, I repeat, once it's done, -marketing slides for decision makers -more buzz in any java/web forum to promote wicket François Le 5 févr. 2013 à 09:52, Chris Colman chr...@stepaheadsoftware.com a écrit : your loosing the focus pretended to be justify before: marketing, not tech. and many people first see, later think :) I think the problem is that most good software engineers see 'beauty' in the elegant component based, object oriented architecture of Wicket - we can all go oooh and h just thinking about how truly beautiful Wicket has been 'engineered'. We see beauty beyond the external presentation. People out in the real world however, or developers who don't get the oooh/aaah value from elegant design and architecture, are usually 'beauty is only skin deep' people - and given then don't care about elegant engineering 'under the hood' their evaluation of the 'goodness' of something is based totally on the appearance of the 'skin'. I think we have to grasp the concept that there are two different types of people and they're on opposite ends of the spectrum - the less 'engineering' someone is the more they crave 'funky look and feel'. Because of the above, and maybe I'm going out on a limb here, IMHO Wicket's much wider adoption is totally reliant on improving the Wicket website's 'looks' to newcomers on their first visit. Regards, Chris - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- Martin Grigorov jWeekend Training, Consulting, Development http://jWeekend.com http://jweekend.com/
Re: Wicket job market
I think the problem is that most good software engineers see 'beauty' in the elegant component based, object oriented architecture of Wicket - we can all go oooh and h just thinking about how truly beautiful Wicket has been 'engineered'. We see beauty beyond the external presentation. People out in the real world however, or developers who don't get the oooh/aaah value from elegant design and architecture, are usually 'beauty is only skin deep' people - and given then don't care about elegant engineering 'under the hood' their evaluation of the 'goodness' of something is based totally on the appearance of the 'skin'. I think we have to grasp the concept that there are two different types of people and they're on opposite ends of the spectrum - the less 'engineering' someone is the more they crave 'funky look and feel'. Because of the above, and maybe I'm going out on a limb here, IMHO Wicket's much wider adoption is totally reliant on improving the Wicket website's 'looks' to newcomers on their first visit. as expressed before: emotions. e... motion motion movement. the nice emotions you experiment as an engineer on wicket, the same non-techs experiment on render-side. but at the end what moves you, and other people, the hole world: emotions. so let's speak that language at the non-dominated side yet, but not only in look feel (design), also in strategy (marketing). - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
I think it would be exhausting and possibly risky to rely on the appeal of the Wicket site. This appeal can already be provided by third party sites that use Wicket. A developer can then choose to show management a selection of sites that are relevant in context. What drives adoption rate is development efficiency, meeting deadlines and ease of deployment. Sure in small markets it is difficult to find developers for Wicket, but it is not difficult to convince a manager with the prospect of an earlier completion date even if a couple of developers have to be trained (or may not have to be trained because they can focus on HTML). It is not very difficult to convince managers of that. So what is wrong? Why is it not working? I can't provide the full answer. But to feel confident about meeting deadlines, I would like to see improvements in the following areas: 1) Better support of statelessness in general 2) Some stateless AJAX if possible, even if only in basic cases with constraints say for auto-complete text fields 3) Transition from stateless pages to statful pages 4) Recovery from loss of state. Is implemented but it does not work. So while after so many years, we don't have that, I can only confidently recommend to use Wicket if users are allowed to have 10 hour web sessions (I have been there), or the users are already used to be kicked out after x minutes like in some online banking sites. Most users today are used to remember-me cookies. So how do we explain to them that a page expired while they can prove that they were still signed in? Bernard On Tue, 5 Feb 2013 19:52:18 +1100, you wrote: your loosing the focus pretended to be justify before: marketing, not tech. and many people first see, later think :) I think the problem is that most good software engineers see 'beauty' in the elegant component based, object oriented architecture of Wicket - we can all go oooh and h just thinking about how truly beautiful Wicket has been 'engineered'. We see beauty beyond the external presentation. People out in the real world however, or developers who don't get the oooh/aaah value from elegant design and architecture, are usually 'beauty is only skin deep' people - and given then don't care about elegant engineering 'under the hood' their evaluation of the 'goodness' of something is based totally on the appearance of the 'skin'. I think we have to grasp the concept that there are two different types of people and they're on opposite ends of the spectrum - the less 'engineering' someone is the more they crave 'funky look and feel'. Because of the above, and maybe I'm going out on a limb here, IMHO Wicket's much wider adoption is totally reliant on improving the Wicket website's 'looks' to newcomers on their first visit. Regards, Chris - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
Reading the mails sent so far, I think Wicket should improve two aspects: -Its promotion -Support for stateless usage. The second point has already been indicated as a target for Wicket 7. The promotion stuff is probably the most challenging because many of Wicket supporters has technical skills rather than promotional. IMHO a first concrete and easy-to-do step to make Wicket more appealing is creating a Showcase link for left menu that points to live examples. In the current site live examples don't have enough visibility (just my two cents). We should also add some Wicket-stuff live examples to show some of the most eye-catching modules. I think it would be exhausting and possibly risky to rely on the appeal of the Wicket site. This appeal can already be provided by third party sites that use Wicket. A developer can then choose to show management a selection of sites that are relevant in context. What drives adoption rate is development efficiency, meeting deadlines and ease of deployment. Sure in small markets it is difficult to find developers for Wicket, but it is not difficult to convince a manager with the prospect of an earlier completion date even if a couple of developers have to be trained (or may not have to be trained because they can focus on HTML). It is not very difficult to convince managers of that. So what is wrong? Why is it not working? I can't provide the full answer. But to feel confident about meeting deadlines, I would like to see improvements in the following areas: 1) Better support of statelessness in general 2) Some stateless AJAX if possible, even if only in basic cases with constraints say for auto-complete text fields 3) Transition from stateless pages to statful pages 4) Recovery from loss of state. Is implemented but it does not work. So while after so many years, we don't have that, I can only confidently recommend to use Wicket if users are allowed to have 10 hour web sessions (I have been there), or the users are already used to be kicked out after x minutes like in some online banking sites. Most users today are used to remember-me cookies. So how do we explain to them that a page expired while they can prove that they were still signed in? Bernard On Tue, 5 Feb 2013 19:52:18 +1100, you wrote: your loosing the focus pretended to be justify before: marketing, not tech. and many people first see, later think :) I think the problem is that most good software engineers see 'beauty' in the elegant component based, object oriented architecture of Wicket - we can all go oooh and h just thinking about how truly beautiful Wicket has been 'engineered'. We see beauty beyond the external presentation. People out in the real world however, or developers who don't get the oooh/aaah value from elegant design and architecture, are usually 'beauty is only skin deep' people - and given then don't care about elegant engineering 'under the hood' their evaluation of the 'goodness' of something is based totally on the appearance of the 'skin'. I think we have to grasp the concept that there are two different types of people and they're on opposite ends of the spectrum - the less 'engineering' someone is the more they crave 'funky look and feel'. Because of the above, and maybe I'm going out on a limb here, IMHO Wicket's much wider adoption is totally reliant on improving the Wicket website's 'looks' to newcomers on their first visit. Regards, Chris - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
Reading the mails sent so far, I think Wicket should improve two aspects: -Its promotion -Support for stateless usage. The second point has already been indicated as a target for Wicket 7. The promotion stuff is probably the most challenging because many of Wicket supporters has technical skills rather than promotional. IMHO a first concrete and easy-to-do step to make Wicket more appealing is creating a Showcase link for left menu that points to live examples. In the current site live examples don't have enough visibility (just my two cents). We should also add some Wicket-stuff live examples to show some of the most eye-catching modules. you are opining projecting like an engineer, not as an expert in the promotion area you mention. insisting to the infinite: expertise on on how to focus not only the new look feel, but the contents, the information, what and how to be presented, is required. and this is not an engineer skill. engineers can help complementing it, but not exactly focusing it. moreover, with the help of this promotion (marketineer) expertise, there's no need to re-invent the wheel. just see how others - the competence - do well in this area, and learn from them, instead of rejecting that by other tech-thical reasons. expertise in tech-market to focus it required, watching the competence. as one ever said: it is very important WHAT, but more important HOW. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
The list at https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/WICKET/Ideas+for+Wicket+7.0 is just ideas as stated at the top. Probably we should create tickets in Jira so people can vote for them. On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 12:39 PM, Andrea Del Bene an.delb...@gmail.comwrote: Reading the mails sent so far, I think Wicket should improve two aspects: -Its promotion -Support for stateless usage. The second point has already been indicated as a target for Wicket 7. The promotion stuff is probably the most challenging because many of Wicket supporters has technical skills rather than promotional. IMHO a first concrete and easy-to-do step to make Wicket more appealing is creating a Showcase link for left menu that points to live examples. In the current site live examples don't have enough visibility (just my two cents). We should also add some Wicket-stuff live examples to show some of the most eye-catching modules. Currently on InMethod Grid examples are hosted at http://www.wicket-library.com/inmethod-grid/data-grid/simple?0 Which others you find as a good enough to be promoted ? I think it would be exhausting and possibly risky to rely on the appeal of the Wicket site. This appeal can already be provided by third party sites that use Wicket. A developer can then choose to show management a selection of sites that are relevant in context. What drives adoption rate is development efficiency, meeting deadlines and ease of deployment. Sure in small markets it is difficult to find developers for Wicket, but it is not difficult to convince a manager with the prospect of an earlier completion date even if a couple of developers have to be trained (or may not have to be trained because they can focus on HTML). It is not very difficult to convince managers of that. So what is wrong? Why is it not working? I can't provide the full answer. But to feel confident about meeting deadlines, I would like to see improvements in the following areas: 1) Better support of statelessness in general 2) Some stateless AJAX if possible, even if only in basic cases with constraints say for auto-complete text fields 3) Transition from stateless pages to statful pages 4) Recovery from loss of state. Is implemented but it does not work. So while after so many years, we don't have that, I can only confidently recommend to use Wicket if users are allowed to have 10 hour web sessions (I have been there), or the users are already used to be kicked out after x minutes like in some online banking sites. Most users today are used to remember-me cookies. So how do we explain to them that a page expired while they can prove that they were still signed in? Bernard On Tue, 5 Feb 2013 19:52:18 +1100, you wrote: your loosing the focus pretended to be justify before: marketing, not tech. and many people first see, later think :) I think the problem is that most good software engineers see 'beauty' in the elegant component based, object oriented architecture of Wicket - we can all go oooh and h just thinking about how truly beautiful Wicket has been 'engineered'. We see beauty beyond the external presentation. People out in the real world however, or developers who don't get the oooh/aaah value from elegant design and architecture, are usually 'beauty is only skin deep' people - and given then don't care about elegant engineering 'under the hood' their evaluation of the 'goodness' of something is based totally on the appearance of the 'skin'. I think we have to grasp the concept that there are two different types of people and they're on opposite ends of the spectrum - the less 'engineering' someone is the more they crave 'funky look and feel'. Because of the above, and maybe I'm going out on a limb here, IMHO Wicket's much wider adoption is totally reliant on improving the Wicket website's 'looks' to newcomers on their first visit. Regards, Chris --**--** - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@wicket.**apache.orgusers-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org --**--**- To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@wicket.**apache.orgusers-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org --**--**- To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@wicket.**apache.orgusers-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- Martin Grigorov jWeekend Training, Consulting, Development http://jWeekend.com http://jweekend.com/
Re: Wicket job market
I would add modules TinyMCE, Google Maps and jqPlot. An example of integration with Facebook could be cool as well :) The list at https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/WICKET/Ideas+for+Wicket+7.0 is just ideas as stated at the top. Probably we should create tickets in Jira so people can vote for them. On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 12:39 PM, Andrea Del Bene an.delb...@gmail.comwrote: Reading the mails sent so far, I think Wicket should improve two aspects: -Its promotion -Support for stateless usage. The second point has already been indicated as a target for Wicket 7. The promotion stuff is probably the most challenging because many of Wicket supporters has technical skills rather than promotional. IMHO a first concrete and easy-to-do step to make Wicket more appealing is creating a Showcase link for left menu that points to live examples. In the current site live examples don't have enough visibility (just my two cents). We should also add some Wicket-stuff live examples to show some of the most eye-catching modules. Currently on InMethod Grid examples are hosted at http://www.wicket-library.com/inmethod-grid/data-grid/simple?0 Which others you find as a good enough to be promoted ? - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 7:45 PM, procrastinative.developer procrastinative.develo...@gmail.com wrote: I really enjoy wicket, it's really easy to create complex site with it. For me the biggest problem was a 'wicket way'. To create site effectivly, we need to learn a lot about how wicket works etc. Without good documentation process of learning can be frustrating. I see this problems in wicket: 1)lack of good documentation (for beginners is ok, but for more complex problems sometimes I need to spend a lot of time to discover how I need to do that) since you know better some parts of Wicket now I officially invite you to help me with the new reference guide for beginners. See my previous mail in this thread for the urls many people complain about this but no one offered help so far 2)lack of good IDE support - I use netbeans and intellij and tools for it are not very good. Intellij has very good support for Java/Scala/Groovy, HTML, JS, HTML, CSS :-) 3)lack of good list of tools -in my wicket career i found a lot usefull tools, but in 50% it was a matter of luck. what kind of tools do you mean ? which are the useful ones ? 4)a lot of abandoned plugins - because of a lot of api breaks between wicket 1.4 and wicket 6.0 some plugin not working with current version of wicket. Here is my point of view here - the abandoned plugins are those which are not very useful to the community. Since no one migrated them means that no one needed them so far. Many libraries have migrated so it is not so hard. Wicket developers did a lot of good work. Wicket popularity depends on wicket community. Maybe developers of plugins and wicket tools(not only wicket components, but also IDE plugins developers and tools like wicket RAD etc) should give feedback what they need for easier tools creation. Wicket dev should freeze api. I think that now wicket is very mature framework and with version 6.0 its time to start building infrastructure around it that help developers to create webapplications. Maybe it's time to build site like wicket repository where user can publish and search information about created by other users plugins? The repository is at https://github.com/wicketstuff/core Why do you need something else ? Who will maintain several repositories ? This will just confuse all new developers. Pick an issue from https://github.com/wicketstuff/core/issues?direction=descsort=createdstate=open and make your contribution to the community. -- View this message in context: http://apache-wicket.1842946.n4.nabble.com/Wicket-job-market-tp4656048p4656092.html Sent from the Users forum mailing list archive at Nabble.com. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- Martin Grigorov jWeekend Training, Consulting, Development http://jWeekend.com http://jweekend.com/
Re: Wicket job market
I'll wade into the point about IDE plugins since I was the original maintainer of Wicketforge (https://code.google.com/p/wicketforge/), which is still being actively developed by Minas Manthos. As it stands today, Wicketforge is a great productivity enhancer when developing Wicket apps. It provides autocompletion of Wicket IDs, templated panel and page creation, as well as a few inspections and intentions to make life easier (More info here: https://code.google.com/p/wicketforge/wiki/PluginFeatures). More features could be added, but the value is questionable given IDEA's already excellent HTML and Java support. Right now Wicketforge has no open tickets. If the plugin doesn't do something you want it to do, checkout the source and contribute back. I'm sure Minas would love to get some patches, and if he's busy I'll come out of plugin retirement and take a look. -Nick On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 10:45 AM, procrastinative.developer procrastinative.develo...@gmail.com wrote: I really enjoy wicket, it's really easy to create complex site with it. For me the biggest problem was a 'wicket way'. To create site effectivly, we need to learn a lot about how wicket works etc. Without good documentation process of learning can be frustrating. I see this problems in wicket: 1)lack of good documentation (for beginners is ok, but for more complex problems sometimes I need to spend a lot of time to discover how I need to do that) 2)lack of good IDE support - I use netbeans and intellij and tools for it are not very good. 3)lack of good list of tools -in my wicket career i found a lot usefull tools, but in 50% it was a matter of luck. 4)a lot of abandoned plugins - because of a lot of api breaks between wicket 1.4 and wicket 6.0 some plugin not working with current version of wicket. Wicket developers did a lot of good work. Wicket popularity depends on wicket community. Maybe developers of plugins and wicket tools(not only wicket components, but also IDE plugins developers and tools like wicket RAD etc) should give feedback what they need for easier tools creation. Wicket dev should freeze api. I think that now wicket is very mature framework and with version 6.0 its time to start building infrastructure around it that help developers to create webapplications. Maybe it's time to build site like wicket repository where user can publish and search information about created by other users plugins? -- View this message in context: http://apache-wicket.1842946.n4.nabble.com/Wicket-job-market-tp4656048p4656092.html Sent from the Users forum mailing list archive at Nabble.com. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
Did you file a ticket for the problems you experienced? On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 12:21 PM, procrastinative.developer procrastinative.develo...@gmail.com wrote: I was testing this plugin a some time ago and I had a lot of problems with it (NPE, no switching between files). I was so frustrated about this situation, that I uninstall this plugin and I resign from using it in development. Thanks about info, I will try this plugin again. -- View this message in context: http://apache-wicket.1842946.n4.nabble.com/Wicket-job-market-tp4656048p4656104.html Sent from the Users forum mailing list archive at Nabble.com. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
Hi, Spring MVC is backed by VMWare. GWT by Google (or not anymore ?!) Wicket and Tapestry as Apache projects are developed by volunteers. I think what miss is the marketing and the training. I'm not sure whether there is such job search site in Germany to get some stats but the market for Wicket here is pretty big. Among others several German banks use Wicket for their web apps. On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 1:05 PM, Philippe Demaison ph.demai...@gmail.comwrote: Hello, Let's say that the most popular java web frameworks are Wicket, Tapestry, GWT, Spring MVC. Have you seen the graph ? http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=Wicket%2C+Tapestry%2C+GWT%2C+%22Spring+MVC%22 Other frameworks Play Framework, Apache Click, Stripes, Struts, JSF, Seam http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=%22Play+Framework%22%2C+%22Apache+Click%22%2C+Stripes%2C+Struts%2C+JSF%2C+Seam What needs to be improved to get a wider adoption of Wicket ? Best regards Phlippe -- Martin Grigorov jWeekend Training, Consulting, Development http://jWeekend.com http://jweekend.com/
Re: Wicket job market
Hi, IMHO on countries that invest heavily on RD (new technologies) like Germany, Netherlands, UK, USA, etc Wicket market is growing... and you can find lots of Jobs posts asking for Wicket versed programmers.. See http://www.indeed.de/Jobs?q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.nl/Wicket-vacatures http://www.indeed.fr/emplois?q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.co.uk/jobs?q=Wicketl= compare to http://www.indeed.es/ofertas?q=Wicketl= :-( As many other OpenSource projects its development depends largely on volunteers and on companies willing to pay back with employee time for maintenance/documentation. etc. So, there is no point on comparing with frameworks backed by big players or well established frameworks. At least in Spain my experience is that: 1- I do not risk my ass decision makers are a big obstacle for adoption: they just want to hear about big names backed software or at least well know/established software... so that, if development ins't going as planned, it is not a problem of the framework selected. 2- Many programmers comming from Struts like frameworks background have big problems in caching up with OOP required for Wicket and the Wicket way. 3- Lack of a unified place where to find free/well-supported commercial quality components doesn't help either when you want to sell wicket. On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 1:05 PM, Philippe Demaison ph.demai...@gmail.comwrote: Hello, Let's say that the most popular java web frameworks are Wicket, Tapestry, GWT, Spring MVC. Have you seen the graph ? http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=Wicket%2C+Tapestry%2C+GWT%2C+%22Spring+MVC%22 Other frameworks Play Framework, Apache Click, Stripes, Struts, JSF, Seam http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=%22Play+Framework%22%2C+%22Apache+Click%22%2C+Stripes%2C+Struts%2C+JSF%2C+Seam What needs to be improved to get a wider adoption of Wicket ? Best regards Phlippe -- Regards - Ernesto Reinaldo Barreiro Antilia Soft http://antiliasoft.com/ http://antiliasoft.com/antilia
Re: Wicket job market
I wouldn't discount Apache, look at how Struts took off, and look at the Apache HTTP server, the most widely used server on the web. Apache may not be a big corporation but they are a still a big name. On 2/4/13 7:37 AM, Ernesto Reinaldo Barreiro wrote: Hi, IMHO on countries that invest heavily on RD (new technologies) like Germany, Netherlands, UK, USA, etc Wicket market is growing... and you can find lots of Jobs posts asking for Wicket versed programmers.. See http://www.indeed.de/Jobs?q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.nl/Wicket-vacatures http://www.indeed.fr/emplois?q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.co.uk/jobs?q=Wicketl= compare to http://www.indeed.es/ofertas?q=Wicketl= :-( As many other OpenSource projects its development depends largely on volunteers and on companies willing to pay back with employee time for maintenance/documentation. etc. So, there is no point on comparing with frameworks backed by big players or well established frameworks. At least in Spain my experience is that: 1- I do not risk my ass decision makers are a big obstacle for adoption: they just want to hear about big names backed software or at least well know/established software... so that, if development ins't going as planned, it is not a problem of the framework selected. 2- Many programmers comming from Struts like frameworks background have big problems in caching up with OOP required for Wicket and the Wicket way. 3- Lack of a unified place where to find free/well-supported commercial quality components doesn't help either when you want to sell wicket. On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 1:05 PM, Philippe Demaison ph.demai...@gmail.comwrote: Hello, Let's say that the most popular java web frameworks are Wicket, Tapestry, GWT, Spring MVC. Have you seen the graph ? http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=Wicket%2C+Tapestry%2C+GWT%2C+%22Spring+MVC%22 Other frameworks Play Framework, Apache Click, Stripes, Struts, JSF, Seam http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=%22Play+Framework%22%2C+%22Apache+Click%22%2C+Stripes%2C+Struts%2C+JSF%2C+Seam What needs to be improved to get a wider adoption of Wicket ? Best regards Phlippe - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
Hi, On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 3:20 PM, Tim Urberg t...@urberg.net wrote: I wouldn't discount Apache, look at how Struts took off, and look at the Apache HTTP server, the most widely used server on the web. Apache may not be a big corporation but they are a still a big name. It is not my intention to discount Apache (read my allusion to well established frameworks as Struts). I just wanted to pointing out that for managers it is a lot easier to decided for WELL established names that for newcomers... Things like 1-how/where do I find programmers that know this technology.? 2- Is my team going to catch up quickly with new things, would they be able to solves difficult issues? 3- if not who is available on my local marked that will be able to solve those issues for me at a reasonable price? 4- What do I gain risking new technology? Please show me a nice free (or cheap) well maintained component pack I can use to solve my problems/quickly build my applications. Those are the questions I have faced when trying to get wicket adopted. On 2/4/13 7:37 AM, Ernesto Reinaldo Barreiro wrote: Hi, IMHO on countries that invest heavily on RD (new technologies) like Germany, Netherlands, UK, USA, etc Wicket market is growing... and you can find lots of Jobs posts asking for Wicket versed programmers.. See http://www.indeed.de/Jobs?q=**Wicketl=http://www.indeed.de/Jobs?q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.nl/Wicket-**vacatureshttp://www.indeed.nl/Wicket-vacatures http://www.indeed.fr/emplois?**q=Wicketl=http://www.indeed.fr/emplois?q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.co.uk/jobs?**q=Wicketl=http://www.indeed.co.uk/jobs?q=Wicketl= compare to http://www.indeed.es/ofertas?**q=Wicketl=http://www.indeed.es/ofertas?q=Wicketl= :-( As many other OpenSource projects its development depends largely on volunteers and on companies willing to pay back with employee time for maintenance/documentation. etc. So, there is no point on comparing with frameworks backed by big players or well established frameworks. At least in Spain my experience is that: 1- I do not risk my ass decision makers are a big obstacle for adoption: they just want to hear about big names backed software or at least well know/established software... so that, if development ins't going as planned, it is not a problem of the framework selected. 2- Many programmers comming from Struts like frameworks background have big problems in caching up with OOP required for Wicket and the Wicket way. 3- Lack of a unified place where to find free/well-supported commercial quality components doesn't help either when you want to sell wicket. On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 1:05 PM, Philippe Demaison ph.demai...@gmail.com wrote: Hello, Let's say that the most popular java web frameworks are Wicket, Tapestry, GWT, Spring MVC. Have you seen the graph ? http://www.indeed.com/**jobtrends?q=Wicket%2C+** Tapestry%2C+GWT%2C+%22Spring+**MVC%22http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=Wicket%2C+Tapestry%2C+GWT%2C+%22Spring+MVC%22 Other frameworks Play Framework, Apache Click, Stripes, Struts, JSF, Seam http://www.indeed.com/**jobtrends?q=%22Play+Framework%** 22%2C+%22Apache+Click%22%2C+**Stripes%2C+Struts%2C+JSF%2C+**Seamhttp://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=%22Play+Framework%22%2C+%22Apache+Click%22%2C+Stripes%2C+Struts%2C+JSF%2C+Seam What needs to be improved to get a wider adoption of Wicket ? Best regards Phlippe --**--**- To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@wicket.**apache.orgusers-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- Regards - Ernesto Reinaldo Barreiro Antilia Soft http://antiliasoft.com/ http://antiliasoft.com/antilia
Re: Wicket job market
Does anyone think the rise of javascript based single page thick client type of applications are eating on wickets share? When i try to sell wicket to my peers, they normally argue that they want a stateless client and a stateful rich clients. The kind of clients that you build with javascript toolkits such as angular, backbone etc. One of the main reason why i started using wicket was my phobia for javascript. That phobia is no more. Infact i want more and more control over the javascript on my client. Does anyone else share the same sentiments? I am still a huge wicket fun and i use it in many projects. Josh. On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 5:53 PM, Ernesto Reinaldo Barreiro reier...@gmail.com wrote: Hi, On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 3:20 PM, Tim Urberg t...@urberg.net wrote: I wouldn't discount Apache, look at how Struts took off, and look at the Apache HTTP server, the most widely used server on the web. Apache may not be a big corporation but they are a still a big name. It is not my intention to discount Apache (read my allusion to well established frameworks as Struts). I just wanted to pointing out that for managers it is a lot easier to decided for WELL established names that for newcomers... Things like 1-how/where do I find programmers that know this technology.? 2- Is my team going to catch up quickly with new things, would they be able to solves difficult issues? 3- if not who is available on my local marked that will be able to solve those issues for me at a reasonable price? 4- What do I gain risking new technology? Please show me a nice free (or cheap) well maintained component pack I can use to solve my problems/quickly build my applications. Those are the questions I have faced when trying to get wicket adopted. On 2/4/13 7:37 AM, Ernesto Reinaldo Barreiro wrote: Hi, IMHO on countries that invest heavily on RD (new technologies) like Germany, Netherlands, UK, USA, etc Wicket market is growing... and you can find lots of Jobs posts asking for Wicket versed programmers.. See http://www.indeed.de/Jobs?q=**Wicketl= http://www.indeed.de/Jobs?q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.nl/Wicket-**vacatures http://www.indeed.nl/Wicket-vacatures http://www.indeed.fr/emplois?**q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.fr/emplois?q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.co.uk/jobs?**q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.co.uk/jobs?q=Wicketl= compare to http://www.indeed.es/ofertas?**q=Wicketl= http://www.indeed.es/ofertas?q=Wicketl= :-( As many other OpenSource projects its development depends largely on volunteers and on companies willing to pay back with employee time for maintenance/documentation. etc. So, there is no point on comparing with frameworks backed by big players or well established frameworks. At least in Spain my experience is that: 1- I do not risk my ass decision makers are a big obstacle for adoption: they just want to hear about big names backed software or at least well know/established software... so that, if development ins't going as planned, it is not a problem of the framework selected. 2- Many programmers comming from Struts like frameworks background have big problems in caching up with OOP required for Wicket and the Wicket way. 3- Lack of a unified place where to find free/well-supported commercial quality components doesn't help either when you want to sell wicket. On Mon, Feb 4, 2013 at 1:05 PM, Philippe Demaison ph.demai...@gmail.com wrote: Hello, Let's say that the most popular java web frameworks are Wicket, Tapestry, GWT, Spring MVC. Have you seen the graph ? http://www.indeed.com/**jobtrends?q=Wicket%2C+** Tapestry%2C+GWT%2C+%22Spring+**MVC%22 http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=Wicket%2C+Tapestry%2C+GWT%2C+%22Spring+MVC%22 Other frameworks Play Framework, Apache Click, Stripes, Struts, JSF, Seam http://www.indeed.com/**jobtrends?q=%22Play+Framework%** 22%2C+%22Apache+Click%22%2C+**Stripes%2C+Struts%2C+JSF%2C+**Seam http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=%22Play+Framework%22%2C+%22Apache+Click%22%2C+Stripes%2C+Struts%2C+JSF%2C+Seam What needs to be improved to get a wider adoption of Wicket ? Best regards Phlippe --**--**- To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscribe@wicket.**apache.org users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- Regards - Ernesto Reinaldo Barreiro Antilia Soft http://antiliasoft.com/ http://antiliasoft.com/antilia
Re: Wicket job market
toolkits such as angular, backbone etc. One of the main reason why i started using wicket was my phobia for javascript. That phobia is no more. Infact i want more and more control over the javascript on my client. Does anyone else share the same sentiments? I am still a huge wicket fun and i use it in many projects. Josh. i think that the evolution of: - network speed - navigators capabilities (memory, processing speed, etc. provided by hardware advances) is creating the picture of java virtual machine in client-side but with html, css and javascript. you can see more and more heavy-duty web software being executed on navigators (client-side) with more and more load of dependencies (javascript resources an so on). so, at the end, executing a web-application will transform the something as similar as it was downloading an applet and running that piece on navigator. with the difference, for the moment, that all code downloaded is not crypted or compiled, but interpreted. it seems like a fish biting its tail. soon may be, we'll have javascript virtual machine's (already working in navigators, almost) downloading and running javascript applets (tons of code). - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
Am 04.02.2013 15:43, schrieb manuelbarzi: Play Framework, Apache Click, Stripes, Struts, JSF, Seam http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=%22Play+Framework%22%2C+%22Apache+Click%22%2C+Stripes%2C+Struts%2C+JSF%2C+Seam What needs to be improved to get a wider adoption of Wicket ? IMO, selling Wicket as Vaadin does, may help a lot. I think, you should not compare wicket with vaadin. Wicket is not the right answer for every project. Wicket does not compete with vaadin, because wicket is a different hammer. The rise of javascript apps could change the future of web development, but for such a project you should not use wicket either. IMHO wicket is the better answer than struts, grails (if you have a long term maintenance cycle), jsf... I think there are many wicket projects out there, but wicket is not the so called cool stuff like grails, spring roo and so on... nothing a developer likes to play with (which is IMHO a good thing). I think, this could be changed with wicket 6 (jquery build-in)... but it is a long way. Michael - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
RE: Wicket job market
In Australia it's almost non-existent. Mostly technology is 5 or 6 years behind the rest of the world, generally. Most places I've worked for here use JSP and Struts 1. Obviously there are plenty of places that do cutting edge stuff, but it's few and far between. I work for the only company I know of that uses Wicket (they used it before I came, but it's the reason why I'm here). I do plenty of searches for Wicket based jobs, as I'm still a contractor and other than here, there is nothing. Guess that means I'm hoping to stick around! ;) Okay, how's this for Sod's Law. I figure I should do a quick search on seek.com.au before making these claims, and another company in Melbourne mentions Wicket as a nice-to-have on a job description... :) Col. -Original Message- From: Michael Mosmann [mailto:mich...@mosmann.de] Sent: 05 February 2013 08:33 To: users@wicket.apache.org Subject: Re: Wicket job market Am 04.02.2013 15:43, schrieb manuelbarzi: Play Framework, Apache Click, Stripes, Struts, JSF, Seam http://www.indeed.com/jobtrends?q=%22Play+Framework%22%2C+%22Apache+C lick%22%2C+Stripes%2C+Struts%2C+JSF%2C+Seam What needs to be improved to get a wider adoption of Wicket ? IMO, selling Wicket as Vaadin does, may help a lot. I think, you should not compare wicket with vaadin. Wicket is not the right answer for every project. Wicket does not compete with vaadin, because wicket is a different hammer. The rise of javascript apps could change the future of web development, but for such a project you should not use wicket either. IMHO wicket is the better answer than struts, grails (if you have a long term maintenance cycle), jsf... I think there are many wicket projects out there, but wicket is not the so called cool stuff like grails, spring roo and so on... nothing a developer likes to play with (which is IMHO a good thing). I think, this could be changed with wicket 6 (jquery build-in)... but it is a long way. Michael - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org EMAIL DISCLAIMER This email message and its attachments are confidential and may also contain copyright or privileged material. If you are not the intended recipient, you may not forward the email or disclose or use the information contained in it. If you have received this email message in error, please advise the sender immediately by replying to this email and delete the message and any associated attachments. Any views, opinions, conclusions, advice or statements expressed in this email message are those of the individual sender and should not be relied upon as the considered view, opinion, conclusions, advice or statement of this company except where the sender expressly, and with authority, states them to be the considered view, opinion, conclusions, advice or statement of this company. Every care is taken but we recommend that you scan any attachments for viruses. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
I think, you should not compare wicket with vaadin. Wicket is not the right answer for every project. Wicket does not compete with vaadin, because wicket is a different hammer. The rise of javascript apps could change the future of web development, but for such a project you should not use wicket either. IMHO wicket is the better answer than struts, grails (if you have a long term maintenance cycle), jsf... I think there are many wicket projects out there, but wicket is not the so called cool stuff like grails, spring roo and so on... nothing a developer likes to play with (which is IMHO a good thing). I think, this could be changed with wicket 6 (jquery build-in)... but it is a long way. your loosing the focus pretended to be justify before: marketing, not tech. and many people first see, later think :) nobody was comparing Wicket with Vaadin, neither technically and neither in any other similar aspects. but you seem to defend so it in your mail. Vaadin is just mentioned as a good example (like it or not) that gains a lot of adepts just because of its cool marketing presentation at its website (in terms of style, look feel, and special effects). that's all. so could be any other tech that applies similar commercial strategies. just to give you an example: from many persons i know, who have decision power in projects, and they have no idea about wicket, they just say: does wicket really have serious projects? is it actually used? cause i see that GWT or Vaadin seem much more worked, professional, and nice. and you cannot pretend them to perfeclty understand the differences between techs because they have no enough technical skills to do so. sad (not really, is a nice feedback to learn from) but true. Wicket is probably the best most of us have ever enjoyed before. but let's be realistic, there's the nice paradox of non competitive presentation of this presentation framework yet, to be sold to not enough tech skilled people, who are decision makers. they just want to see nice cinema. then, why not adding that to Wicket site, and be more marketineers too? i think we may all agree that in general, open-source projects in Apache have a big lack of cool presentation and marketing. and marketing it is not a concept that goes against open-source, of course. there are many nice open-source projects that do sell them-selves well in their sites. one nice idea could be: why not opening a competition to create a more marketineer presentation of Wicket tech? - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket job market
I agree with you. The one thing i would say:if you want to have a nice presentation of vaadin,it comes out of the box,because thats a vaadin feature:nice presentation. No other framework has it such easy:) So lets start a competition... Michael:) manuelbarzi manuelba...@gmail.com schrieb: I think, you should not compare wicket with vaadin. Wicket is not the right answer for every project. Wicket does not compete with vaadin, because wicket is a different hammer. The rise of javascript apps could change the future of web development, but for such a project you should not use wicket either. IMHO wicket is the better answer than struts, grails (if you have a long term maintenance cycle), jsf... I think there are many wicket projects out there, but wicket is not the so called cool stuff like grails, spring roo and so on... nothing a developer likes to play with (which is IMHO a good thing). I think, this could be changed with wicket 6 (jquery build-in)... but it is a long way. your loosing the focus pretended to be justify before: marketing, not tech. and many people first see, later think :) nobody was comparing Wicket with Vaadin, neither technically and neither in any other similar aspects. but you seem to defend so it in your mail. Vaadin is just mentioned as a good example (like it or not) that gains a lot of adepts just because of its cool marketing presentation at its website (in terms of style, look feel, and special effects). that's all. so could be any other tech that applies similar commercial strategies. just to give you an example: from many persons i know, who have decision power in projects, and they have no idea about wicket, they just say: does wicket really have serious projects? is it actually used? cause i see that GWT or Vaadin seem much more worked, professional, and nice. and you cannot pretend them to perfeclty understand the differences between techs because they have no enough technical skills to do so. sad (not really, is a nice feedback to learn from) but true. Wicket is probably the best most of us have ever enjoyed before. but let's be realistic, there's the nice paradox of non competitive presentation of this presentation framework yet, to be sold to not enough tech skilled people, who are decision makers. they just want to see nice cinema. then, why not adding that to Wicket site, and be more marketineers too? i think we may all agree that in general, open-source projects in Apache have a big lack of cool presentation and marketing. and marketing it is not a concept that goes against open-source, of course. there are many nice open-source projects that do sell them-selves well in their sites. one nice idea could be: why not opening a competition to create a more marketineer presentation of Wicket tech? - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- Diese Nachricht wurde von meinem Android-Mobiltelefon mit K-9 Mail gesendet.
Deployment models (was: Re: Wicket job market)
On 02/04/2013 02:05 PM, Philippe Demaison wrote: What needs to be improved to get a wider adoption of Wicket ? That is probably the most relevant subject IMHO. FWIW, a largely disruptive factor is a new but increasingly important business/deployment model, that of the cross-domain, embedded client-side app. Imagine you have an webapp that does XYZ and you offer that as a service. You may want to allow your clients to embed this functionality using Ajax+JSONP+cross domain (VS an iframe), i.e. embed your app by offering a pure javascript client. That's what I'm currently missing from wicket. This actually forces me to largely rewrite app by exposing REST interfaces and patching up a REST javascript client from scratch using something like backbone.js. Just my 0.25. Manos - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
wicket job opportunity, we are hiring
the company i work for ( 42lines.net ) is growing and we are looking for a few good devs. about our approach: * we are a distributed company with employees based predominantly in the usa, there are 27 of us now * everyone telecommutes either from home or a coworking space of your choice (paid for by the company) * we use a variation of agile methodology (daily scrums, iterations, peer code reviews, etc) tech stack: * wicket * jpa/hibernate/querydsl * cdi/weld * resteasy * jquery / jquery mobile what we want from you: * first and foremost you are smart and you know how to apply those smarts to writing code * you work on PST/EST +- 2 hours * you have a decent internet connection capable of skype (we can help you get one) * you understand (not just know) java and oop * you are comfortable in sql, hibernate, and wicket there is lots more info, including how to apply, available here: https://www.42lines.net/2012/05/29/now-hiring-2-new-java-engineers-and-2-new-qa-engineers/ cheers, -igor - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: wicket job opportunity, we are hiring
Hi Igor, this is an interesting opportunity, too bad it is time zone limited. I hope you'll find somebody. __ Cedric Gatay http://www.bloggure.info | http://cedric.gatay.fr | @Cedric_Gatayhttp://twitter.com/Cedric_Gatay On Tue, Jun 5, 2012 at 10:37 PM, Igor Vaynberg igor.vaynb...@gmail.comwrote: the company i work for ( 42lines.net ) is growing and we are looking for a few good devs. about our approach: * we are a distributed company with employees based predominantly in the usa, there are 27 of us now * everyone telecommutes either from home or a coworking space of your choice (paid for by the company) * we use a variation of agile methodology (daily scrums, iterations, peer code reviews, etc) tech stack: * wicket * jpa/hibernate/querydsl * cdi/weld * resteasy * jquery / jquery mobile what we want from you: * first and foremost you are smart and you know how to apply those smarts to writing code * you work on PST/EST +- 2 hours * you have a decent internet connection capable of skype (we can help you get one) * you understand (not just know) java and oop * you are comfortable in sql, hibernate, and wicket there is lots more info, including how to apply, available here: https://www.42lines.net/2012/05/29/now-hiring-2-new-java-engineers-and-2-new-qa-engineers/ cheers, -igor - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
wicket job opportunity, we are hiring
the company i work for ( 42lines inc) is growing and we are looking for a few good devs. about our approach: * we are a distributed company with employees based predominantly in the usa, i think there are 22 of us now * everyone telecommutes either from home or a coworking space if you get cabin fever sitting at home * we use a variation of agile methodology (daily scrums, iterations, peer code reviews, etc) tech as of now: * wicket * jpa/hibernate * cdi/weld * resteasy * joda date/time * querydsl * guava * metagen * jquery * jquery mobile what we want from you: * first and foremost you are smart and you know how to apply those smarts to writing code * you work on PST/EST +- 2 hours * you have a decent internet connection capable of skype (we can help you get one) * you understand (not just know) java and oop * you are comfortable in sql, hibernate, and wicket there is lots more info, including how to apply, available off this blog post: https://www.42lines.net/2011/10/15/now-hiring-3-new-java-engineers-and-2-new-qa-engineers/ cheers, -igor - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Wicket job
Hi! Looking for an on-site Wicket developer/consultant, Helsinki, Finland: If you are interested, apply at http://www.youritprofile.com/job_ad/id/3375 ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Wicket job, Helsinki, Finland
Hi! We have a job-opening for a wicket developer. The job requires on-site presence (Helsinki, Finland) and finnish language skills (minimum fluent in reading). Project starts in august and duration is 3-6 months. Apply at: http://www.youritprofile.com/job_ad/id/2813 ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Wicket Job Opportunity
we are looking to hire a few senior and junior level engineers. when: a Continental US Timezone (we can make an exception if you are wicked good) where: full telecommute we work on an expanding intranet application for a university. we use the latest technologies and keep our stack up to date. we have a developer-friendly environment. more details at http://www.42lines.net/employment/java_engineer cheers, -igor - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Wicket Job Opportunity in Belgium (Leuven)
Hi, Is this Open to people outside Belgium, Am in Nairobi.Kenya.Africa. Kind regards. Josh. On Thu, Feb 17, 2011 at 11:10 PM, Maarten Bosteels mbosteels@gmail.comwrote: Hi everyone, We are looking for a senior Java Developer, preferably with good knowledge of Wicket. You will join a team of 5 enthusiastic developers and are responsible for the implementation of new, challenging projects within our existing registration system. You support best practices such as TDD, continuous integration, design patterns and continuous refactoring, and you know how to apply them with the aim of guaranteeing the quality of the source code. For more details : http://www.dns.be/pdf/vacature-senior-developer-jan2011-en.pdf http://www.dns.be/pdf/vacature-senior-developer-jan2011-nl.pdf We offer - An interesting job with room for your own initiatives, responsibility and technical challenges in a financially healthy organisation. - A pleasant and stimulating work environment, with fun and professional colleagues in a great atmosphere. - Flexible working hours. - The opportunity to improve your knowledge and skills thanks to a personal development plan with 12 days of training a year. - A very attractive salary supplemented by extra legal benefits: group insurance, hospitalisation cover, meal vouchers, 32 holidays, laptop. Please send your resume to maarten.bosteels (at) dns.be *Maarten Bosteels* *Manager Software Development [image: dnsbe_logo.png] **DNS.be vzw/asbl* · Ubicenter · Philipssite 5 · bus 13 · 3001 Leuven www.dns.be
Re: Wicket Job Opportunity in Belgium (Leuven)
Hi, We are looking for a permanent, full-time position, not for a consultant. We need someone who is able to work at our office at least 4 days a week. So I am afraid that living in (or moving to) Belgium is a requirement best regards Maarten On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 3:30 PM, Josh Kamau joshnet2...@gmail.com wrote: Hi, Is this Open to people outside Belgium, Am in Nairobi.Kenya.Africa. Kind regards. Josh. On Thu, Feb 17, 2011 at 11:10 PM, Maarten Bosteels mbosteels@gmail.comwrote: Hi everyone, We are looking for a senior Java Developer, preferably with good knowledge of Wicket. You will join a team of 5 enthusiastic developers and are responsible for the implementation of new, challenging projects within our existing registration system. You support best practices such as TDD, continuous integration, design patterns and continuous refactoring, and you know how to apply them with the aim of guaranteeing the quality of the source code. For more details : http://www.dns.be/pdf/vacature-senior-developer-jan2011-en.pdf http://www.dns.be/pdf/vacature-senior-developer-jan2011-nl.pdf We offer - An interesting job with room for your own initiatives, responsibility and technical challenges in a financially healthy organisation. - A pleasant and stimulating work environment, with fun and professional colleagues in a great atmosphere. - Flexible working hours. - The opportunity to improve your knowledge and skills thanks to a personal development plan with 12 days of training a year. - A very attractive salary supplemented by extra legal benefits: group insurance, hospitalisation cover, meal vouchers, 32 holidays, laptop. Please send your resume to maarten.bosteels (at) dns.be *Maarten Bosteels* *Manager Software Development [image: dnsbe_logo.png] **DNS.be vzw/asbl* · Ubicenter · Philipssite 5 · bus 13 · 3001 Leuven www.dns.be
Wicket Job Opportunity in Belgium (Leuven)
Hi everyone, We are looking for a senior Java Developer, preferably with good knowledge of Wicket. You will join a team of 5 enthusiastic developers and are responsible for the implementation of new, challenging projects within our existing registration system. You support best practices such as TDD, continuous integration, design patterns and continuous refactoring, and you know how to apply them with the aim of guaranteeing the quality of the source code. For more details : http://www.dns.be/pdf/vacature-senior-developer-jan2011-en.pdf http://www.dns.be/pdf/vacature-senior-developer-jan2011-nl.pdf We offer - An interesting job with room for your own initiatives, responsibility and technical challenges in a financially healthy organisation. - A pleasant and stimulating work environment, with fun and professional colleagues in a great atmosphere. - Flexible working hours. - The opportunity to improve your knowledge and skills thanks to a personal development plan with 12 days of training a year. - A very attractive salary supplemented by extra legal benefits: group insurance, hospitalisation cover, meal vouchers, 32 holidays, laptop. Please send your resume to maarten.bosteels (at) dns.be *Maarten Bosteels* *Manager Software Development [image: dnsbe_logo.png] **DNS.be vzw/asbl* · Ubicenter · Philipssite 5 · bus 13 · 3001 Leuven www.dns.be
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
Sam Stainsby schrieb: Finland, Finland, Finland The country where I quite want to be! ^^^ Not the best job application I've seen :-) but a nice reference to monty python´s flying circus ;) - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
Well done, Uwe! -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/Java-Wicket-Job-Opportunity%2C-Finland-tp26853946p26944833.html Sent from the Wicket - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
Yeah, working remotely IS an option. ** Martin 2009/12/19 Martin Makundi martin.maku...@koodaripalvelut.com: Hi! We are looking for talented individuals to work with us on our online products. Development tools include: * java + wicket * m2eclipse, eclipse ide * jpa + hibernate * javascript + jquery Contact me for more information if you are interested. ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
Remember to mention such things to your recruitment agents. regards Nino 2009/12/21 Martin Makundi martin.maku...@koodaripalvelut.com: Yeah, working remotely IS an option. ** Martin 2009/12/19 Martin Makundi martin.maku...@koodaripalvelut.com: Hi! We are looking for talented individuals to work with us on our online products. Development tools include: * java + wicket * m2eclipse, eclipse ide * jpa + hibernate * javascript + jquery Contact me for more information if you are interested. ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
On Sat, 19 Dec 2009 18:12:48 -0800, shetc wrote: Finland, Finland, Finland The country where I quite want to be! ^^^ Not the best job application I've seen :-) - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
hello, I am very interested. please contact me chinedub...@gmail.com thank you On 12/19/09, Martin Makundi martin.maku...@koodaripalvelut.com wrote: Hi! We are looking for talented individuals to work with us on our online products. Development tools include: * java + wicket * m2eclipse, eclipse ide * jpa + hibernate * javascript + jquery Contact me for more information if you are interested. ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
Hi Martin, I'm Interested in an international professional experience. That position for a short duration? If so, give me some information about, thank you On Sat, Dec 19, 2009 at 8:21 AM, Martin Makundi martin.maku...@koodaripalvelut.com wrote: Hi! We are looking for talented individuals to work with us on our online products. Development tools include: * java + wicket * m2eclipse, eclipse ide * jpa + hibernate * javascript + jquery Contact me for more information if you are interested. ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- Pedro Henrique Oliveira dos Santos
Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
Hi! We are looking for talented individuals to work with us on our online products. Development tools include: * java + wicket * m2eclipse, eclipse ide * jpa + hibernate * javascript + jquery Contact me for more information if you are interested. ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
Hi, I am interested in learning more about the offer. I'm the maintainer for wicketstuff-push and maven-gae-plugin, I can also point you to some sites we've done for our clients, with jQuery or wicket. I would like to know the details regarding tour products, so please feel free to reply or im me at kry...@gmail.com. Sincerely, Rodolfo Hansen On Sat, Dec 19, 2009 at 6:21 AM, Martin Makundi martin.maku...@koodaripalvelut.com wrote: Hi! We are looking for talented individuals to work with us on our online products. Development tools include: * java + wicket * m2eclipse, eclipse ide * jpa + hibernate * javascript + jquery Contact me for more information if you are interested. ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
I think that it is always best to reply directly to the person offering the job rather than posting to the list. The default action for reply is to the list - so please double check who you are sending emails to before sending. -- Jeremy Thomerson http://www.wickettraining.com On Sat, Dec 19, 2009 at 9:46 AM, Rodolfo Hansen rhan...@kindleit.netwrote: Hi, I am interested in learning more about the offer. I'm the maintainer for wicketstuff-push and maven-gae-plugin, I can also point you to some sites we've done for our clients, with jQuery or wicket. I would like to know the details regarding tour products, so please feel free to reply or im me at kry...@gmail.com. Sincerely, Rodolfo Hansen On Sat, Dec 19, 2009 at 6:21 AM, Martin Makundi martin.maku...@koodaripalvelut.com wrote: Hi! We are looking for talented individuals to work with us on our online products. Development tools include: * java + wicket * m2eclipse, eclipse ide * jpa + hibernate * javascript + jquery Contact me for more information if you are interested. ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
Sorry. On Sat, Dec 19, 2009 at 1:36 PM, Jeremy Thomerson jer...@wickettraining.com wrote: I think that it is always best to reply directly to the person offering the job rather than posting to the list. The default action for reply is to the list - so please double check who you are sending emails to before sending. -- Jeremy Thomerson http://www.wickettraining.com On Sat, Dec 19, 2009 at 9:46 AM, Rodolfo Hansen rhan...@kindleit.net wrote: Hi, I am interested in learning more about the offer. I'm the maintainer for wicketstuff-push and maven-gae-plugin, I can also point you to some sites we've done for our clients, with jQuery or wicket. I would like to know the details regarding tour products, so please feel free to reply or im me at kry...@gmail.com. Sincerely, Rodolfo Hansen On Sat, Dec 19, 2009 at 6:21 AM, Martin Makundi martin.maku...@koodaripalvelut.com wrote: Hi! We are looking for talented individuals to work with us on our online products. Development tools include: * java + wicket * m2eclipse, eclipse ide * jpa + hibernate * javascript + jquery Contact me for more information if you are interested. ** Martin - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- Rodolfo Hansen CTO, KindleIT Software Development Email: rhan...@kindleit.net Office: 1 (809) 732-5200 Mobile: 1 (809) 299-7332
Re: Java Wicket Job Opportunity, Finland
Finland, Finland, Finland The country where I quite want to be! -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/Java-Wicket-Job-Opportunity%2C-Finland-tp26853946p26860446.html Sent from the Wicket - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Wicket Job
Location: Jacksonville, FL Company: Availity Job Description: http://www.availity.com/about-availity/careers/ (search for for Developer III position) Summary: Web app written in JSP/Servlets being converted to Wicket. ORM layer is Hibernate. Javascript library is JQuery. Obviously should great at using Wicket (creating custom components, modifying existing Wicket components, integrating with JQuery, understanding Wicket component lifecycle, understanding models, integrating Servlet/JSP legacy with Wicket, etc) but also understand HTML/CSS/Javascript best practices and making the UI cross browser. ORM expertise a plus but not super important. More importantly, a passion for technology, especially pushing the boundaries of UI development! It's a great place to work and if you have fresh ideas on how to improve the code base they are welcome; Ex: Availity was going to use JSF before I joined, whew! If you have specific questions just shoot me an email and I will do my best to answer. -- Regards, Robert McGuinness III
Re: Wicket Job offer
All the things are interesting, but can you share some experience about inject component or model with guice? I am trying Salve solution. On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 6:02 PM, Wayne Pope waynemailingli...@googlemail.com wrote: Hello all, We are looking for a long term wicket developer to join our very small company here in Monaco/Nice area. Salary is in the range of 2500 to 4500 a month Euro depending on experience. Starting with a 6 month contract moving to a full time position afterwards. English speaking working environment You'll be working on an online B2B application. Technologies used: Wicket 1.4 Java 6 Guice Maven Warp Hibernate Mysql Lucene search Open office headless Commons Ant Tomcat Linux and Solaris Hosted in the cloud. JQuery XHTML/css Please contact me DIRECTLY if you are interested - NOT THE MAILING LIST! This position is NOT available as a remote/work from home position. many thanks Wayne - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org -- -- Enjoy. Thanks! Haulyn Microproduction Mobile: +086-15864011231 email: saharab...@gmail.com, hmp.hau...@foxmail.com website: http://haulynjason.net gtalk: saharab...@gmail.com yahoo: jia_hao...@yahoo.com msn: saharab...@gmail.com skype: saharabear QQ: 378606292 Haulyn Jason
Re: Wicket Job offer
Hi Wayne, What time frame are you looking at for start time? Cheers, Antony Stubbs, sharca.com On 14/08/2009, at 12:02 PM, Wayne Pope wrote: Hello all, We are looking for a long term wicket developer to join our very small company here in Monaco/Nice area. Salary is in the range of 2500 to 4500 a month Euro depending on experience. Starting with a 6 month contract moving to a full time position afterwards. English speaking working environment You'll be working on an online B2B application. Technologies used: Wicket 1.4 Java 6 Guice Maven Warp Hibernate Mysql Lucene search Open office headless Commons Ant Tomcat Linux and Solaris Hosted in the cloud. JQuery XHTML/css Please contact me DIRECTLY if you are interested - NOT THE MAILING LIST! This position is NOT available as a remote/work from home position. many thanks Wayne - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Java/Wicket Job Available with Wicket founder at Networks in Motion
My company is hiring someone (ideally in Seattle, but we also have an Aliso Viejo office down near L.A.) We are doing a lot of back-end server work in Java, but we would really prefer someone with solid Wicket experience for a variety of reasons. The team is me and one other guy, so there would be three coders after this hire. We really need a high quality and highly productive person. Our company is doing really well and our group is small and fun and focussed on simple, appropriately architected OO and OSS solutions. http://seattle.craigslist.org/see/sof/1311327500.html Thanks, Jonathan Locke - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Wicket Job Opportunity in Singapore
Hi,We have TWO (2) open positions in our company. We are looking forfull time Java developers preferably with Wicket experience to fill these positions in ourSingaporeoffice.For detail job description and about our company , please log on to http://www.vocanic.com/hiring.html.Thank you. Lim, Teck HooiSoftware Developer+65 8282 9972 | cell+65 6327 8096 | office73A Tanjong Pagar RdSingapore 088494Registration No:200500677HCONFIDENTIALITY NOTICEThe information contained in this message is confidential, intended only for the use of the individual or the entity named as recipient. If the reader of this message is not that recipient, you are notified that any dissemination, distribution or copy of this message is strictly prohibited.
Wicket Job offer
PLEASE REPLY TO ME DIRECTLY - NOT THE USER GROUP! Web 2.0 startup based in Nice/Monaco in the south of France seeks top developer to join their small team. English working environment. Skills: Java, Apache Wicket, Hibernate (annotations), Guice, XHTML, CSS, javascript, Agile/SCRUM, Linux skills, ant bash, maven. Experience 3+ years. If you contribute to open source projects this will be a bonus. Must be motivated and interested in all Web applications, developments and open source frameworks and projects. You must have excellent design and OO , being able to product clean simple code, and not work from examples. The ability to figure out quickly how a new technology/framework is imperative. Must be comfortable working in a SCRUM environment - ie transparency on your code, and daily updates of progress. Bonus skills: Open source contributions, design interests, usability experience, Lucerne search engine/library, The company based in Monaco/Nice area will shortly be launching an online social Web application targeted at SME's. You will be joining just before this period and be expected to pick up quickly from the current code and base and become 100% responsible for the platform and code base including all architecture, design, and contribute to the discussions on future developments/direction of the product. You'll also be responsible for production troubleshooting and scalability. This role is for someone will all round skills and you'll need to be flexible and work on new items at short notice. This is a small company of only 4 people so you must be part of the team and be motivated to work in this type of environment. This role can turn into a long term position for someone motivated to contribute and be part of the company and will reap the rewards. The person who fills this role needs a passion for Internet based technologies and Web sites, knowledge and interest in Web based sites, applications, design , usability, new trends and ways of working on the net. Please send you CV to me. We need someone on the ground here unfortunalty, not working remotely at this time. thanks Wayne - To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@wicket.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@wicket.apache.org
Wicket job opportunity New York City
Hi Wicket Users, Kikin is currently looking for a Java Frontend Developer with a background in Wicket. We are already doing some pretty interesting things with Wicket, using it both for regular website stuff as well as for embedded widgets. It is a great position that allows you to push Wicket to its limit, build up a component library, work with a wide variety of content and also get to work on select middleware pieces. The ideal candidate has a proven track record in developing with Java frontend technologies (including Wicket), strong knowledge of DHTML, DOM, AJAX, Javascript, Browser compatibility and has attention to detail. This is a fulltime position based in SoHo/NYC with competitive pay and benefits. No contractors or recruiters please. For the right candidate we are more than willing to help with relocating to NYC. We are an early stage startup that is developing a new way of web personalization that will turn the industry upside down. We are fully funded and have an experienced team of founders that have multiple successful exits under their belt. While we are still in private beta, our product is already being used by 1 users every day. If you are interested to learn more about this opportunity, please send your resume to jobs at kikin.com. Thanks, Gerald - To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]