I would strongly recommend checking out Axion (
http://axion.tigris.org/ ) as well, which is also in the incubator (cvs
is still on tigris as they promised users a 1.0 release in that
namespace, I believe).
When Derby was first announced I thought it may make life rough on
Axion, but the more
I'm in =)
-Brian
On May 21, 2004, at 2:51 PM, Kevin Burton wrote:
It's about a 1.5 months away but I figured I would try to get a pulse
on how much interest there is in holding a JavaOne BOF.
We've contacted SUN directly and they seem interested... though to be
honest I was thinking it would be
u use OJB, Hibernate, TJDO,
Cayenne, Speedo, EJB-CMP, iBatis, Spring-DAO, or Fazoogle Data Objects.
-Brian
On Apr 20, 2004, at 4:28 PM, David Sean Taylor wrote:
On Apr 20, 2004, at 12:59 PM, Brian McCallister wrote:
I'm sorry to hear that, I am also sorry to see that I cannot find any
posts
works.
On the Hibernate thing -- you could adapt the Cocoon approach and have
a non-ASF site with ASL incompatible modules.
-Brian
On Apr 20, 2004, at 3:15 PM, David Sean Taylor wrote:
On Apr 20, 2004, at 11:54 AM, Brian McCallister wrote:
As far as I know nothing has changed in regards to linki
As far as I know nothing has changed in regards to linking to LGPL code
in ASL code that we host.
On a tangentially related not -- if there is anything that Hibernate
does that OJB doesn't, let us know and we'll fix that problem =) The
only major feature Hibernate has that OJB does not is a mar
Despite any rumors to the contrary, Jakarta being the capital of
Indonesia on the island of Java had nothing to do with it either ;-)
-Brian
On Jan 27, 2004, at 10:45 PM, Craig R. McClanahan wrote:
Quoting Uncle Roastie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Why/how was the name Jakarta choosen?
Thanks,
[EMAI
Holy war time:
IoC TLP's
public class Log4J implements JakartaAware, LoggingAware
{
...
}
public class Log4J
{
public void setJakarta(Jakarta jakarta) { ... }
public void setLogging(Logging logging) { ... }
}
public class Log4J
{
public Log4J(Jakarta jakarta, Loggi
On Thu, 2003-12-18 at 14:03, Henri Yandell wrote:
> Either it would roll back to the old style as Tomcat + friends, or would
> become the Java-Foundry for Apache [a la Sourceforge], or would become
> Jakarta Commons, or both of the latter two. Dunno what other visions there
> might be out there for
OJB supports using JCS for distributed caching, but I don't know how
many people actually use it (we don't). There is overlap between OJB
and Turbine contributors
Arrowhead ASP, a GPL ASP interpreter, ( http://www.tripi.com/arrowhead/
) also uses JCS as I know the guy who wrote it =) OTOH I don
On this topic - I am tackling OJB documentation at the moment and would
love to chat with someone who has put together a solid set of docs for
one of the projects with excellent docs.
As it isn't community relevant, really, drop me a line offline if you
can give me a couple pointers about thing
Jasmeet,
The idea is for new projects to enter through the Incubator (
http://incubator.apache.org/ ). The basic process is defined to be
1) Submit proposal
2) Discuss proposal
3) Incubator PMC votes on proposal
4) Incubation begins or doesn't based on vote
...
5) Incubation Exits or Aborts (dep
I think the confusion stems from
10% Early Bird Discount:
ends 1 September 2003
at http://www.apachecon.com/2003/US/html/sponsors.html
Early Bird (Sponsors) != Early Bird (Attendees)
It fooled me =)
-Brian
On Thursday, September 4, 2003, at 04:06 PM, Rodent of Unusual Size
wrote:
Cek
On Thursday, September 4, 2003, at 04:05 PM, Rodent of Unusual Size
wrote:
Brian McCallister wrote:
Actually, as registration isn't open yet, the early-bird is quite a
farce.
i rather resent that remark.
Wasn't aimed at you (or anyone) personally - presumably there is a good
reas
On Thursday, September 4, 2003, at 04:05 PM, Rodent of Unusual Size
wrote:
Brian McCallister wrote:
Actually, as registration isn't open yet, the early-bird is quite a
farce.
i rather resent that remark.
It wasn't aimed at you (or anyone) personally -- I apologize if you
took i
Actually, as registration isn't open yet, the early-bird is quite a
farce.
-Brian
On Thursday, September 4, 2003, at 02:31 PM, Andrew C. Oliver wrote:
Christ, they just got it together. While I'm covered, folks were for
months
asking "Are we having an apachecon" and then it was barely adverti
You can Say Apache, because you're right there in front of them to
clear up
any confusion.
For the ASF to call HTTPD "Apache" perpetuates the myth that thats all
there
is to it.
So... "We are using Apache, that is really Apache Hutpud, but you
cannot write hutpud because it confuses people abou
On Thursday, July 17, 2003, at 05:32 AM, Tetsuya Kitahata wrote:
the image * Apache == Apache HTTPD * will gradually diminish.
At the same time, IMHO, HTTPD members are better to take it into
consideration when they publish the [announcement] to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I saw "[ANNOUNCE][SECURITY] Apache
It might be useful for projects who *need* help to let that be known in
some easy-to-find way. Some projects are well staffed, some are
understaffed. If you are involved with several of the project mailing
lists it becomes more clear, but if you are say, a company who wants to
contribute effort
So it is a choice between Apache and SourceForge I guess.
oo oo oo oo, or java.net
Actually, at first glance it seems to be quite a bit slicker than
SourceForge at least (not that being slicker than SF in its current
state is terribly difficult).
=)
--
I apologize for sending to this list, but both
[EMAIL PROTECTED] and
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (the one still listed
on the Jakarta site) are bouncing right now. What is the list name (and
subscribe request) addy for torque users now?
Thanks,
Brian
-
The scary thing is I have heard clients that they think that if they
use any open source... now their software is open source or in a
conflict with comerical software they are using.
A good way to handle this is to take the Apache projects, name them
something different, add a pretty UI and th
On Tue, 2002-12-17 at 14:38, Peter Royal wrote:
> On Tuesday, December 17, 2002, at 02:13 PM, Henri Yandell wrote:
> > Seems as if most of Jakarta use OS X now. Is it just that us X-junkies
> > are
> > loud and proud about it?
>
> I switched recently ( ~ 4mo ). It would be interesting to conduct
On Fri, 2002-12-13 at 09:18, Andrew C. Oliver wrote:
> Because its more stable and runs faster under Linux than Star/OpenOffice?
>
Sadly, MS Word under CrossOver Office is more stable on my Linux
workstation at work than OpenOffice. Hopefully this will change.
-Brian
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail:
On Thu, 2002-12-12 at 12:43, php user wrote:
> I was wondering if thier is way I can deny people access to my website via an
> ip address?
Yes.
1) Deny by the web server.
A) In Apache HTTPD:
http://www.gewex.com/manual/mod/mod_access.html
B) In IIS: Install Apache, th
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