Why the bitterness? Competition is a good thing. Personally I am happy that OXF has been opensourced. It is a good solid product and its main weakness was not being opensource.
Having used both OXF and Cocoon on several projects they are both good and both different. I believe OXF started out from Norman Walsh's pipeline definition. http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/NOTE-xml-pipeline-20020228/ The result is the almost complete eradication of java in the presentation tier which is either a good or a bad thing depending on your perspective. But the way I see it, it just means more choice for web developers. In some ways I find OXF is more like Struts than Cocoon -- I see it as a way to bring my Struts colleagues across to XSLT pipelining rather than as a replacement for Cocoon. Looking through the comparison I cant find anything that is actually untrue? I'm sure if there is anything specific then the Orbeon guys will change it. Damon. > > but I was just wondering if any of the Cocoon developers are interested > > in taking a look at the current state of the comparison between their > > Presentation Server and Cocoon and maybe come up with more accurate > > descriptions of cocoons capabilities? > > Bah. I've seen that they changed it again: whenever they had to > recognize that Cocoon had the very same (if not better) capabilities, > they used the "limited" keyword. I see no way and no reason for them > to come out with an accurate comparison, and their open sourcing seems > to me the typical last resort they could think of. I would rather let > them die the painful death they deserve. > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]