I am a new with turbine stuff too. And I agree that the documentation is
very very thin !!! However as a newbie I would like to suggest following
steps to make life easier !!

- Read the TDK over all idea
- Read all the howtos !!! (Turbine main site -> Turbine 2.3 Documentation ->
Howtos)
- Read the services (Turbine main site -> Turbine 2.3 Documentation ->
Services)
- Read Velocity Documentation too if you plan on using velocity templates
for display !!
- Download the sample antelope application and get it to work
- Build your application around the antelope application, and configure and
fine tune the sample app itself !!! (Simply because this way you dont have
to go through any of the configuration nightmares !!! Mainly if you want to
use Fulcrum as the security framework !)

Thanks,
Amit
-----Original Message-----
From: Henning P. Schmiedehausen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2004 5:04 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: What's up?


"Courcoux Peter, Slough" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

>There are a couple of alternatives. Henning has been working on a maven
>plugin which, I believe, gets a new project set up. I have not used this
but
>I understand it is very good. There are more details on this if you look in
>the mail archives. Hopefully Henning will chip in with more information.

You can find details about the Maven plugin called META at
http://jakarta.apache.org/turbine/meta/

There is also a second release candidate for Turbine 2.3.1. Expect the
final release once our prerequisites (namely commons-configuration and
db-torque) have new releases (which should happen RSN).

        Regards
                Henning
-- 
Dipl.-Inf. (Univ.) Henning P. Schmiedehausen          INTERMETA GmbH
[EMAIL PROTECTED]        +49 9131 50 654 0   http://www.intermeta.de/

RedHat Certified Engineer -- Jakarta Turbine Development  -- hero for hire
   Linux, Java, perl, Solaris -- Consulting, Training, Development

"Fighting for one's political stand is an honorable action, but re-
 fusing to acknowledge that there might be weaknesses in one's
 position - in order to identify them so that they can be remedied -
 is a large enough problem with the Open Source movement that it
 deserves to be on this list of the top five problems."
                       -- Michelle Levesque, "Fundamental Issues with
                                    Open Source Software Development"

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