Hello, I am pleased to announce a new article on JSFCentral.com by Leonardo Uribe: Understanding JSF 2.0 Performance – Part 1.
In this series of articles, Leonardo Uribe discusses JSF 2 and MyFaces Core performance, and its implications for web applications. Additionally, he highlights last year's (2011-2012) performance enhancements in the Apache MyFaces JSF Implementation through an in-depth comparison between JSF and Apache Wicket. Leonardo compares different aspects—speed, memory usage, session size—to give a better understanding of how JSF works under different conditions. Finally, he does an up-to-date (2013) web framework comparison between JSF 2 and other alternatives like Apache Wicket, Apache Tapestry, Spring MVC and Grails 2. In the end, choosing a web framework requires that you balance performance with other considerations. Read part 1 of the series here: http://www.jsfcentral.com/articles/understanding_jsf_performance_1.html --- Kito D. Mann | @kito99 | Author, JSF in Action Virtua, Inc. | *http://www.virtua.com*<http://www.virtua.com/%20/t%20_blank> | JSF/Java EE training and consulting *http://www.JSFCentral.com* <http://www.jsfcentral.com/%20/t%20_blank> – JavaServer Faces FAQ, news, and info | @jsfcentral * Listen to the Enterprise Java Newscast: *http://w<http://blogs.jsfcentral.com/JSFNewscast/> ww.enterprisejavanews.com* * JSFCentral Interviews Podcast: http://www.jsfcentral.com/resources/jsfcentralpodcasts/ * Sign up for the JSFCentral Newsletter: http://oi.vresp.com/?fid=ac048d0e17 __