On Sep 1, 2006, at 1:41 PM, Dossy Shiobara wrote:
I find this kind of funny since organizations are willing to support Tomcat, or WebSphere, etc.
I didn't say it was logical! :)
It's conceivable that you could run Apache as the web server (handling HTTP requests) sitting in front of AOLserver as the "application server." We all understand why this is largely unnecessary, but presumably it would get you past the auto-immune reaction of your customers.
Unfortunately that doesn't help. If the client wants to host it themselves, then having AOLserver in there anywhere is a problem. This can actually be beneficial for us; our hosting business thrives mainly because people don't want to deal with it themselves or can't get their IT depts to touch it. But for those whose policies dictate that they must host in-house, it's often the kiss of death.
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