> sessions.  If you really want to know about these things, first do
> your homework and read a few books.

I could probably tell you names of all the architecture books
"Borders"/Barnes Nobles carries.
Perhaps if you try to do some reasearch yourself into these topics, you will
find a few conflicting
development design patterns. Yes, there is are a TON of other research
papers out there
but nothing really that you could use to model Large Applications.

Joe

----- Original Message -----
From: "Paul Kenney" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "CF-Talk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, July 19, 2004 1:31 AM
Subject: Re: MAX 2004 (MVC's Session)

> In general, I don't know if conferences are really where you will find
> in-depth information on these topic.  This is mainly because they are
> not simple and do not fit within the short format of individual
> sessions.  If you really want to know about these things, first do
> your homework and read a few books.  Then when you get to the
> conference, find your peers and discuss it in more detail with them.
> See what others are doing and what they think about these topics.
>
> Sometimes you learn more between sessions than you do in all of them
combined.
>
>
>
> On Sun, 18 Jul 2004 22:19:27 -0700, Sean Corfield
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > I believe what we are looking for is a session on Enterprise
Development
> > > that includes MVC's, Sevice Oriented Architecture, Integrating legacy
> > > systems etc
> > > Basically routes to Architect Extensible Enterprise (ERP Like)
Systems?
> >
> > I think you're more likely to find that sort of stuff at CFUN than
> > MAX. The audience for MAX is very broad and MAX has to cater for a
> > very large community that extends far beyond ColdFusion. Even CFUN
> > caters for a very broad (ColdFusion) community. Things like SOA are
> > not on most CFers' radars at the moment (and probably never will be).
> > I accept their is a need for such topics somewhere but even from where
> > I sit - as an enterprise architect - I would say that the audience for
> > such topics is relatively small.
> >
> > Having said that, I'm very pleased to see interest in these topics
> > here. It speaks volumes for the maturity of the CF community that such
> > things are even being discussed. I'd love to see some sessions of this
> > nature at CFUN-05...
> >
> >
>
>
[Todays Threads] [This Message] [Subscription] [Fast Unsubscribe] [User Settings] [Donations and Support]

Reply via email to