> -----Original Message----- > From: Gianugo Rabellino [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: woensdag 21 november 2001 16:46 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: [Fwd: freshmeat project listing for Cocoon]
> Here is a small suggestion for a change: > > "Apache Cocoon is a XML publishing framework leveraging the power of the > latest XML technologies. Designed for performance and scalability around > the SAX event model, Cocoon offers a flexible and powerful environment > based on the separation of concerns between content, logic and style and > on a central configuration file which drives the whole processing. > Cocoon is able to interact with most data sources (from filesystems to > RDBMS, from LDAP to native XML databases) and to serve the content to > different devices in different formats (HTML, WML, PDF, SVG, RTF just to > name a few). Cocoon can be used both as a servlet or in a standalone > fashion." IMHO, we should also mention XSLT next to SAX - otherwise people could go for the Xalan Servlet when looking for serverside XSLT. And 'leveraging' is a big no-no in buzzword bingo :-) Slightly rephrased: "Apache Cocoon is an XML publishing framework that raises the usage of XML & XSLT technologies for content-centric web applications (1) to a new level. Designed for performance and scalability around pipelined SAX processing, Cocoon offers a flexible environment based on the separation of concerns between content, logic and style. A centralized configuration system and sophisticated caching top this all off and help you to create, deploy & maintain rock-solid web applications. Cocoon interacts with most data sources (from filesystems to RDBMS, from LDAP to native XML databases) and adapts content delivery to the capabilities of different devices (HTML, WML, PDF, SVG, RTF just to name a few). Cocoon can be used both as a Servlet or using its powerful commandline interface. For interactive webapps, Cocoon offers Actions and support for XSP, JSP and Velocity." ________ (1) sorry ;-) - perhaps we should change this to Java web applications? Content-centric (still) is more honest I believe. Not meaning to offend anyone, </Steven> --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]