"Robert Koberg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > David Crossley wrote:
> > > +1 ... However, it is hard to have interactive search on
> > > a static website. Again, if only Cocoon was running on
> > > the server, we
> > > could use the new Cocoon-Lucene functionality.
> > >
> > > Sure, links to Google might help. However, Google's content
> > > is at least one month out-of-date ... a bit useful, nevertheless.
> 
> ---
> wouldn't it be easier to have an interactive (not sure what that is...)
> search on a static site? If you know the content you need to
> search then you can prepare.

As discussed elsewhere in this thread, the problem is that
we cannot run any services on the xml.apache.org machine.
Yes, the search system could operate on the collection of
static Cocoon 2 documents.

Robert Koberg continued:
> Stefano Mazzocchi wrote: 
> > Oh, I'd love to have Cocoon serve its own pages, believe me, but apache
> > machines are simply too loaded for that (and I don't personally have the
> > access level to be able to run this, nor I want that responsability on
> > such an important servers since I'm no system adminitrator of any sort!)
> >
> > Maybe we could use Nagoya (Sun E4500, *big* beast!) for that and
> > redirect: Sam, you have access to that machine, right?
> 
> ---
> Are you guys saying that the cocoon site site should be dynamic?
> Isn't that a waste of resources for a few weekly graphs?
> best,
> -Rob

It would be used for many things. Live demos of the distributed
samples is one other thing that is sadly missing.
--David

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