Leszek Gawron dijo: > On Mon, Apr 19, 2004 at 02:44:11AM -0600, Antonio Gallardo wrote: >> Leszek Gawron dijo: >> You are cruel! :-D >> >> We are trying to show people the right things from the beginning: >> >> Last week, we training our new coworker with PHP background. We started >> to >> show the Cocoon world with OJB+JXTG+CForms+Flow. After 2 days of >> intensive >> training (8 hours each day and BTW, I cannot speak anymore) + Carlos the >> day after guiding in a sample of a contact DB webapp (cca. 5 tables) in >> 1 >> day. > Noone would pay me for the training so if someone wants advice I cannot > spend 16 hours straight to do that only.
No one payed us for that. :-( We are a very small company in a very poor country. We need to go to the streets to find our food! :-D But training is the right thing, the more you train people, the less you save time later. This is a fact! :-D Also it helps me to see if I am able to explain all this stuff. It helps a lot to consolidate the knowledges about Cocoon. BTW, it was my first conference and I think it was good. Before that, I was afraid I was able to talk about Cocoon for 1 hour, but now I am afraid that 1 hour presentation is too small time for that! If things goes good, I will do a Cocoon presentation on summer for university students in my country. I hope it will encourage more people to try the Cocoon way. > But if I tell him: Look at the sitemap, create a simple view, create an > action ahat does an insert with esql > - he manages to do it by himself. Step forward is one of those 4 > technologies > you mentioned (learning 4 at the same time can give a newbie pretty big > headache) Told me about that! I am one of the early adopters. :-D We made the switch from XSP+DBActions+FormValidatorAction -> the 4 mentioned technologies at once, without training! In our office, I am the one who spend time trying new things before commit them for prodution. I really love this part of my job. > It is always better to start from the right place but without guidance > it's start small or do not start at all. Agreed. Best Regards, Antonio Gallardo.
