I work on karaf with a number of projects for the US government. I have mentioned it before but here is a link to one that is open source https://github.com/codice/ddf I have also seen a number of other products that we integrate with starting the migration to karaf such as saiku 4.0 and pentaho 6.0 http://wiki.pentaho.com/display/PEOpen/6.0+OSGI+documentation Our company has a text analytics/natural language processing and cross document correlation product that runs on karaf but I think we may be competitors with Benson's company and he is a committer. I have also met a lot of redhat people in the DC area that work with karaf/service mix through fuse. My guess is that you will find karaf use is a lot like web forums. For every person that comments on karaf in the mailing list there are 100's who are just lurkers.
For a short marketing spiel I would go with something along the lines of. "Karaf was selected as the server to host a large DOD/Cross Agency application that searches and serves terabytes of data to thousands of users across the government. Karaf has undergone rigorous security scans such as Fortify, Retna and ACAS all while meeting the performance requirements expected of a critical system." David On Sat, Feb 13, 2016 at 9:04 AM, Serge Huber <[email protected]> wrote: > I like the idea too. Let me try for Jahia : > > "Jahia uses Apache Karaf in two of its products : Marketing Factory and > Digital Experience Manager (DXM). Marketing Factory actually uses Apache > Unomi that uses Apache Karaf as its runtime, and DXM uses Apache Karaf as > an embedded OSGi runtime inside its JavaEE Web Application. Both systems > are commercially available applications that are deployed at large > customers throughout the world and rely upon Apache Karaf to deliver > high-performance, scalable and highly available solutions”. > > How does this read ? Is it acceptable ? > > cheers, > Serge… > > > On 13 févr. 2016, at 08:48, Christian Schneider <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > A list of users of karaf would be nice but I think something even better > would be to have a short success story for each user. > > The story could show an overview of the architecture and technologies > they use as well as their business case. > > We could then showcase one user in a round robin fashion on the karaf > entry page with a short teaser. A click would go to the full story and > > also give links to all the other stories. > > > > Of course we have to agree on some rules how such a story should look > like. So for example maybe we maybe would not want too blatant advertising > for the user. > > We might also want to set a limit for the size of the story. > > > > I could describe what Talend does with Karaf and also ask some users I > know for their stories. > > > > What do you think? > > > > Christian > > > > On 10.02.2016 19:06, Serge Huber wrote: > >> Hello, > >> > >> I just got a question from management about the list of known users of > Karaf. > >> I couldn't provide a nice list and his got me thinking about putting > some users on the home page and then link to a more complete list. > >> > >> I can already offer to list my company if that helps :) > >> > >> Cheers, > >> Serge > >> > >> Serge Huber > >> CTO & Co-Founder > >> > >> T +41 22 361 3424 > >> 9 route des Jeunes | 1227 Acacias | Switzerland > >> jahia.com > >> SKYPE | LINKEDIN | TWITTER | VCARD > >> > >>> JOIN OUR COMMUNITY to evaluate, get trained and to discover why Jahia > is a leading User Experience Platform (UXP) for Digital Transformation. > > > > > > -- > > Christian Schneider > > http://www.liquid-reality.de > > > > Open Source Architect > > http://www.talend.com > > > >
