Ean Schuessler wrote:
> Scott Gray wrote:
>> Well it all really comes down to the question of who gets to define the 
>> structure of the content, is it OFBiz or is it the CMS?
>>
>> If it is OFBiz, then will other CMS' be able to consume that structure or 
>> will we be left trying to write our own?
>>
>> If it is the CMS, then in order to support more than one CMS, OFBiz would 
>> need some sort of mapping mechanism to provide OFBiz developers with a 
>> consistent structure to work with.
>>
>> But as I said earlier, I really don't have enough knowledge at the moment 
>> about any of this and will need to do more research before I can say 
>> anything that isn't based on guesses and hunches.  It would be nice if 
>> others interested in this did some as well.
>>   
> Any CMS integrated with OFBiz will need to link content items to
> products, parties, workflows and so on that exist outside of the CMS
> model. In that sense, OFBiz must define the content model because the
> root of the content is the OFBiz datamodel and not the other way around.
> 
> The question is whether the CMS model that is used to control content
> related to the OFBiz data model should be the same CMS that is used to
> manage blogs, forums, wikis and other useful goodies. To me, the prime
> mover in these categories quickly becomes the code controlling the
> content rather than the data structures because the data structures are
> fairly simple. Looking at JSR-283 based solutions, one does not see
> anything even close in terms of popularity to systems such as Wordpress,
> Drupal or even Roller.
> 
> With regard to the JSR-286, I think its a maze of confusion and a dead
> technology. This article sort of sums it up
> http://today.java.net/article/2009/01/16/jsr-286-edge-irrelevance.
> Google Gadgets has as much or more these days and yet its adoption is by
> no means assured.
> 
> If we really want to switch to JSR-283 as our content interface then I
> guess the first sensible step would be a JSR-283 adapter on top of the
> current CMS so that new and old content apps can exist side by side.
> Once all the existing code is migrated to use the JSR-283 interfaces we
> could switch out the underlying provider. This would have the added
> advantage of being able to publish OFBiz legacy content into a JSR-283
> environment. Of course, we would still have to work out how to provide
> ECAs on this new technology and take care of all the other details that
> the current framework gives us.

Something not mentioned above, is that I should not be forced to
abandon my favorite editor.  This includes using vim, emacs,
dreamweaver, and grep+perl+cat+sed.


> 

Reply via email to