Alex.

I can only assume that your goal here is to drum up some notice of
your framework. I understand that in this competitive environment that
getting noticed can be a challenge. If you truly believe in your
approach to web applications and you want your framework to be taken
seriously you need to get a site into production. You need to be able
to point to live sites that are solving problems that developers have
to solve. To bootstrap this you'll probably have to do some consulting
gigs and do the implementations. Building something real is a great
way to understand the strengths and weaknesses of your tools.

Tapestry is open source so you can peek into the internals and see all
the warts first hand. There is also an open source application running
in the wild that exercises features that solve real world problems.

Site
http://tapestry.zones.apache.org:8180/tapestry5-hotel-booking/signin

Code
https://github.com/ccordenier/tapestry5-hotel-booking/

I try not to be rude often, but to be brutally honest; your website
doesn't inspire confidence in your framework. As unfair as it is,
looking good is important even for something that should be based
purely on technical merit. Simplify your examples and pretend to be
solving real world problems. How do I attach to a database? How do I
work with existing code? How do I optimize for search engines?

Anyway, good luck with your framework.
Josh

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