I'm at JavaOne following the fun around java.net and java.com.

This morning I learned more about the new developer portal http://www.java.net. The site is edited by Tim O'Reilly and the chief web dog is James. Tim describes himself as the Colonel Sanders of the site, he jokes that it's really a group of O'Reilly Associates editors that will be editing the site. From what I've learned java.net is a private-labeled version of SourceForge with a bunch of new bells and whistles added (blogs, wikis, forums.) So it is open for anyone to host a public project, open-source projects included. I'm going to look into creating a mirror of the PushToTest site on Java.net - PushToTest is home to the TestMaker community, an open-source project for testing Web-enabled applications, especially Web Services. I'll post here on my experience with Java.net.

-Frank


On Wednesday, June 11, 2003, at 04:04 AM, Christopher Lenz wrote:


That's because it's powered by CollabNet/SourceCast, and CollabNet sponsors Tigris. A lot of SourceCast is (or is going to be) built on top of Tigris projects like Scarab and Subversion (IIUC).

-chris

Scott Tavares wrote:
they are even using the tigris style (http://style.tigris.org) CSS on the project page (http://www.dev.java.net/servlets/ProjectList)
Nicola Ken Barozzi wrote:

http://java.net/




---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


--
Frank Cohen, Founder, PushToTest, http://www.PushToTest.com, phone: 408 374 7426
Come to PushToTest for free open-source test automation solutions that test and monitor
Web-enabled applications, especially Web Services for scalability and reliability.




---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Reply via email to