I have read the jboss decisions about how J2EE fits in and how newcomers can learn
this technology. I also agree with the reference to Enterprise JavaBeans by Richard
Monson-Haefel, which is a great book. My suggestion is to take some examples and play
with them. Take a couple of great EJB servers, like Jboss and Orion (with it's free
development license, at www.orionserver.com), and look into Richard Monson-Haefel own
implementation of openEJB when it's available (www.openEJB.org). I would stay away
from Jonas, as you need to play configuration games. If you get two or three good EJB
servers running, like the one's I mentioned, try porting some developed applications
to the different EJB servers and play with them. If you need to play with another web
server talking to an EJB application, try Resin. Stay away from the high priced
implementations, unless you like to give away money (in which case, I would gladly
accept donations). Keep up the great work, Jboss crew.
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