I am going to go out on a limb here and say that Tomcat is what got us in the 
hot water that is burning our skin today. The whole viewpoint that application 
servers are big and heavyweight is antiquated. What people don't realize is 
that Tomcat is more "proprietary" and difficult to use than just using an 
application server. (Shoot, Glassfish starts nearly as fast as Tomcat these 
days! - http://raibledesigns.com/rd/entry/glassfish_2_vs_tomcat_6)

Please don't assume that I am biased towards application servers or I have any 
investment in them at all. One year ago I would have been the first person to 
slander application servers. After taking a very extensive look at Seam, I 
realize that we have painted ourselves into a corner by discarded services like 
JNDI and JTA and trying to run on pure servlet containers. It is actually 
harder to go without them.

While Tomcat support is interesting from an academic perspective, it is simply 
not that beneficial. Besides, all you have to do to "upgrade" Tomcat to an 
application server is to dump the embedded JBoss in the global library 
directory of Tomcat. While on the one had this just turns JBoss inside out, 
putting Tomcat on top rather than the application server itself, it at least 
allows you to use the services that are known, supported, and capable.

All this isn't to say that Seam isn't supporting Tomcat. I think all of the 
examples run on Tomcat. What I am saying is that frankly I don't think it is 
the right direction anymore.

You should really give the Java EE spec another look, especially with Web Beans 
on the way. Tomcat is just a module, a servlet module. If you want to use 
Tomcat, just write servlets or Struts apps.

These opinions are my own. I am not speaking for the Seam developers.

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