FYI for those looking for a JSP Editor etc. in Eclipse (there is English below the German).

Don
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From: <http://groups.google.com//groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&newwindow=1&edition=us&q=author:stopthespammers%40t-online.de+>Andy Schmitt (<mailto:stopthespammers%40t-online.de>[EMAIL PROTECTED])
Subject: IBM will grosse Teile von WSAD freigeben


<http://groups.google.com//groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&newwindow=1&edition=us&selm=c0usgm%24n3f%2403%241%40news.t-online.com>View this article only
Newsgroups: <http://groups.google.com//groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&newwindow=1&edition=us&group=de.comp.lang.java>de.comp.lang.java
Date: 2004-02-17 21:19:18 PST


Hallo,

in der Eclipse-Webtools-Newsgroup wurde vor einigen Tagen ein sehr
umfangreiches Dokument gepostet. Es geht darum, dass IBM einen grossen
Teil seiner kommerziellen Eclipse-Version an das Eclipse-Konsortium
verschenken wird.

Unter anderem einen kompletten grafischen SQL/Datenbank-Designer,
HTML-Editor und Editoren f�r WSS,UDDI,JSP und alles was einem
so richtig Freude macht wenn man es kostenlos bekommt ;-)

Nur finde ich keine weiteren Ank�ndigungen dazu. Ist dies alles
oder wenigstens Teile davon in der neuesten Eclipse-Version M7
bereits verf�gbar? Der DB- und Sql-Designer w�rde mich sehr interessieren.

Das Dokument ist 500 KB gross und hier ist die Ank�ndigung von IBM:

> "Arthur Ryman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> schrieb im Newsbeitrag
> <http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=bvnfqj%24puv%241%40eclipse.org>news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Here is an overview of the components IBM is proposing to contribute to
the project. We have already shipped these components in WebSphere
Studio and are in the process of refactoring them in anticipation of
contribution to this project.

The overview also describes where these components be can extended and
where they need further development. I'll be discussing these at the
EclipseCon Bof Session on Wednesday night. Please comment.

-- Arthur

The proposed contributions are mainly the J2EE plumbing used by
WebSphere Studio. We are not giving away what we consider to be
value-add differentiators, e.g. the GUI based J2EE deployment descriptor
editors, UML tools, Universal Test Client, Struts Builder, JSF tools,
etc. We are also giving away several advanced editors that we feel are
important to round out the programming model, e.g. JSP, SQL, XSD, WSDL.

Our business model is as you say as far as the "bytes" go, but don't
forget the issue of product support. High quality support is valued by
customers and IBM will of course continue to sell that.

Also, the "bells and whistles" include many new tool opportunities in
the areas of Service Oriented Architectute, Advanced J2EE Frameworks,
Model Driven Development, Business Process Integration, Web Service
Choregraphy, etc. There is no shortage of tools that will differentiate
the eclipse platform from vendor product offerings.

-- Arthur


Gruss Andy




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