I might have mentioned it on this list before, but Hallmark Stories
(www.hallmarkstories.com) uses Struts for their online photo album site.
We are pushing Struts for several of our customers as well (of course
with our adapters :-) ).
Robert McIntosh
Go to www.JBoss.org
Apparently they're starting to give the larger boys a stir!
More importantly, I need to comment on the beer issue. The foster's you
have up there is a US company with an AUS label. The only real beer, is
the beer down here!
Arron.
Mark Galbreath wrote:
>My point was more towards the issue of Tomcat not being an EJB
container and
>the apparent scope of the company would make EJBs mandatory for
handling
>data access.
>
>But I know what you mean about a company getting cheap on you. I am
forced
>to used JRun (chosen solely based on the price), arguablly the worst
app
>server on the planet.
>
>And stop sending that Foster's crap up here - we want real beer!
>
>Cheers!
>Mark
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Dan Washusen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2002 10:50 PM
>To: Struts Users Mailing List
>Subject: RE: Things that use Struts
>
>
>Like I said, it's only a proof of concept. The company in question is
used
>to paying a LOT of money for it's application servers, apparently they
>almost jumped at the chance at cutting that cost to near nothing... I'm
only
>a lowly dev on the project and don't really know any of the politics
>associated. At the moment the only technical issues I am aware of with
>tomcat is it's comparably ineffective method of session management and
fail
>over (being restricted to one apache instance for the tomcat sticky
>sessions).
>
>Anyway, I just thought you might like to know about it. We are
definitely
>using Struts, Tomcat may change due to the above issue.
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Mark Galbreath [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Friday, 18 January 2002 12:23 PM
>To: Struts Users Mailing List
>Subject: Re: Things that use Struts
>
>
>"One of Australias' biggest sites?" How are you going to that with
Tomcat?
>
>Cheers!
>Mark
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Dan Washusen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: "Struts Users Mailing List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2002 8:02 PM
>Subject: RE: Things that use Struts
>
>
>>Hey everyone,
>>I'm currently working on a proof of concept for a re-write of one of
>>Australia's biggest sites (just under a million searches a month).
The
>>proof of concept runs the front end (presentation layer) on Linux with
>>Tomcat 4 and Struts. I'll keep you posted on how it goes (so far so
>>
>good).
>
>>There is even some talk of Lucene being used.
>>
>>Needless to say, we are very impressed with both Tomcat and Struts.
>>
>>Cheers,
>>Dan
>>
>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: Stuart Charlton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>>Sent: Friday, 18 January 2002 10:01 AM
>>To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
>>Subject: Things that use Struts
>>
>>
>>Hi everyone,
>>
>>I've been a Struts developer and lurker since 1.0 was first released
and
>>have been pushing it in a big way within my company... Just wanted to
>>
>throw
>
>>in my two cents about where we're using Struts for people who are
>>
>wondering
>
>>whether Struts is right for their project, or if it can tackle a large
>>
>scale
>
>>system.
>>
>>a) We have a subcontract that's replacing a system for a division of
the
>>U.S. Navy. This system is replacing 1.5 million lines of COBOL code
with
>>
>a
>
>>J2EE solution using Struts, WebLogic and TOPLink. After 3 months of
>>development is nearly 60,000 lines of code and will be around 150,000
by
>>
>the
>
>>time we're done. Most of the screens are pretty static, but this is
>>definitely a huge system, and Struts' design paradigm has scaled
>>
>gracefully
>
>>(with a lot of help from TOPLink).
>>
>>b) One of our financial clients is using a web-based inventory system
for
>>trading whole loans & mortgages. This will be refactored to
incorporate
>>Struts over the next several months (currently it's a bit icky,
somewhere
>>between JSP model 0 or 1 in terms of modularity).
>>
>>c) Our new venture with Random House, http://www.codenotes.com/ was
>>
>written
>
>>completely with Struts on JRun.
>>
>>Struts is a great framework, the code is clean enough to eat off of,
and
>>
>it
>
>>really makes J2EE sing. With a lot of the new whiz-bang ASP.NET
features
>>coming down the pipe, I think Struts really is what's keeping
JSP/Servlet
>>development competitive....
>>
>>Cheers
>>Stu Charlton
>>Senior Architect / Trainer, Infusion Development
>>Disclaimer: Everything in this message is the opinion of your humble
>>correspondent and is not necessarily the opinion of Infusion
Development
>>corp.
>>
>>
>>
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