Yeah...I could use some bookmarkable pages but just didn't. Since we're doing paid advertising and not worry so much about indexing on google it wasn't a huge concern to get one or two pages in the entire cart indexed - the snakeriverfarms.com site is more of a brochure site and they'd probably target that before the cart, which sits behind the site.
I know the portal would be a big project but it's definitely something I'm interested in doing...though I'm going to research all options before any real work gets done there...want to be sure it gets done right. I'm not too familiar w/ the portlets spec but from what I've read, it's going in the direction of being closely tied to JSF, especially in future implementations. If that's the case, I'd be interested in avoiding it altogether - I'm not real impressed by what I see in JSF today...even the "good" implementations. However, if there were a way to somehow tie Wicket into the spec...I'd definitely look at it! On 6/14/06, Eelco Hillenius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Thanks for sharing and congrats. Tiny remark: wouldn't you want to > work with bookmarkable pages more, especially for things like contact > details, terms of use, etc? You shouldn't really need to be in a > session to access those pages (you probably want google to index them) > and if you mount the urls to those pages, that will look even better! > > About the portal... that's a non-trivial task. Depending on how many > services you actually want to develop of course. Wouldn't it be a > better idea to look at JSR168 portal servers and see how Wicket can be > fit in? Janne still has the idea of working on Wicket support for 2.0; > maybe you can tickle him a bit ;) > > Eelco > > > > On 6/14/06, Vincent Jenks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > So, I finally completed our first Wicket experiment - the infamous > > storefront I've been blathering about endlessly: > > > > http://www.snakeriverfarms.com/ - click the animated gif on the > > bottom-left of the page. > > > > I'm hoping it leads to more Wicket-based projects for me here at work > > but I've got definite plans of my own - the first of which is a Portal > > based on Wicket. > > > > We have a really crappy portal here at work that was quite > > expensive...and I'd really like to build something better myself w/ > > Wicket & EJB 3.0. As far as I know, there's nothing out there like > > that currently, is there? > > > > I was looking at JSR-286 but it looks like it's geared toward JSF, am > > I correct? If that were the case I'd have no interest in conforming > > to it - but please correct me if I'm wrong. > > > > I'd like to begin planning it right away but I thought I'd take some > > feedback from the good folks behind Wicket first since you've all been > > so helpful so far! I've never built anything quite as modular as a > > portal before and I'm not sure where to begin as far as making > > "portlets" dynamically loadable & modular while keeping performance > > acceptable. I'd like to build an initial, rough, alpha-quality base > > to release as an open source project and work from there. > > > > I've never created my own open source project either, so any input > > there would be helpful! > > > > Thanks all! > > > > -v > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Wicket-user mailing list > > Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net > > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Wicket-user mailing list > Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user > _______________________________________________ Wicket-user mailing list Wicket-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wicket-user