<div>Mann. That's enough "guidance" for one day. My head hurts from trying to keep track of all the suggestions. I think I'm going to stick with GlassFish and research Seam. </div> <div> </div> <div>I was a bit apprehensive about asking for help, but I'm glad I did now. Thanks for everything guys.</div> <div> </div> <div>Jackie<BR><BR><B><I>Mark Smith <mark.smith@valtech.com></I></B> wrote:</div> <BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">Glass fish and seam are a nice combination!<BR><BR>________________________________<BR><BR>From: jug-bounces@lists.okcjug.org on behalf of Jason Lee<BR>Sent: Mon 6/2/2008 4:54 PM<BR>To: jug@lists.okcjug.org<BR>Subject: Re: [OKC JUG] Guidance<BR><BR><BR>On Mon, Jun 2, 2008 at 4:43 PM, Mark Smith <MARK.SMITH@VALTECH.COM>wrote:<BR><BR><BR>I say use Jboss and Seam or Tomcat and Spring. Those I think are the best and easiest to use
frameworks for applications in the java world.<BR><BR><BR><BR>I'd vote for GlassFish and Seam ;) but that's even more to learn, though, if learning XML is needed, Spring would certainly help there. :)<BR><BR>-- <BR>Jason Lee, SCJP<BR>Software Architect -- Objectstream, Inc.<BR>Mojarra and Mojarra Scales Dev Team<BR>https://mojarra.dev.java.net <HTTPS: mojarra.dev.java.net /><BR>https://scales.dev.java.net <HTTPS: scales.dev.java.net /><BR>http://blogs.steeplesoft.com <HTTP: blogs.steeplesoft.com /><BR>_______________________________________________<BR>Jug mailing list<BR>Jug@lists.okcjug.org<BR>http://lists.okcjug.org/listinfo.cgi/jug-okcjug.org<BR></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><p>