[Sigia-l] "Who Really Turns Off JavaScript?"

Todd Warfel lists at toddwarfel.com
Thu Nov 10 14:02:54 EST 2005


Sounds more like the engineering of the application was complex, not the
application itself. You can have terribly powerful applications that don't
have 5000 JSP modules.

We designed a very intelligent species application for Cornell that tracks
around 20 million records, has data analysis built in and is the only one of
its kind (as well as an industry first)). It's been a huge success and has
even been cloned several times for other universities and companies. It's
got a pretty sick AI back end. I won't go into all the details, but suffice
it to say, we didn't have to create 5000 JSP modules to do it.

On Nov 7, 2005, at 6:50 AM, Timothy Karsjens wrote:


In fact, some of the projects I have completed successfully, have been some
of the most complex in the respective industries. A travel application of
recent note, for example, had over 5000 JSP modules for the functionality
alone, with a handful for the interface framework. This entire application
did not use Javascript *at all*, but it was very, very complex.


Cheers!

Todd R. Warfel
Partner, Design & Usability Specialist
Messagefirst | making products & services easier to use
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