Joe,
I'd just like to know one thing.
When you say "web development", do you also mean the html editor?
Because I don't use any of the Java, WebSphere, etc things, but do 
occasionally make a static html page in WDSCi.
Thanks,
Peter Colpaert
Application Developer, Consumer Luminaires 
Industrieterrein Satenrozen 11, 2550 Kontich, Belgium 
Tel. +32/ 3 450 74 09, Fax +32/ 3 450 74 33, Internal 1317 
peter.colpaert@xxxxxxxxxxx, www.philips.com
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Joe Pluta <joepluta@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 
Sent by: wdsci-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
06/03/2008 20:51
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Websphere Development Studio Client for iSeries <wdsci-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
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Subject
Re: [WDSCI-L] Is RDi really a "new" product?
Dean, Robert wrote:
I think you just answered your own question.  The reason to plug 3rd 
party stuff into WDSC is so that we don't have to push IBM to devote the 
resources to support it.
For example, IBM is focusing its strategic investments on JSF/EGL, and 
also on RESTful stuff like that delivered in Project Zero.  I don't need 
IBM to support (for example) Struts, Tapestry, Wicket, Seam, or any number 
of other frameworks if I can add third-party plugins that provide that 
support to WDSC/RDi. 
You questioned someone last week because they had separate workspaces 
for EGL and non-EGL work.  I don't want to have separate Eclipse instances 
for IBM-provided and non-IBM-provided plugins.
You're kind of missing the point of RDi.  Unlike WDSC, RDi is not 
designed as a web application development environment and will not be 
supported as one.  It's a single-purpose tool.  RDi-SOA is RDi plus EGL, 
again single-purpose.  Not meant for development of any other 
framework.  If you start plugging stuff into it and it breaks, IBM won't 
support it.  If you are planning to do web development, you need a 
different tool, such as RAD, or one of the many Eclipse-based tool 
offerings, such as MyEclipse.
Joe
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