Artikel lesen → WordPress : A Java Fanboys Red Pill Andreas Steffan · Veröffentlicht am 15. April 201312. Januar 2014I have been a Java Fanboy since its early days. I considered PHP a toy language for script kiddies, avoided it as much as possible and addressed problems with my golden hammer JVM instead. Revisiting today, it can actually be even ridiculous to pick a JVM based solution instead of PHP. This post is about one common case – a public website.
Artikel lesen → Starting and Stopping Alfresco the Admin Way : Using Init Andreas Steffan · Veröffentlicht am 18. Februar 201317. Februar 2014Running a Java process as a service has always been somewhat messy and causing headaches. This post gives a recipe to hook Alfresco system lifecyle to init – starting and stopping it the admin way.
Artikel lesen → Agile erste Schritte mit Alfresco ECM Andreas Steffan · Veröffentlicht am 23. Januar 201317. Februar 2014Enterprise Content Management Systeme (ECMS) versprechen Unterstützung bei vielen Themen im Umgang mit Dokumenten. Aber Features bringen Komplexitität mit sich. Wie kann man sich als Alfresco Einsteiger der Herausforderung ECM stellen ?
Artikel lesen → Java Class Reloading Pain : A Fresh Open Source JRebel Alternative Andreas Steffan · Veröffentlicht am 15. Januar 201312. Januar 2014This post introduces a fresh and simple pure Open Source approach knocking down JVM- and application restarts during development. It really helps – in grails 2.0 and beyond.
Artikel lesen → Sane Enterprise Software in Germany and Beyond Andreas Steffan · Veröffentlicht am 17. Dezember 201212. Januar 2014ERP, CRM, ECM – Enterprise software can be incredibly frustrating. This post summarizes what I expect from a contemporary product.
Artikel lesen → Is Google Drive becoming a Threat for Enterprise Content Management ? Andreas Steffan · Veröffentlicht am 20. November 201212. Januar 2014Google Drive will never be threat to ECM because of the lack of trust in Google and the cloud in general. This seems to be the killer argument and common sense. On top of that, it is missing frequently required features. Are these old arguments actually reasonable today ?