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<font face="sans-serif">Hi jBPM developers,<br>
<br>
Thank you guys a lot for jBPM5 !<br>
I liked certain things... in particular BeanShell scripting.<br>
<br>
Just a quick background about me:<br>
I can call myself a Core Java developer with a lot of "random
skills" spread from Assembly language to IBM/X10 (
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://x10-lang.org">http://x10-lang.org</a> ), databases, etc, etc. With so many different
skills (not being expert on nothing!), I'm trying to reduce the
number of new things to be learned whilst playing with jBPM5 (and
become non-specialist on even more things).<br>
<br>
I'm not a web developer, definitely not. And I'm not planning to
become one, in spite I understand I will have to have my hands
dirty with GWT (or even Vaadin?) in future, at a certain point.<br>
<br>
I'd like to have "kind of jbpm-console" but without the typical
look and feel of a BPM console, I mean: without the Inbox and
other queues, etc. Could you please give me some ideas and/or
directions about this?<br>
<br>
I think my process could run under a single user (from jBPM5
perspective). Web users would authenticate at a certain point but
I guess authentication could be stored internally as a variable
(authenticated email address).<br>
<br>
Any direction is much, much appreciated.<br>
<br>
Thanks a lot and regards<br>
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<pre class="moz-signature" cols="72">--
Richard Gomes
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.jquantlib.org/index.php/User:RichardGomes">http://www.jquantlib.org/index.php/User:RichardGomes</a>
twitter: frgomes
JQuantLib is a library for Quantitative Finance written in Java.
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.jquantlib.com/">http://www.jquantlib.com/</a>
twitter: jquantlib
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