Hi Pete
Thanks for your reply, I am really interested in discussing this project
with you. Yet i am going through the source code and studying the stuff, so
appreciate any guidance. Hence could i know the convenient time for you at
the #seam-dev.
Cheers
Harsha
On Mon, May 17, 2010 at 3:57 AM, Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Hi Harsha,
This is great news. I am probably the right person to chat to about this -
I've previous sketched out the ESB integration ideas in a brainstorming
session - I think I have the photographs somewhere. Drop by #seam-dev on
irc.freenode.net (I'm out on Monday this week), and we can discuss, and
try to get you on the right path.
Pete
On 15 May 2010, at 12:36, Harsha wrote:
> Hi
>
> I am really interested in involving Fedora Summer of Coding with Seam
Framework as most of the methodologies used are in the path of my interest
and the exposure. Please have a look at my resume. I was a GSOC student in
2008 as well but not this time.
>
> One of the related project i have involved is SCI Flex: (Flexible
integration of SOA and CEP). The main
> idea was to build an enterprise level solution that yield SOA
infrastructure around the
> CEP (Complex Event Processing) system
> • Technologies Used –J2SE 5.0, Web Services, JMS, Axiom, JS,
Derby, Esper and Synapse ESB
> and OLR (Online rating) module of the Citi Bank where I have experienced
EJB 3, Spring, JPA, JMS, MDB, GWT, EXT-GWT, Oracle 10g, Java 1.6 and Web
Logic 11g
>
> So i am really confident and i have a good back ground to make this
project success with the help of the community. So far i have involved in
various Open Source Projects like Sci-Flex [1][2], Sahana[3], OpenMRS[4],
LimeSurvey.
>
>
> [1]:
http://code.google.com/p/sci-flex/
>
> [2]:
https://www.ohloh.net/accounts/harsha_halgaswatta
>
> [3]:
http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code-2008-sahana/
>
> [4]:
http://openmrs.org/wiki/OpenMRS
>
>
> So i am glad to know more information on this project other than what
idea itself propose and more technical docs.
>
> Thanks
> Harsha
>