Yesterday's launch of Activiti starts a new generation of business process management (BPM) software that will disrupt the existing BPM engine landscape. Activiti promises to be the ideal choice for using BPM in commercial application development, because it is both based on open-standards and distributed under a liberal open-source license. More than anything else, these two aspects of Activiti make it more interesting for commercial software development than either other open source BPM platforms that have more restrictive licenses, or closed-source commercial offerings that carry the heavy price of vendor lock-in.
Did you know we have an open-source web site?
We release all our open-source projects there, as a way to give back to the open-source community we use and abuse every day and without which we’d be knee-deep stuck in proprietary code, inscrutable bugs and opaque security.
This article is about web application internationalisation (internationalization, I18N) and language localisation (localization, L10N). This article shows you how to localise a Play framework web application, with an example based on the 'Yet Another Blog Engine' example application, used in the Play tutorial.
At Lunatech, we recently decided to build a small web application to implement one of our ideas for generating business plan summaries. We needed to get this running on-line as quickly as possible, with minimal time spent coding, so we chose to build it using the Play! framework. The result was fast development, clean code, easy deployment and an instantly popular web application - http://plancruncher.com/.
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