paul.nowak wrote: Matt, thanks for the comments. I made an error on the version of Plone. It's 2.5 Plone running on Zope 2.9x.
In regards to the additional products, we have a skin installed and we have a product that we had custom developed for us that connects to a PostgreSQL database. We've looked at slow PostgreSQL queries causing problems and have not been able to find an issue. We've also tested for the case where the PostgreSQL server is down and have not been able to create an issue. We therefor...
This is truly the age of the browser interface. Internet Websites and Web
applications increasingly offer rich, dynamic, browser-based user interfaces
that deliver everything you expect from an installed desktop application. These
applications deliver function and ease-of-use without requiring expensive
desktop software installs.
The underlying technology for this browser UI approach has
existed for a decade but the term AJAX
was coined in 2005 by Jesse James Garrett of Adaptive Path. The core of this
approach is the ability to make dynamic, asynchronous data requests of a Web
server without having to reload the Web page or hit the refresh button. This
approach enables Web developers to build rich UIs that run on every browser and
across every popular platform.
In the last three years many JavaScript frameworks with AJAX support have become
available from open source projects and commercial vendors. These include
Prototype, script.aculous (which is built on top of Prototype), Dojo, Google
Web Toolkit (GWT), DWR, TIBCO General Interface, and Yahoo UI.
These capabilities continue to evolve rapidly and Web
developers now have a wide array of powerful UI tools they can use to build
their Web applications.
The toolset for the QA staff responsible for testing and
certifying AJAX
applications hasn’t caught up yet with the capabilities being offered to Web
developers. Currently most AJAX testing is being done manually.
Modern Web applications have n-tier architectures that communicate via messaging. A new
generation of testing tools will provide recording of and visibility into the
detail message events that affect the function of AJAX UIs.
For the first time, application testers need to understand
the structure and semantics of the messages (down to the packet level) being
exchanged to design tests for these applications.
About Ken Gardner Ken Gardner, executive chairman for SOASTA, is an industry veteran with more than 30 years in the enterprise software industry. He is a six-time entrepreneur having previously been the founder and CEO of Istante (acquired by Oracle in December 2004); Sagent Technology (IPO in April 1999); ReportSmith (acquired by Borland in March 1994); and ViewPoint Systems (acquired by Knowledgeware in June 1992). His first startup, in 1985, was Tesseract Corporation where he was senior vice president of Technology. From 1978 to 1985, he worked in R&D at Tymshare, Inc.
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