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From the Blogosphere Tiggr Is Built with JSF, RichFaces, Seam and Flex
Interview with Tiggr architect: Sasha Piskun
By: Max Katz
Jun. 24, 2011 08:45 AM
(Cross-posted on the Tiggr blog) Sasha Piskun is Tiggr’s Chief Architect. Sasha recently moved to Exadel’s Concord office from Exadel’s Donetsk office in Ukraine. He has many years of experience designing and building large enterprise applications. We are very happy to have him in Concord where he leads Tiggr development and prepares Tiggr Mobile App Builder release in late summer. Learn more about Tiggr Mobile Apps Builder and sign up for private beta here.
Please describe the application.
You should be able to create prototype which look and behave as close as possible to the real application and Tiggr will allow you to do that. Anyone can try creating their first prototype at http://gotiggr.com. I also want to take a step back and tell readers why mockups, which many are familiar with are different than prototypes. Many readers are probably familiar with mockups and might be wondering why not use mockups. Mockups are used in many projects, usually during project requirements phase to show how the UI will look. Mockups is good tool to use, however, mockups suffer from a number of drawbacks today. First of all, mockups are static. Today, interfaces are very interactive with Ajax-like features and it also very common now to use pop-ups in application UI. Expressing such interactivity or navigation is just not possible with static mockups. The most you can really get from a mockup is a image. Secondly, mockups don’t give you a realistic view of the UI. Mockups are typically drawn using lines and shapes such as boxes, circles, and rectangles. You sometimes also get hand-drawn like components. With such tools you can create an outline or draw the shape of various UI elements; however, this won’t give you a realistic view of the user interface. Thirdly, sharing and collaborating is usually done using the same old approach – e-mail. Most mockup tools let you save the mockup as an image which can then be shared via e-mail. Getting feedback or collaborating on the mockup becomes a challenge. You end up e-mailing the mockup image back and forth among project members asking for feedback followed by the resending an updated mockup image. How many users were there for this application, and what stage is it in currently? How large was the development team, and what were the different roles? What resources did you use (books, web sites, consultants)? What have the users said about the application? What is your development platform? Tiggr technology stack consists of the following:
As for development tools (IDE), our team uses JBoss Tools and Flash Builder 4. Tiggr uses an interesting mix of technologies. We used JSF with RichFaces for pages such as Login, Projects list page, and Profile page. The back end is Seam, and naturally we used JPA for persistence. I guess so far it’s not that interesting. Now, when you open any particular project, the actual editor where you design the prototype is Flash/Flex. The Flex portion talks to the same Seam-based back end. The communication between Flex and Seam is done with Exadel Flamingo (http://exadel.org/flamingo). I’m sure some readers might ask, why not use HTML everywhere, even for the editor? When we launched Tiggr last year, we wanted (of course) to get something fast out there. We had Flex expertise in-house and knew that what we are trying to do can be done with Flex. Today it’s definitely possible to accomplish with HTML5. It’s possible that HTML5 support in some browsers wasn’t as good then as it is today. So we didn’t want to spent time trying to figure out which JavaScript library would work best. Having said that and moving forward, we are considering switching entirely to HTML5 for the entire application. What is your deployment platform? Tiggr was always in the Cloud as it’s a web application and available to anyone and anywhere with an browser and Internet connection. Up until last month, it was hosted on Exadel servers. Tiggr has experienced a tremendous growth. To accommodate this growth as well as increase performance and allow for better scalability, Tiggr application is now deployed on Amazon EC2. Amazon EC2, the industry leading Cloud Platform, will provide Tiggr with unlimited growth potential, increased performance, allow for better scalability and better security. Which JSF implementation did you use? Did you use any custom or third-party components? Did you use any other technologies (like Tiles, Hibernate, Spring, etc.)? Is there a URL where we can see the completed system? Great, thank you for your time. Latest Cloud Developer Stories
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