Lets make it happen. Who wants to be involved? What form of interaction is 
preferred: IRC, e-mails, anything else?

AFAIK, Dojo is built on bones of many projects and directly sponsored by 
real life applications like JotSpot (http://www.jot.com). Guys from WebWork 
(http://www.opensymphony.com/webwork/) and Yahoo/Flickr (I think you don't 
need URL for that :-) ) donated some code as well. Wicket 
(http://wicket.sourceforge.net/) is using it. We are not talking about 
academic ideas here. Maybe Alex will share his take on the whole 
client-server issue.

Regarding documentation --- what you said is true. A lot of cool stuff 
should be excavated from sources. Recently they started to spend more time 
on documentation. It is going to be a major focus of one of upcoming 
milestones.

Thanks,

Eugene


"Simon Willison" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote 
in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
> On 14 Nov 2005, at 19:26, Eugene Lazutkin wrote:
>
>> I think it is wise to talk to core Dojo guys (e.g., Alex Russell)  about
>> Django Ajax and explain them what we need. They are accessible and
>> responsive. I am sure they will meet Django's requirements. Let's  talk 
>> to
>> Bob too to understand his position on that.
>
> This is a very good idea. Alex Russell has expressed interest in  Django 
> in the past. Dojo is a remarkable framework - all it needs to  take over 
> the world is more detailed documentation.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Simon



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