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<title>Comments for What is ECO anyway?</title>
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<id>http://dn.codegear.com/article/33259</id>
<updated>2008-12-01T19:38:11-08:00</updated>
<entry>
<title>re: What is ECO anyway?</title>
<author>
<name>Peter Morris</name>
<uri>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/userall?commentid=38555</uri>
</author>
<id>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/view?commentid=38555</id>
<updated>2005-07-23T05:30:49-07:00</updated>
<published>2005-07-23T05:30:49-07:00</published>
<summary>re: What is ECO anyway?</summary>
<content>Well, ECO is 3 tier anyway, but I presume you mean 3 physical tiers rather than logical ones?If I had to implement logic on the server I would create an ECO web service, otherwise I would use ECO clients and implement a remote persistence server to handle the DB updates (no logic).These questions are best asked in the newsgroups, they will receive more attention there.</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>re: What is ECO anyway?</title>
<author>
<name>Chris Chi</name>
<uri>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/userall?commentid=38554</uri>
</author>
<id>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/view?commentid=38554</id>
<updated>2005-07-21T19:19:45-07:00</updated>
<published>2005-07-21T19:19:45-07:00</published>
<summary>re: What is ECO anyway?</summary>
<content>I think ECO is a very complex framework and it is hard to maintenance(understand), just a lot of components (just like WebSnap)and not loosely coupled.</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>What is ECO anyway?</title>
<author>
<name>Chris Chi</name>
<uri>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/userall?commentid=38553</uri>
</author>
<id>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/view?commentid=38553</id>
<updated>2005-07-21T19:00:41-07:00</updated>
<published>2005-07-21T19:00:41-07:00</published>
<summary>What is ECO anyway?</summary>
<content>And How about multi-tier and ECO ?Is there have any solution ?Best regards.Chris</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>re: What is ECO anyway?</title>
<author>
<name>Peter Morris</name>
<uri>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/userall?commentid=38552</uri>
</author>
<id>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/view?commentid=38552</id>
<updated>2005-07-21T16:07:35-07:00</updated>
<published>2005-07-21T16:07:35-07:00</published>
<summary>re: What is ECO anyway?</summary>
<content>HiThat is an implementation detail, a &quot;how to&quot;.  I just wanted to write a &quot;what is&quot;, so that people can decide whether or not they wish to look at ECO and go into the &quot;how to&quot; realm.Post your question on the ECO newsgroup and someone will surely answer.</content>
</entry>
<entry>
<title>What is ECO anyway?</title>
<author>
<name>Chris Chi</name>
<uri>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/userall?commentid=38549</uri>
</author>
<id>http://threads.codegear.com/threads/threads.exe/view?commentid=38549</id>
<updated>2005-07-20T20:06:41-07:00</updated>
<published>2005-07-20T20:06:41-07:00</published>
<summary>What is ECO anyway?</summary>
<content>BonjourYes, ECO is great.But... What about .NET GUI (DataGrid, etc) ?How to bind .NET control with ECO object ?ThanksChris</content>
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