I have written a five part blog series on using Greasemonkey. My first
two posts start with the basics of Greasemonkey. Readers of this list
won't find anything new in these.
The latter three posts discuss the merits of Greasemonkey within the
enterprise, and when it is the right tool for IT projects. I also
discuss issues such as security and deployment. Let me know what you
think.
Blog 1: <a href="http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/07/
mashups_using_g.html">
More Mashups: Using Greasemonkey to Weave New Features into Web Sites</
a>
Blog 2: <a href="http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/07/
oreilly_safari.html">
Building a Greasemonkey Mashup Tutorial</a>
Blog 3: <a href="http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/08/
greasemonkey_in.html">
Greasemonkey in the Enterprise: When is GM the Right Tool for IT?</a>
Blog 4: <a href="http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/08/
enterprise_grea.html">
Beware of Greasemonkey's Inverted Security Model</a>
Blog 5: <a href="http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/08/
enterprise_grea_1.html">
Solving the Greasemonkey Script Versioning Problem</a>
Thanks!
Peter
Blog 1: More Mashups: Using Greasemonkey to Weave New Features into
Web Sites
http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/07/mashups_using_g.html
Blog 2: Building a Greasemonkey Mashup Tutorial
http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/07/oreilly_safari.html
Blog 3: Greasemonkey in the Enterprise: When is GM the Right Tool for
IT?
http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/08/greasemonkey_in.html
Blog 4: Beware of Greasemonkey's Inverted Security Model
http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/08/enterprise_grea.html
Blog 5: Solving the Greasemonkey Script Versioning Problem
http://dev2dev.bea.com/blog/plaird/archive/2007/08/enterprise_grea_1.html
On 8/20/07, Peter Laird <peter...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
--
LouCypher
Lou - feedback is positive so far, so I will look to tie this info
into the wiki.
Thanks - and keep the feedback coming.