Hi, Dave,
thank you for replying.
I have a pretty good knowledge of t-lib and was able to get things running based on that; however, I am still dazzled by all the different "platforms". Agent Interaction SDK, Media Interaction and Queued Interactions ...
I did not think about looking into Agent Interaction because I thought it was very different from Platform SDK. It's like looking into DDK (device driver kit) for samples to how to use DirectX SDK. At least I thought so... So, the coding in Agent Interaction and other SDKs are identical to each other?
As for application blocks is there some document to summarizes all of them? Like, what is genji?
Interestingly enough, Java Platform SDK comes with two application blocks: warm-standby and config. I am perplexed as to why only these two application blocks are offered. I can think of a myriad of features that probably have a much higher priority than these two. I guess it depends on how you look at it - do these blocks come as part of SDK (in which case I find it very lacking) or are they added as a sample of how to use SDK (in which case I am perplexed because I did not know that Voice Platform also allowed for access to configuration later and on top of having something more relevant to what majority of users would need).
If so, then, why are they broken up into different SDKs and not offered as one? Am I the only one who feels that Genesys is trying to squeeze more money from users and exercise more control over custom development by taking what used to be t-lib and splitting it into limited versions?
The last question is beyond the topic of this post, but can't stop wondering...
Thanks for the heads up.