Jeff,

We have clear statements from myspace that the problem was more their
code and coding practice than anything else. Ask people who were at
cfunited what they said. Quick and dirty describes how they coded, not
how ColdFusion should be used.

--
Michael




On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 12:16 PM, Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> I've always been interested in how and why MySpace changed from ColdFusion to 
> ASP.NET. I've just seen a new book by Julia Angwin called "Stealing MySpace: 
> The Battle to control the most popular website in America."  Here is what she 
> has to say about the change:
>
> Around 2004, MySpace was hitting its max loads and faced major upscaling and 
> server farming. In discussing that, Angwin writes:
>
> "At the same time, MySpace was contemplating finally transitioning from 
> ColdFusion, the programming language it had started with, to the more robust 
> ASP.NET Microsoft programming language. ColdFusion was a programming language 
> for quick and dirty websites, not for heavy-duty database applications. 
> Intermix board member Andrew Sheehan, who had joined MySpace's fledgling 
> board, helped MySpace get some discount software licenses from Microsoft."
>
> [end of quotation]
>
> There it is, friends, in black and white. Gee, you wonder where they got such 
> a negative impression of CF's capabilities?
>
> Jeff E
>
>
> 

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