There is no way to give a meaningful answer to this question. The only
way, IMHO, to approach it is to ask what kind of traffic is expected and
consider the time and resources available.
Then, you can look at the site plan and determine through testing and/or
experience what parts of the site are most appropriate in what
language. Since most of the machinery in our sites is hand built - Studio
for CF; VisualCafe and JBuilder for Java and jsp - we do sites which use both.
It isn't just that JRun will be bundled with CF, the promise is that .cfm
files, instead of being compiled to p-code files and held in RAM as they
are now, will be compiled to .class files. That way, you could "instantly"
turn a CF site into a Java site. I can't wait.
Cary
At 02:16 PM 8/24/2000 +0800, you wrote:
>Ok. Everyone agrees Java servers kick its butt it seems! The question is
>though - by how much? How many Cold Fusion servers does it take to service
>the same number of users as one of those Java servers? 2? 3? If we're
>talking about numbers like that then that's not so bad considering CF costs
>easily half the price of say Weblogic....And how well does JRun compare?
>Allaire is saying that JRun is going to be an integrated part of the next
>major Cold Fusion server release later this year.....
>
>J
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