To be fair though, you could say the exact same thing of Flex.






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-----Original Message-----
From: Aaron Roberson
To: CF-Talk
Sent: Thu Nov 30 23:57:09 2006
Subject: Re: Sean Corfield, it's time to approve my post

"I will say that for a few years now I've been suspicious of the
actual revenue numbers generated by ColdFusion, how that revenue
breaks down between maintenance versus new licenses for new versions,
new customer growth trend, and how that trend's growth pattern
compares to the overall growth patterns of other platforms.  Saying
that overall revenue has grown can indicate any number of things; the
devil's in the details."

In Adam's defense, I think many of us have had the same suspicion. The
number of shared hosting providers offering ColdFusion support has
hardly increased. At least by my observation. In addition, it is not
everyday (or week for that matter) that I come across a website that
is using ColdFusion. However, I couldn't count how many times I come
across PHP websites. There is a subtle increase in the number of open
source projects for ColdFusion, but most of them are by the same
people who have been contributing to the community for years (Camden,
Helms, Woodward, Farrell, etc.). ASP.NET and PHP are being taught on
community and university campuses in increasing numbers. At my
community college, they just dropped the ColdFusion class in favor of
ASP.NET.

I have no idea what the future holds for ColdFusion, but the fact that
these discussion keep coming up reveals that Adam is not the only one
from within the community who has a sneaking suspicion that ColdFusion
is not doing as well as we would like. Not to say that it is doing
bad, but that it is not competing with alternatives such as Ruby, PHP
and ASP.NET (all of which are free by the way).

-Aaron



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