>I'm not surprised. The big question continues to be "What can Adobe do 
>to promote ColdFusion?" CF gets press on releases, and Adobe has 
>actively and aggressively marketed toward the government IT sector for a 
>few years now. I just want to see the articles that say "Yeah, we're 
>migrating from .Net to ColdFusion. It's just a much more dynamic and 
>integrated platform."

The problem a lot of people are mentioning as well is lack of developers. It 
becomes a vicious circle...developers jump to another platform because there 
are more jobs, so it becomes harder for employers to find ones that are 
experienced in CF, so they switch, which makes jobs even harder to find, etc. 
So it really has to be a two-pronged attack...getting more people to want to 
use CF for their sites, but also getting more developers to learn it. And of 
course, trying to keep hosting options as well. I really do think the cost of 
the server is an issue, when it comes to getting more people on board. 
Certainly at the Enterprise-level it's not an issue (or shouldn't be), but for 
small-time developers that want to run their own box, it's a hard sell. And 
these are the folks that are needed to really grow support for the platform. I 
ran into that just this week with someone that was in college and wanted to 
learn my software and put up a store using his own box. I might have been 
willing to do some kind of educational discount, but the cost of ColdFusion 
pretty much made the whole discussion moot. I'm hoping eventually Railo or 
SmithProject might become more viable as low-cost options...but even if they 
do, they're likely to be options only those of us that are already invested in 
CF will know about. I imagine this is something a lot of us that sell CF 
applications run into...if you sell a .Net or PHP application, it's not a big 
deal who someone is hosting with, as the vast majority of hosts offer these. If 
you have a CF application though, if a normal merchant finds you through Google 
or some other application/script listing site, 9 times out of 10 they are not 
going to be able to run your application because their host doesn't run CF (or 
they are using...gasp...GoDaddy!) So before you can even sell you on your 
application, you have to sell them on switching hosts. It's a tough situation, 
for sure. It's one thing I really liked with the Railo licensing, which works 
with the way their server can configure different "webs" as separate entities 
and then license each individually, versus a more costly full-priced server. 
It's a great low-cost entry that is attractive to a small developer, while 
still requiring someone that is using the server to host many sites to pay a 
reasonable price. 




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