Well the truth is CFML will never die, I mean when you want to think about
the likes of the Amiga. What can one say, but the world has changed a lot
since then. And the option of open source has change a lot of people's views
towards ROI in a lot of cases, and this applies to CFML because as a
language (scripting or programming) it will never die.

 

ColdFusion as a product is another story, and most people's views would be
on how Adobe eventually view their position and whether they think their
competitors are of any threat. Now that will be a debate within itself..

 

 

-- 
Senior Coldfusion Developer
Aegeon Pty. Ltd.
 <http://www.aegeon.com.au/> www.aegeon.com.au
Phone: +613 9015 8628
Mobile: 0404 998 273

 

 

 

From: cfaussie@googlegroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Simon Haddon
Sent: Tuesday, 19 August 2008 1:38 PM
To: cfaussie@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cfaussie] Re: I hereby resign :)

 

Also, one thing that I would agree with.  The only people that I have ever
heard say that CF is dying is CF people.  Why is that? No-one else I know in
the industry that I associate with says that.







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