I don't know of any measure of stability.

I do see more Java complaints on the mailing list, but it might just be 
that there are more Java users.

Performance would vary depending on your app.  I assume Java would have a 
perf advantage on a processing intensive app, though, for example, if your 
app is bottlenecked by datastore queries, that might significantly reduce 
the Java advantage.



On Thursday, May 24, 2012 1:54:05 PM UTC-4, Gitted wrote:
>
> I am assuming that the performance of a java app on appengine would 
> outperform a python application, would this actually result in cheaper 
> hosting fees? 
>
> Are both platforms just as stable? 
>
> (let's ignore the fact that you can probably develop faster with 
> python)


On Thursday, May 24, 2012 1:54:05 PM UTC-4, Gitted wrote:
>
> I am assuming that the performance of a java app on appengine would 
> outperform a python application, would this actually result in cheaper 
> hosting fees? 
>
> Are both platforms just as stable? 
>
> (let's ignore the fact that you can probably develop faster with 
> python)


On Thursday, May 24, 2012 1:54:05 PM UTC-4, Gitted wrote:
>
> I am assuming that the performance of a java app on appengine would 
> outperform a python application, would this actually result in cheaper 
> hosting fees? 
>
> Are both platforms just as stable? 
>
> (let's ignore the fact that you can probably develop faster with 
> python)

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