Just because the podcast is old does not mean its content is not
relevant.
Actually I think JEE is less relevant today than when the podcast was
recorded.

Next, how about in industry?

Amazon engineers I know say that their infrastructure is hosted on an
in house branch of Tomcat (Catalina servlet container needed
adjustment for their environment).
I have heard this from many well known environments.
I personally have never worked in an environment where a JEE solution
was necessary.

Most of the time when you hear people claim they need JEE, they
usually are not aware that all of the features are available much
cheaper and with lower maintenance.

>From what I gather JEE has been ignored by most of the large web
businesses in favor of Java SE, LAMP, Rails etc.
Read this article on Netflix, I am not as familiar with their
environment but from what I gather Java SE has been good enough for
most of what they do if not all.
http://blogs.computerworlduk.com/open-enterprise/2010/12/netflix-opens-up-about-open-source/index.htm

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