We normally use coldfusion during prototyping stage because it is a lot
faster to develop and to deploy (make customer try and make any revision
necessary) because it roughly takes 3 times longer to develop the same thing
in coldfusion.

If Neo jump to J2EE i hope it maintains the simplicity of coldfusion or at
least as simple as jrun without sacrificing the development time.  If it
becomes as complex as J2EE looks like asp.net is a better alternative for
RAD


----- Original Message -----
From: "charles arehart" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "JRun-Talk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2002 8:15 AM
Subject: RE: CF2J2EE


> Do you mean moving entirely from CF to J2EE? Or keeping some CF and
> integrating with J2EE apps and services? And do you mean moving entire
> applications or leaving existing ones and only building new ones?
>
> I'd think each of those pose different possibilities. (Of course, some
> aspects would be the same for all, but each poses its own set of pros and
> cons, I'd think.)
>
> /charlie
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Drew Falkman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2002 6:33 PM
> > To: JRun-Talk
> > Subject: CF2J2EE
> >
> >
> > Hey all-
> >
> > I have a question to pose to you anyone who is interested in responding:
> >
> > What would you tell a ColdFusion user if s/he were to ask what
advantages
> > they could utilize by moving to a J2EE environment?
> >
> > Thanks...
> >
> > Drew Falkman
> > Author, JRun Web Application Construction Kit
> > http://www.drewfalkman.com/books/0789726009/
> >
> 
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